1 / 32

Chapter 1: Ancient America and Africa

Chapter 1: Ancient America and Africa. The Peoples of America Before Columbus Africa on the Eve of Contact Europe on the Eve of Invading the Americas Conclusion: The Approach of a New Global Age. The Peoples of America Before Columbus. Migrations to the Americas.

kalare
Download Presentation

Chapter 1: Ancient America and Africa

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 1:AncientAmerica and Africa • The Peoples of America Before Columbus • Africa on the Eve of Contact • Europe on the Eve of Invading the Americas • Conclusion: The Approach of a New Global Age

  2. The Peoples of AmericaBefore Columbus

  3. Migrations to the Americas • Earliest arrivals about 35,000 B.C.E. • Land bridge 600 miles wide connecting Asia with Alaska • Nomadic bands from Siberia hunting big-game animals • Main migration between 11,000 and 14,000 years ago • Perhaps multiple migrations by sea and land

  4. Hunters, Farmers, and Environmental Factors Migration southward and eastward Paleo-Indian era: 14,000 to 10,000 years ago Hunting Pleistocene mammals - megafauna Archaic era: 10,000-2,500 years ago Agricultural revolution c. 5000 B.C.E. Settled village life replaced nomadic existence Regional trading networks formed By about 500 B.C.E. hundreds of small independent kin-based groups

  5. Mesoamerica • Large-scale societies in Mexico • Olmec and Toltec civilizations • 1600-400 BC • Aztecs • Capital at Tenochtitlán • 200,000 inhabitants • located on an island in Lake Texcoco • Hierarchical society • Nobility, free commoners, serfs, slaves • Skilled hydraulic engineers • "floating gardens" • artificially created islands where produce was grown • aqueduct supplied fresh water

  6. Expansion of the Aztec Empire

  7. Regional North American Cultures • Pre-Columbian era • Diversity, many small groups • Pueblo people, by 1200 C.E. • Planned villages, farming, terracing, irrigation • Northwest Pacific coast • Plank houses, fishing, less agriculture • Great Plains to Atlantic tidewater • Algonquian, Iroquoian, Muskhogean, Siouan

  8. An Anasazi Village

  9. Regional North American Cultures • Early Mound Builders • Massive earthen complexes • Numerous burial and effigy mounds • 10,000 mounds in Ohio • Mississippian culture, from about 600 C.E. • Centered at Cahokia near St. Louis • Wide influence and contacts • Wisconsin to Louisiana and Oklahoma to Tennessee

  10. Serpent Mound in southwest Ohio

  11. Cahokia

  12. Mississippian Culture Shrine Figures

  13. Regional North American Cultures • Northeast Indians • Mixed agriculture, hunting, fishing • Waterside villages • Migrated seasonally • Southeast • Long-distance trade • Elaborate pottery and baskets • Some earthmoving

  14. Iroquois Iroquois Near Lake Ontario Loose confederation Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, Seneca Palisaded villages and longhouses Communal living Bounty divided among all

  15. Contrasting Worldviews • Indian and European attitudes differ markedly • “Civilized” versus “savage” • Relationship with nature • Land ownership • Social hierarchy – except for Aztec, Inca • Matrilineal versus patrilineal organization • Gender roles • Role of trade • Religious conceptions

  16. Africa on the Eve of Contact

  17. The Kingdoms of Central and West Africa • Varied landscape, varied cultures • Sophisticated agricultural techniques and livestock management • Nok peoples, modern Nigeria • Ironworking by 450 B.C.E. • Ghana Empire • Extensive urban settlement • Long-distance commerce • Plentiful gold • Islam • spreads into Sub-Saharan areas by 1000 C.E.

  18. Spread of Islam in Africa, c. 1500 C.E.

  19. The Kingdoms of Central and West Africa • Mali Empire • Grows under Mansa Musa • Agriculural production and gold trade • Timbuktu • Songhai Empire • Niger River • Farmers, traders, fishermen, and warriors • Sonni Ali and Muhammad Ture • Kongo and Benin • Centers of slave trade

  20. Western African Kingdoms

  21. The African City of Loango

  22. African Slavery • Result of warfare or crime • Slaveowning a mark of status • Slaves have rights – education, marriage, parenthood • Not necessarily slaves for life • Slavery not automatically passed on to children • Family the root of individual identity

  23. African Ethos • Family • Basic unit of social organization • Often matrilineal • Religion • Supreme Creator • Animist – nature spirits • Importance of the dead, and intercessors • King at the top of society • Supported by nobles and priests

  24. Europe on the Eve ofInvading the Americas

  25. The Rebirth of Europe • Renaissance • Based on trade • Recovery after Black Death of 1300s • Political centralization • But limitations, e.g. Magna Carta • Peasant class in the process of transformation

  26. A Procession in Venice

  27. Centralizing & Expanding • Stronger monarchs create bigger armies • Exploration • Driven by trade motives • Find source of African gold • Portuguese lead exploration • With royal support • Technological advances

  28. Religious Wars

  29. Conclusion:The Approach of a New Global Age

  30. Conclusion:The Approach of a New Global Age • The 1500s in West Africa, Europe, Americas • Development of West African empires • Renaissance Europe • Maritime technology • Aztec and Inca Empires • Mound-building societies decentralizing

  31. Timeline

More Related