Age of Exploration Notes - Union Academy Charter School
Transcription
Age of Exploration Notes - Union Academy Charter School
EUROPE ENTERS THE MODERN AGE Objective: Students will analyze the motives and technology that allowed the age of exploration come to pass. THE AGE OF EXPLORATION Age of Exploration: a period of European exploration and discovery that lasted from about 1418 to 1620 TERMS TO KNOW Route- A path, course or way of travel from one place to another. Conquest- To capture or gain control by force, as the Spanish did in the New World, taking over the Native American people. Interdependence- a relationship between countries in which they rely on one another for resources, goods, or services Epidemic- A sudden and widespread outbreak of a disease within a specific population group or area Impact- an effect or result Colony- A country or area under the full or partial political control of a another country, typically a distant one, and occupied by settlers from that country. Mercantilism- An economic practice adopted by the European colonial powers (Portugal, Spain, England, France, the Netherlands) to exploit their overseas possessions (colonies) so that the "mother country" could become more wealthy. They do this by taking the resources and riches in the country, setting up plantations and then trading with these colonies. Imperialism- A policy in which a strong nation seeks to dominate other countries politically, socially, and economically. Missionary- someone who attempts to convert others to a certain religion; the Spanish wanted to convert the Natives to Catholicism. TERMS TO KNOW http://quizlet.com/_tvge3 Racism- prejudice, discrimination, or antagonism directed against someone of a different race based on the belief that one's own race is superior. Ethnocentric- Belief or idea that one's cultural or ethnic group is superior to others. Encomienda- A grant by the Spanish Government to a Spanish colonist in America giving the right to demand tribute and forced labor from the Indian inhabitants of an area Columbian Exchange- The exchange of plants, animals, diseases, and technologies between the Americas and the rest of the world following Columbus's voyages. Treaty of Tordesillas- 1494 agreement between Catholic Portugal and Catholic Spain to agree to split the newly conquered lands in the New World (Central & South America). Portugal got Brazil the rest went to Spain. PEOPLE Prince Henry the Navigator- (1394-1460) Prince of Portugal who established an observatory and school of navigation and directed voyages that spurred the Age of Exploration.. Barthololmeu Dias- Portuguese explorer who in 1488 was the first European to get round the Cape of Good Hope. He did not make it to Asia but helped est. a sea route to Asia. Vasco DaGama- Portuguese explorer. In 1497-1498 he led the first naval expedition from Europe to sail to India, opening an important commercial sea route. Christopher Columbus- 1492 - Italian hired by Spain (King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella) tried to find a route to Indies by traveling west, but discovered the "New World". Ferdinand Magellan- Portuguese mariner in the service of Spain, set sail in pursuit of Columbus's goal of reaching the Spice Islands by sailing westward; was the first to circumnavigate the world. 1519-1522 Sir Francis Drake-English explorer/pirate who was the 2nd person and 1st Englishman to circumnavigated the globe from 1577 to 1580 and was sent by Queen Elizabeth I to raid Spanish ships/settlements for gold. Helped defeat the Spanish Armada. Henry Hudson-An English explorer who explored for the Dutch. In 1609,He claimed the Hudson River around present day New York and called it New Netherland. He also had the Hudson Bay named for him Hernando Cortez-1519-1521Spanish conquistador who defeated the Aztecs and conquered Mexico for Spain. This was the first step in creating a Spanish Colony. Francisco Pizzaro -Spanish conquistador who crushed the Inca civilization in Peru; took gold, silver and enslaved the Incas in 1532. Helped create Spanish colony. Jacques Cartier -1535, French explorer sailed up to St. Lawrence river hoping it would lead to the Pacific Ocean in order to reach Asia. Establishes Frances's claim on Canada. At the same time that Europe was swept up in the Renaissance, Scientific Revolution and the Reformation, other major changes were taking place in the world. These changes originated in Europe, but soon involved other continents. The changes began with a series of voyages during the 1400s, 1500s, and early 1600s when European explorers ventured into the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. With today’s global positioning satellites, Internet maps, cell phones, and superfast travel, it is hard to imagine exactly how it might have felt to embark on a voyage across an unknown ocean. Think/Pair/Share: Would you be willing to undertake such a voyage? Only those most adventurous, most daring, and most confident in their abilities to sail in any weather, manage any crew, and meet any circumstance dared do so; for not having those qualities meant certain death. European explorers changed the world in many dramatic ways. Because of them, cultures divided by 3,000 miles or more of water began interacting. European countries claimed large parts of the world. As nations competed for territory, Europe had an enormous impact on people living in distant lands. The Americas, in turn, made important contributions to Europe and the rest of the world. For example, from the Americas came crops such as corn and potatoes, which grew well in Europe. By increasing Europe’s food supply, these crops helped create population growth. THE CAUSES OF EUROPEAN EXPLORATION Two main reasons stand out. First, Europeans of this time had several motives for exploring the world. Second, advances in knowledge and technology helped to make the Age of Exploration possible. For early explorers, one of the main motives for exploration was the desire to find new trade routes to Asia. Europeans were especially interested in spices from Asia. Trade with the East, however, was difficult and very expensive. Muslims and Italians controlled the flow of goods. European monarchs and merchants wanted to break the hold that Muslims and Italians had on trade . WHY EXPLORE? Political 1 . Empire building European Countries wanted to build up their empires over seas and create colonies in order to practice Mercantilism . 2. Nationalism Loyalty and devotion to one’s countr y, claiming land for your nation. 3. Rivalr y Among Nations- European countries raced to the Americas to claim the most land for their countr y so they would be the most power ful in the world. Economic 1 .Foreign Goods wanted spices, indigo, gold slaves etc. resources that were available in other nations, especially in Asia. 2. Wealth- Find gold, practice mercantilism . Religious Spread their Faith - Af ter the Reformation nations wanted to conver t natives to their type of Christianity, to help build up their nations. Per sonal- 1 . Adventure some wanted to explore for the excitement 2. Curiosity some wanted to know what else was out there 3. Fame some wanted to go down in histor y as a hero Knowledge 1 . To Find a Route to Asia. 2. Create more accurate maps - each explorer added to maps and corrected them as they sailed. 3. Better Equipment tools like the sextant, astrolabe and compass and better ships that could carr y more supplies like the caravel made long ocean voyages possible. What was a main motive for European exploration? ADVANCES IN KNOWLEDGE AND TECHNOLOGY A number of advances during the Renaissance made it easier for explorers to venture into the unknown. One key advance was in cartography, or mapmaking. Discoveries by explorers gave mapmakers new information with which to work. In 1507, a German cartographer made the first map that clearly showed North and South America as separate from Asia. In turn, better maps made navigation easier. World Map 1507 CARAVELS An improved ship design also helped explorers. By the 1400s, Portuguese and Spanish shipbuilders were making a new type of ship called a caravel . These ships were small, fast, and easy to maneuver. Their special bottoms made it easier for explorers to travel along coastlines where the water was not deep. Caravels also used lateen sails, a triangular style adapted from Muslim ships. These sails could be positioned to take advantage of the wind no matter which way it blew. THE CARAVEL Along with better ships, new navigational tools helped sailors travel more safely on the open seas. Sailors used compasses to find their bearing, or direction of travel. The astrolabe helped sailors determine their distance north or south from the equator. Finally, improved weapons gave Europeans a huge advantage over the people they met in their explorations. Sailors could fire their cannons at targets near the shore without leaving their ships. On land, the weapons of native peoples often were no match for European guns, armor, and horses. An instrument whose __Magnetic________ metal needle aligns itself with the magnetic fields of the earth. This causes one end of the The needle to point north. Mariners used this information to navigate the ___Compass__________ ship. The ____Chinese_____ are said to have invented the first _____ compass over 2000 years ago. Map A representation of a region of the __earth_____ or heavens. This tool was once used to determine the __Altitude_____________ of the sun or other celestial bodies. The _Astrolabe________ An early sixteenth-century instrument for measuring the altitude of a heavenly body. It consists of a square shaft and a sliding cross-piece set at right angles to the shaft. The shaft end is held at the __observer’s_______ eye and the cross-piece positioned to line up with the sun and the horizon. The cross-piece marks a point on the shaft __Crosstaff____________ that is referred to in a table of __degrees___ and minutes. _quadrant____________ An early instrument for_measuring_________ altitude of celestial bodies, consisting of a 90° graduated arc with a movable __radiius__ for measuring angles. _sextant__________ A ___Navigational_________ instrument which replaced the astrolabe and was used for measuring the angle between the horizon and the sun or a star in order to find out the latitude (of a ship) The _Caravel The Carvel was more maneuverable and could sail with or _against_______ the wind. It could take on large _strong _________ waves. It’s _light_______, _____triangular_________________ sails made it faster too! Which of these is an advance in knowledge and technology that led to European exploration? A. A desire to spread Christianity. B. A chance to earn wealth from new lands. C. Improved ship design D. Merchants who wanted to increase trade. EUROPE ENTERS THE MODERN AGE Objective: Students will be able to list the discoveries of the Portugese explorers. PORTUGAL BEGINS THE AGE OF EXPLORATION The major figure in early Portuguese exploration was Prince Henry, the son of King John I of Portugal. Nicknamed “the Navigator,” Prince Henry was not an explorer himself. Instead, he encouraged exploration and planned and directed many important expeditions. Beginning in about 1418, Henry started a school of navigation where sailors and mapmakers could learn their trades. His cartographers made new maps based on the information ship captains brought back. Henry’s early expeditions focused on the west coast of Africa. Gradually, Portuguese explorers made their way farther and farther south. VASCO DA GAMA In July 1497, Vasco da Gama set sail with four ships to chart a sea route to India. Da Gama arrived in the port of Calicut, India, in May 1498. ROUTES OF PORTUGUESE EXPLORATIONS Which Portuguese explorer sailed around Africa and across the Indian Ocean to reach India? A. B. C. D. Batholomeu Dias Prince Henry Pedro Cabral Vasco Da Gama PORTUGAL CONTROLS THE INDIAN OCEAN Portugal’s control of the Indian Ocean broke the hold Muslims and Italians had on Asian trade. With the increased competition, prices of Asian goods—such as spices and fabrics—dropped, and more people in Europe could af ford to buy them. During the 1500s, Portugal also began to establish colonies in Brazil. The native people of Brazil suffered greatly as a result. The Portuguese forced them to work on sugar plantations, or large farms . As the native population of Brazil decreased, the Portuguese needed more laborers. Starting in the mid–1500s, they turned to Africa for slave labor. Learning Objective: Students will be able to describe the contributions of Columbus and Magellan to the Age of Exploration. It was Ferdinand and Isabella who sponsored the voyages of Christopher Columbus. The Italian-born Columbus thought that the Indies, or eastern Asia, lay on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean. He believed sailing west would be the easiest route to reach it. When Columbus failed to win Portuguese support for his idea, Ferdinand and Isabella agreed to pay for the risky voyage In August 1492, three ships left Spain under Columbus’s command. As the weeks went by, some of the men began to fear they would never see Spain again. Then, on October 12, a lookout sighted land. Columbus had landed in the Carribean islands. For three months, Columbus and his men explored nearby islands with the help of native islanders. Thinking they were in the Indies, the Spanish soon called all the local people “Indians. In March 1493, Columbus arrived back in Spain. He proudly reported that he had reached Asia. Over the next ten years, he made three more voyages to what he called the Indies. He died in Spain in 1506, still insisting that he had sailed to Asia. Why did Columbus sail west? A. Because Portugal prevented him sailing east. B. Because he thought America lay on the other side of the Atlantic. C. Because a storm sent his expedition of course. D. Because he thought eastern Asia lay on the other side of the Atlantic. Ferdinand Magellan Magellan believed he could sail west to the Indies. He was looking for a strait, or channel, through South America. In August 1519, he set sail with five ships and about two hundred and fifty men. Magellan looked for the strait all along South America’s east coast. He finally found it at the southern tip of the continent. Today, it is called the Strait of Magellan. Magellan reached the Pacific Ocean in November 1520. It took another three months to cross the Pacific. Continuing west, Magellan visited the Philippines. There he became involved in a conflict between two local chiefs. In April 1521, Magellan was killed in the fighting. Magellan’s crew sailed on to the Spice Islands. Three years after the expedition began, the only ship to survive the expedition returned to Spain. The 18 sailors on board were the first people to travel completely around Earth. True or False Why? Magellan returned to Spain in 1523 with 18 sailors. The early Spanish explorations changed Europeans’ view of the world a great deal. The voyages of Christopher Columbus revealed the existence of the Americas. Magellan’s expedition opened up a westward route to the Indies. It showed that it was possible to sail completely around the world. Columbus’s voyages marked the beginning of Spanish settlement in the West Indies. Spain earned great wealth from its settlements. For the native people of the West Indies, however, Spanish settlement was extremely detrimental. The Spanish forced native people to work as slaves in the mines and on the plantations. Priests forced many of them to become Christians. When the Spanish arrived, perhaps one or two million Taino lived on the islands. Within fifty years, fewer than five hundred Taino were left. The rest had died of starvation, overwork, or European diseases. Since the native populations died, the Spanish brought millions of enslaved Africans to work in their American colonies. How did Spanish and Portuguese exploration affect people in Africa? A. Africans found a new sea route around the world. B. Africans attended Prince Henry’s navigation school. C. Africans were enslaved and brought to the Americas. D. Africans sold spices to Portugal and Spain. Both Spain and Portugal Claimed South America as their own. (Even though millions of Native Americans inhabited this continent) In 1494 Pope Alexander VI set the LINE OF DEMARCATION, dividing South America among the two countries. Spain got everything but what is present day Brazil. Other European Countries are now going to scramble to get a piece of North America. Learning Objective: Students will be able to describe the conquest of the native peoples in the Americas by the Spanish. detrimental: something that does harm or damage. epidemics: an outbreak of a contagious disease that spreads quickly and over a wide geographic area. Conquistador: a Spanish conqueror After Columbus’s voyages, Spain was eager to claim even more lands in the New World. To explore and conquer "New Spain," the Spanish turned to adventurers called conquistadors, or conquerors. The conquistadors were allowed to establish settlements and seize the wealth of natives. Hernán Cortés In 1519, Spanish explorer Hernán Cortés (er– NAHN koor–TEZ), with and a band of fellow conquistadors, set out to explore present-day Mexico and defeated the Aztec empire. The Aztec ruler, Moctezuma II, welcomed the Spanish with great honors. Determined to break the power of the Aztecs, Cortés took Moctezuma hostage. Eventually, the huge Aztec army was defeated by the Spanish. Spanish explorer Hernan Cortez conquered the… A. B. C. D. Inca Empire. Taino Indians. Aztec Empire The New World C. Aztec Empire First, Aztec legend had predicted the arrival of a white- skinned god. When Cortés appeared, the Aztecs welcomed him because they thought he might be this god, Quetzalcoatl. Second, Cortés was able to make allies of the Aztecs’ enemies. Third, their horses, armor, and superior weapons gave the Spanish an advantage in battle. Fourth, the Spanish carried diseases that caused deadly epidemics among the Aztecs. Aztec riches inspired Spanish conquistadors to continue their search for gold. Francisco Pizarro In the 1520s, Francisco Pizarro received permission from Spain to conquer the Inca Empire in South America. By the time Pizarro arrived, however, a civil war had weakened that empire. In April 1532, the Incan emperor, Atahualpa (ah–tuh–WAHL–puh), greeted the Spanish as guests. Following Cortés’s example, Pizarro launched a surprise attack and kidnapped the emperor. Although the Incas paid a roomful of gold and silver in ransom, the Spanish killed Atahualpa. Without their leader, the Inca Empire quickly fell apart. Spanish explorer Francisco Pizzaro conquered the… A. B. C. D. Inca Empire. Taino Indians. Aztec Empire The New World A. Inca Empire Old World New World • 50 to 90% of Natives die from • With the introduction of the potato disease. Strong leaders die and are and other goods from the Americas replaced by weaker ones making it Europe's’ population more than easier to have Europeans take over. doubles. Not enough farmers leads to • European Countries gain a great deal malnutrition making it easier for of wealth and power, through natives to get sick. mercantilism. They become the • Culture of Natives destroyed. dominate force in the New World. • Natives are introduced to animals that will improve their lives. • Some Natives use the horse and become nomadic. • Africans are brought to the new world and Slavery takes hold. Besides gold and silver, ships from the Americas brought corn, potatoes, chocolate, and raw materials to Spain. The Spanish conquests had a major impact on the New World. The Spanish introduced new animals to the Americas, such as horses, cattle, sheep, and pigs. The Spanish also imported slaves from Africa to work on the plantations in the new world after much of the native populations had died. Spain introduced diseases to the New World that killed many of the natives, such as smallpox. Spain destroyed two advanced civilizations. The Aztecs and Incas lost much of their culture along with their wealth. Many became laborers for the Spanish. Millions died from disease. Sir Francis Drake Between 1577 and 1580 Francis Drake sailed around the world. He also claimed part of what is now California for England, English exploration also contributed to a war between England and Spain. As English ships roamed the seas, some captains, nicknamed "sea dogs," began raiding Spanish ports and ships to take their gold. The English raids added to other tensions between England and Spain. In 1588, King Philip II of Spain sent an armada, or fleet of ships, to invade England. With 130 heavily armed vessels and about thirty thousand men, the Spanish Armada seemed an unbeatable force. Drake defeated the Spanish Armada in 1588. Why is this important? The defeat of the Spanish Armada marked the start of a shift in power in Europe. By 1630, Spain no longer dominated the continent. With Spain’s decline, other countries—particularly England —took a more active role in trade and colonization around the world. This is important because it led to more European, especially English, colonies around the world. Other European Explorations The Italian sailor John Cabot made England’s first voyage of discovery. Cabot believed he could reach the Indies by sailing northwest across the Atlantic. In 1497, John Cabot landed in what is now Canada. Believing he had reached the northeast coast of Asia, he claimed the region for England. Another Italian, Giovanni da Verrazano, sailed under the French flag. In 1524, Verrazano explored the Atlantic coast from present-day North Carolina to Canada. His voyage gave France its first claims in the Americas. Sailing on behalf of the Netherlands, English explorer Henry Hudson wanted to find a northwest passage through North America to the Pacific Ocean. Such a water route would allow ships to sail from Europe to Asia without entering waters controlled by Spain. Hudson did not find a northwest passage, but he did explore what is now called the Hudson River in present-day New York State. What is Mercantilism? Economic Policy which depends on a country having colonies to become extremly wealthy and powerful. More colonies= More $$$$$$$$$$$$$$ How do countries gain wealth using Mercantilism? 1. Get Colonies. 2. Create a favorable balance of trade- The “mother”,ruling country must sell more than it buys. 3. Create tariffs or taxes on the goods colonist buy. 4. Create laws that ensure that colonies can only sell to the ruling country, must use their ships to transport goods and can only buy from ruling country. American colonization and mercantilism relied heavily on the Slave Trade. Slaves performed the work on the plantations in the new world. Tobacco plantation, slaves did the work, Plantation owner sold tobacco to England. The movement of goods and slaves between the Americas, Europe and Africa was called the Triangular Trade Route. Raw materials from the Americas went to Europe, Manufactured goods from Europe went to Africa, Slaves from Africa go to the Americas.