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Chapter 4:
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Chapter 4:. Vikings came to North America in the year 1000 A.D. Europeans came 500 years later Europeans had an ethnocentric view of the First Nations.

Jan 12, 2016

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Bertram Summers
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Page 1: Chapter 4:.  Vikings came to North America in the year 1000 A.D.  Europeans came 500 years later  Europeans had an ethnocentric view of the First Nations.

Chapter 4:

Page 2: Chapter 4:.  Vikings came to North America in the year 1000 A.D.  Europeans came 500 years later  Europeans had an ethnocentric view of the First Nations.

Vikings came to North America in the year 1000 A.D.

Europeans came 500 years later Europeans had an ethnocentric view

of the First Nations – Europeans believed that they were superior to the First Nations

Page 3: Chapter 4:.  Vikings came to North America in the year 1000 A.D.  Europeans came 500 years later  Europeans had an ethnocentric view of the First Nations.

The groups soon learned to get along because they both wanted to trade

It took a long time for them to respect each other’s differences

Their whole relationship was based on the fur trade

Page 4: Chapter 4:.  Vikings came to North America in the year 1000 A.D.  Europeans came 500 years later  Europeans had an ethnocentric view of the First Nations.

First Nations wanted things like pots, knives, axes, copper, and guns (all these things lasted longer than wood or bone)

Europeans wanted: FUR! AND LOTS OF IT!

Trading was done by bartering – trading goods, instead of using money

Page 5: Chapter 4:.  Vikings came to North America in the year 1000 A.D.  Europeans came 500 years later  Europeans had an ethnocentric view of the First Nations.

First Nations had always used the barter system between each other

Before trade, First Nations would exchange gifts and perform ceremonies with each other to show cooperation

Ex: using a peace pipe

Page 6: Chapter 4:.  Vikings came to North America in the year 1000 A.D.  Europeans came 500 years later  Europeans had an ethnocentric view of the First Nations.

When Europeans brought furs back to Europe, they were paid TEN TIMES the amount of money they spend to trade for them!

Page 7: Chapter 4:.  Vikings came to North America in the year 1000 A.D.  Europeans came 500 years later  Europeans had an ethnocentric view of the First Nations.

1. First NationsAll winter, First Nations would trap,

skin, and prepare pelts. When spring came, they would travel to trading posts where the Europeans were camped

Page 8: Chapter 4:.  Vikings came to North America in the year 1000 A.D.  Europeans came 500 years later  Europeans had an ethnocentric view of the First Nations.

2. MerchantsMerchants in Europe gave explorers

money to travel from North America to Europe. They also gave the explorers the goods they needed to live here. They became very rich in Europe from the trade

Page 9: Chapter 4:.  Vikings came to North America in the year 1000 A.D.  Europeans came 500 years later  Europeans had an ethnocentric view of the First Nations.

3. Coureurs de bois and voyageursThe early Coureurs de bois, who later

became known as “voyageurs,” were a huge part of the fur trade. They were in contact with both First Nations and Europeans

Page 10: Chapter 4:.  Vikings came to North America in the year 1000 A.D.  Europeans came 500 years later  Europeans had an ethnocentric view of the First Nations.

Without the help of First Nations, Europeans would not have survived. How did they help?

1.Finding food2.How to make medicines3.How to dress in the cold4.Transportation (canoes, snowshoes,

tobaggans)5.Knowledge of the land6.Translating

Page 11: Chapter 4:.  Vikings came to North America in the year 1000 A.D.  Europeans came 500 years later  Europeans had an ethnocentric view of the First Nations.

At first, the entire economy was based on the fur trade

This changed as more peopled settled and communities grew larger

The King of France appointed people to control all the trade happening in New France

Page 12: Chapter 4:.  Vikings came to North America in the year 1000 A.D.  Europeans came 500 years later  Europeans had an ethnocentric view of the First Nations.

1. Jean-Baptiste Colbert-wanted to make the colony be part of

mercantilism-colonists would get goods they

needed, France would become rich-relied on the Wendat people to bring

furs to Montreal and traded

Page 13: Chapter 4:.  Vikings came to North America in the year 1000 A.D.  Europeans came 500 years later  Europeans had an ethnocentric view of the First Nations.

2. Jean Talon-used money to attract new colonists-when he was in charge, the

population of New France doubled!

Page 14: Chapter 4:.  Vikings came to North America in the year 1000 A.D.  Europeans came 500 years later  Europeans had an ethnocentric view of the First Nations.

3. Governor Frontenac-a French noble-had a problem: most of the Wendat

(trading partners) had been killed by smallpox and war

-trade was almost impossible-to solve the problem, he sent

coureurs de bois into the interior to find furs

Page 15: Chapter 4:.  Vikings came to North America in the year 1000 A.D.  Europeans came 500 years later  Europeans had an ethnocentric view of the First Nations.

For hundreds of years, many First Nations were in a war against the Haudenosaunee.

3 Nations agreed to join each other and fight. They called themselves “The Council of Three Fires”

1.Potawatomi2.Odawa3.Ojibwa

Page 16: Chapter 4:.  Vikings came to North America in the year 1000 A.D.  Europeans came 500 years later  Europeans had an ethnocentric view of the First Nations.

Next, these First Nations began talking to the French about peace

A group of 1300 First Nations came to Montreal

The Council, the French, and the Haud. signed a peace treaty

Page 17: Chapter 4:.  Vikings came to North America in the year 1000 A.D.  Europeans came 500 years later  Europeans had an ethnocentric view of the First Nations.

To symbolize the peace, they buried a hatchet deep in the earth. It showed an end to violence.

Today, people still use the expression “Bury the hatchet” to symbolize ended a fight!

Page 18: Chapter 4:.  Vikings came to North America in the year 1000 A.D.  Europeans came 500 years later  Europeans had an ethnocentric view of the First Nations.

Fur traders now travelled in peace and safety

As the number of beavers began to get low, the traders travelled north and west

The profit from the fur trade also allowed new industries like fishing, ironwork, shipbuilding, and farms become successful

Page 19: Chapter 4:.  Vikings came to North America in the year 1000 A.D.  Europeans came 500 years later  Europeans had an ethnocentric view of the First Nations.

The French fur traders were able to travel almost anywhere using canoes along the St. Lawrence River, which branched off

If it wasn’t for the canoe, Canada may not have been settled for a long time

Look at page 84, and read through it together

Page 20: Chapter 4:.  Vikings came to North America in the year 1000 A.D.  Europeans came 500 years later  Europeans had an ethnocentric view of the First Nations.

Britain didn’t want to settle in Canada – it only wanted the fur!

Hudson’s Bay was perfect for this (p.86)

1.Farther north = thicker fur2.Connected to many rivers3.Large ships could drop off supplies

Page 21: Chapter 4:.  Vikings came to North America in the year 1000 A.D.  Europeans came 500 years later  Europeans had an ethnocentric view of the First Nations.

P.87 Definition: stockade

Page 22: Chapter 4:.  Vikings came to North America in the year 1000 A.D.  Europeans came 500 years later  Europeans had an ethnocentric view of the First Nations.

French explorers also created a fur-trading company out west

Called the Nor’Westers This is how the Metis were created Almost all travel was done by canoe Good relationships with First Nations

Page 23: Chapter 4:.  Vikings came to North America in the year 1000 A.D.  Europeans came 500 years later  Europeans had an ethnocentric view of the First Nations.

Americans also came up Peter Pond: travelled from Conneticut

– created a trading post on the Athabasca

the fort was replaced by Fort Chipewyan

Page 24: Chapter 4:.  Vikings came to North America in the year 1000 A.D.  Europeans came 500 years later  Europeans had an ethnocentric view of the First Nations.

The competition between the British and the French sometimes led to violence

Europeans began trading furs for alcohol

Page 25: Chapter 4:.  Vikings came to North America in the year 1000 A.D.  Europeans came 500 years later  Europeans had an ethnocentric view of the First Nations.

Travellers wanted to keep going west, but the Rocky Mountains were in the way

Alexander Mackenzie tried twice:1.Found the “River of Disappointment”2.Found the “Peace River”*he became the first European to

travel ALL the way across Canada!!

Page 26: Chapter 4:.  Vikings came to North America in the year 1000 A.D.  Europeans came 500 years later  Europeans had an ethnocentric view of the First Nations.

Isolation (being alone)|||

Meeting new cultures/people|||

Change

Page 27: Chapter 4:.  Vikings came to North America in the year 1000 A.D.  Europeans came 500 years later  Europeans had an ethnocentric view of the First Nations.

As Europeans and First Nations spent more time with each other, they began sharing many things

Page 28: Chapter 4:.  Vikings came to North America in the year 1000 A.D.  Europeans came 500 years later  Europeans had an ethnocentric view of the First Nations.

1. First Nations lost their land, traditions, and language

2. Had to begin “working” for the fur traders

3. Left their homes to find beavers for Euros

4. Became dependant on Euro goods5. Animals became scarce6. New diseases