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Do Now 8/28 1.Complete your Historical Causation worksheet. 2.This is a silent and individual activity. 3.Please use your annotated notes in the AMSCO text to help you. 4.Lots to do today! Let’s keep it moving!
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Do Now 8/28 1.Complete your Historical Causation worksheet. 2.This is a silent and individual activity. 3.Please use your annotated notes in the AMSCO.

Dec 28, 2015

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Page 1: Do Now 8/28 1.Complete your Historical Causation worksheet. 2.This is a silent and individual activity. 3.Please use your annotated notes in the AMSCO.

Do Now 8/281. Complete your Historical Causation

worksheet.2. This is a silent and individual activity.3. Please use your annotated notes in the

AMSCO text to help you.4. Lots to do today! Let’s keep it moving!

Page 2: Do Now 8/28 1.Complete your Historical Causation worksheet. 2.This is a silent and individual activity. 3.Please use your annotated notes in the AMSCO.

Period 1: 1491-1607 Notes

Page 3: Do Now 8/28 1.Complete your Historical Causation worksheet. 2.This is a silent and individual activity. 3.Please use your annotated notes in the AMSCO.

Outcomes

SWBAT• Identify and explain three reasons European

nations explored and colonized the Americas.• Explain the Spanish transition from the

encomienda system to the asiento system.

Page 4: Do Now 8/28 1.Complete your Historical Causation worksheet. 2.This is a silent and individual activity. 3.Please use your annotated notes in the AMSCO.

Bering Land Bridge• The original inhabitants of the Americas came

over from Asia on the Bering Land Bridge, between what is now Russia and Alaska.

Page 5: Do Now 8/28 1.Complete your Historical Causation worksheet. 2.This is a silent and individual activity. 3.Please use your annotated notes in the AMSCO.

Peoples of Americas• 50 to 100 million people in 1491• Crops such as corn (maize) and potatoes

allowed civilizations such as the Mayas, Aztecs, and Incas to flourish.

Page 6: Do Now 8/28 1.Complete your Historical Causation worksheet. 2.This is a silent and individual activity. 3.Please use your annotated notes in the AMSCO.

Native American Groups of North America

Page 7: Do Now 8/28 1.Complete your Historical Causation worksheet. 2.This is a silent and individual activity. 3.Please use your annotated notes in the AMSCO.

The Northwest• Housing: longhouses• Diet based on: hunting, fishing, foraging• Iconic Culture: totem poles• Major Tribe: Chinook

Page 8: Do Now 8/28 1.Complete your Historical Causation worksheet. 2.This is a silent and individual activity. 3.Please use your annotated notes in the AMSCO.

The Southwest • Housing: cave and cliff dwellings• Diet based on: maize farming• Iconic Culture: irrigation and architecture• Major Tribes: Pueblo, Anasazi

Page 9: Do Now 8/28 1.Complete your Historical Causation worksheet. 2.This is a silent and individual activity. 3.Please use your annotated notes in the AMSCO.

The Great Plains • Housing: tepees• Diet based on: buffalo and farming• Iconic Culture: seminomadic, horses• Major Tribe: Sioux

Page 10: Do Now 8/28 1.Complete your Historical Causation worksheet. 2.This is a silent and individual activity. 3.Please use your annotated notes in the AMSCO.

The Eastern Woodlands• Housing: longhouses• Diet based on: hunting, fishing, agriculture• Iconic Culture: maternal society in villages• Major Tribe: Iroquois Confederation,

Algonquian

Page 11: Do Now 8/28 1.Complete your Historical Causation worksheet. 2.This is a silent and individual activity. 3.Please use your annotated notes in the AMSCO.

SecotanAlgonquian village,

1585

Challenge Question #1:

Page 12: Do Now 8/28 1.Complete your Historical Causation worksheet. 2.This is a silent and individual activity. 3.Please use your annotated notes in the AMSCO.

Iroquois Confederacy• AKA Iroquois League– Made up of the Five Nations –

Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, and Seneca

– Territory: New York, Canada, Great Lakes

• Cultural group that assumed political and military roles in response to the Europeans

Page 13: Do Now 8/28 1.Complete your Historical Causation worksheet. 2.This is a silent and individual activity. 3.Please use your annotated notes in the AMSCO.

Challenge Question #2:Why did the Europeans explore

and colonize the Americas?

Page 14: Do Now 8/28 1.Complete your Historical Causation worksheet. 2.This is a silent and individual activity. 3.Please use your annotated notes in the AMSCO.

Motivations for Colonization• Technology – New technology allowed ships to sail

farther and make more accurate maps– compass, sextant, better ships

• Wealth – European nations needed wealth to increase their military power– mercantilism and joint stock companies

• Power and Status – The growth of large nation-states (Spain, Portugal, France, England) led to international competition– conquistadores found personal wealth and glory

• Religion – Conflict between Catholics and Protestants led to a desire to spread the “right” kind of Christianity

Page 15: Do Now 8/28 1.Complete your Historical Causation worksheet. 2.This is a silent and individual activity. 3.Please use your annotated notes in the AMSCO.

The Columbian Exchange

• Long term exchange of crops, livestock, goods, diseases, and culture between Europe (“Old World”) and the Americas (“New World”)

Page 16: Do Now 8/28 1.Complete your Historical Causation worksheet. 2.This is a silent and individual activity. 3.Please use your annotated notes in the AMSCO.

“Old World” to “New World”

• Animals – horses, cows, chickens• Crops – apples, carrots, coffee, sugar cane• Diseases – plague, cholera, smallpox

Page 17: Do Now 8/28 1.Complete your Historical Causation worksheet. 2.This is a silent and individual activity. 3.Please use your annotated notes in the AMSCO.

“New World” to “Old World”

• Animals – turkey, llama• Crops – beans, cocoa, maize (corn), potatoes,

tobacco• Diseases – syphilis

Page 18: Do Now 8/28 1.Complete your Historical Causation worksheet. 2.This is a silent and individual activity. 3.Please use your annotated notes in the AMSCO.

Results of the Columbian ExchangeIn Europe

• New crops from the Americas provided a nutritious, stable food source– This allowed the European

population to boom and encouraged the move from feudalism to capitalism

• The European belief in white superiority was strengthened

In the Americas

• New diseases wiped out millions of Native Americans

• Horses changed the lives of the Plains Indians

• Native people increasingly resisted forced cultural change

Page 19: Do Now 8/28 1.Complete your Historical Causation worksheet. 2.This is a silent and individual activity. 3.Please use your annotated notes in the AMSCO.

Encomienda System

• Forced labor system in which Native Americans were forced to work in exchange for being “cared for” by a Spanish landowner– Forced conversion to Christianity was also

common• Plantation-based agriculture for crops like

sugar, and mining of precious metals like silver– Eventually replaced by slavery

Page 20: Do Now 8/28 1.Complete your Historical Causation worksheet. 2.This is a silent and individual activity. 3.Please use your annotated notes in the AMSCO.

Challenge Question #3:

Why did the Spanish eventually replace the encomienda system with

the asiento system (slavery)?

Page 21: Do Now 8/28 1.Complete your Historical Causation worksheet. 2.This is a silent and individual activity. 3.Please use your annotated notes in the AMSCO.

Spanish Slavery• With devastated native

populations leading to a lack of workers, the Spanish turned to the asiento system– Slaves were brought from West

Africa– The system was allowed and

even encouraged because a tax was paid to the king for each slave brought to Spanish territory

Page 22: Do Now 8/28 1.Complete your Historical Causation worksheet. 2.This is a silent and individual activity. 3.Please use your annotated notes in the AMSCO.

Caste System• Racially mixed

populations of Spanish settlers, Native Americans, and African slaves led to a rigid caste system based on race– For example, a

“Mestizo” was someone of mixed Spanish and native parents

Page 23: Do Now 8/28 1.Complete your Historical Causation worksheet. 2.This is a silent and individual activity. 3.Please use your annotated notes in the AMSCO.

Bartolomé de Las Casas

• Priest who fought for better treatment for Native Americans– Wrote “The Destruction of

the Indies” and “In Defense of the Indians”

Page 24: Do Now 8/28 1.Complete your Historical Causation worksheet. 2.This is a silent and individual activity. 3.Please use your annotated notes in the AMSCO.

“Then too there exist extraordinary kingdoms among our Indians who live in regions west and south of us. There are large groupings of human beings who live according to a political and a social order. There are large cities, there are kings, judges, laws, all within civilizations where commerce occurs, buying and selling and lending and all the other dealings proper to the law of nations. That is to say, their republics are properly set up, there are institutions. And our Indians cultivate friendship and they live in large cities. They manage their affairs in them with goodness and equity, affairs of peace as well as war. They run their governments according to laws that are often superior to our own... they are inferior to none .... And in a good many customs they outdo, they surpass the English, the French and some groups in our native Spain.”

Page 25: Do Now 8/28 1.Complete your Historical Causation worksheet. 2.This is a silent and individual activity. 3.Please use your annotated notes in the AMSCO.

Why didn’t the native peoples fight back more?

• Disease• Brutal military suppression

• They did – Pueblo Revolt, Pequot War, King Philip’s War, Pontiac’s Rebellion, Creek War, Black Hawk War, Second Seminole War, Nez Perce War, Ghost Dance War, and dozens upon dozens of others over the years.

Page 26: Do Now 8/28 1.Complete your Historical Causation worksheet. 2.This is a silent and individual activity. 3.Please use your annotated notes in the AMSCO.

Pueblo Revolt, 1680

• Angered by forced work and forced conversion, the Pueblo, led by Popé rebelled against the Spanish government.– The Pueblo killed hundred of

Spanish colonists and forced the thousands that still live to leave

– Spanish returned a decade later

Page 27: Do Now 8/28 1.Complete your Historical Causation worksheet. 2.This is a silent and individual activity. 3.Please use your annotated notes in the AMSCO.

Challenge Questions #34-36