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Early Exploration Early Exploration of North America of North America 30,000 BC – 1600
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Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Dec 13, 2015

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Page 1: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Early Exploration of Early Exploration of North AmericaNorth America

30,000 BC – 1600

Page 2: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Geography of the New WorldGeography of the New WorldNew World = Atlantic SeaboardNew World = Atlantic SeaboardGeographyGeography

–RiversRivers

–HarborsHarbors

–MountainsMountains

–ValleysValleys

Page 3: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

NEW WORLD

OLD WORLD

Page 4: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.
Page 5: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

ClimateClimate–almost identical to Europe’salmost identical to Europe’s

ResourcesResources–SoilSoil

–MineralsMinerals

–TimberTimber

Page 6: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Native Americans & The New World

Approximately 50-100 million natives in New World circa 1500– ~ 4-10 million Native Americans

in North America in 1492

Page 7: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Developed civilizations–Incan, Aztec, Mayan

–Based in corn/maize agriculture

–North American tribes were less developed

Page 8: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.
Page 9: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.
Page 10: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Eve of European arrival:–numerous scattered tribes with

different languages, culture, economies, etc.

–discouraged unity against common enemy

Populated Area = “moral decision”

Page 11: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

European movement

Page 12: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Different from Europeans:–Socially

–Religiously

–Warfare

Cultural differences made conflict inevitable

Results:–By 1600, nearly 90% of Native

American population wiped out

Page 13: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

A Map of the Known World,

pre- 1492

A Map of the Known World,

pre- 1492

Page 14: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Reasons for ExplorationCrusades (11th-14th Centuries)

–New culture, ideas, & goods

Page 15: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Renaissance (14th-15th Centuries)–rebirth of learning

–“Man is the measure of things.”

Rise of Nation-States–Political unification and the rise of

absolute monarchs

–Ferdinand & Isabella, Tudors, Valois

–Created strong feelings of Nationalism

Page 16: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Trade–Marco Polo (1271-1295)

–Italian spice monopoly

–fall of Constantinople

–eliminate the middle man

–new route needed to India

Page 17: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

15th century trade routes

Page 18: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

European trade routes

Page 19: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Reformation & Counter-Reformation–competition to spread religious

beliefs

Spanish Reconquista–excess soldiers in Spain

–restless class of adventurers left

Page 20: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Technological Advances–Printing Press, Caravel,

Astrolabe, Quadrant, Compass, Portolano, Lateen Sail

Page 21: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Quickwrite:

How should European discovery of the New World be viewed today – triumphant, genocidal, or something else?

Page 22: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Early ExplorationVikings

–Leif Erikson establish colonies of Vinland in Nova Scotia - c. 1000 A.D.

Irish? Japanese?Mali?

Page 23: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Portugal Leads the Way

Prince Henry the Navigator (1425)–School for Navigators

African Trading Posts–Plantation slavery is established

in Africa by the Portuguese (~1441)

Page 24: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Bartholomew Dias (1488) – reached tip of Africa

Vasco da Gama (1498) – sailed around tip to India

Pedro Cabral (1500) – Brazil

Page 25: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Spain and GloryChristopher Columbus

- Genovese sailorConvinces Queen

Isabella of Spain to try western route to Cathay and spices

Page 26: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Columbus lands at San Salvador in 1492 - claims all land for Spain

Page 27: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.
Page 28: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Made four voyages total Completely wipes out Arawok

tribe while gathering gold Died thinking he reached Asia

Page 29: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

An Equitable SettlementPope tries to prevent fighting

over new lands 1493 – Line of Demarcation 1494 – Treaty of Tordisillas

–Portugal gets Africa and Brazil

–Spain gets rest of New World

–Ignored by England & France

Page 30: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Ferdinand Magellan & the Ferdinand Magellan & the First Circumnavigation of First Circumnavigation of

the Worldthe World

Ferdinand Magellan & the Ferdinand Magellan & the First Circumnavigation of First Circumnavigation of

the Worldthe World

Page 31: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Spanish Explorers and Conquistadores

Spanish seek The 3 G’s–“Gold, Glory, & God”

Page 32: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Amerigo Vespucci (1499) – “America”

Vasco Balboa (1513) – Pacific Ocean Ferdinand Magellan (1519-22) –

circumnavigates globe

Page 33: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Hernan Cortes (1519-21) – destroys the Aztec Empire & ignites Gold Rush

Page 34: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Francisco Pizarro (1532) – defeats the Incan Empire in Peru

Page 35: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Treasures from the Americas

Page 36: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.
Page 37: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Cabeza de Vaca (1527) – explores the Gulf Coast

Ponces de Leon (1573) – explores Florida

Francisco Coronado (1540-42) – explores the desert southwest

Hernando de Soto (1541) – explores the South and crosses the Mississippi

Page 38: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Spanish Explorer Routes

Page 39: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Spanish empire by the 1600’s

consisted of the part of North

AmericaCentral America

Caribbean Islands Much of South

America.

Page 40: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Spanish Colonization

Motives: “Gold, Glory, God”Rigid control from Madrid

–no self rule

Encomiendas System –large feudal estates

–brutal Native American slavery

Page 41: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

The Colonial Class The Colonial Class SystemSystem

The Colonial Class The Colonial Class SystemSystem

PeninsularesPeninsularesSpanish Spanish

ancestoryancestory

PeninsularesPeninsularesSpanish Spanish

ancestoryancestoryCreolesCreolesSpanish Spanish

and Black and Black mixture.mixture.

CreolesCreolesSpanish Spanish

and Black and Black mixture.mixture.

MestizosMestizosSpanish Spanish

and and Indian Indian

mixturemixture

MestizosMestizosSpanish Spanish

and and Indian Indian

mixturemixture

MulattosMulattosWhite White

American American and Black and Black mixturemixture

MulattosMulattosWhite White

American American and Black and Black mixturemixture

Native IndiansNative IndiansNative IndiansNative Indians Black SlavesBlack SlavesBlack SlavesBlack Slaves

Page 42: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Very stratified society–peninsulares, creoles, mestizos

“Black Legend”–Myth that Spanish only brought

evil to New World

St. Augustine (1565): oldest European settlement

Page 43: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Columbian ExchangeEurope gave the New World:

–Diseases (smallpox, influenza, cholera…)

–Horses, Cattle, Sheep–Sugar, Tea, Coffee

New World gave Europe:–Foods (corn, chocolate, potatoes)–Tobacco–Furs

Page 44: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

* Squash * Avocado * Peppers * Sweet Potatoes* Turkey * Pumpkin * Tobacco * Quinine* Cocoa * Pineapple * Cassava * POTATO* Peanut * Tomato * Vanilla * MAIZE * Syphillis

* Olive * Coffee Beans * Banana * Rice* Onion * Turnip * Honeybee * Barley* Grape * Peach * Sugar Cane * Oats* Citrus Fruits * Pear * Wheat * HORSE* Cattle * Sheep * Pig * Smallpox* Flu * Typhus * Measles * Malaria* Diptheria * Whooping Cough

Columbian ExchangeColumbian Exchange or the transfer of goods involved 3 continents, Americas, Europe and Africa

Page 45: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Overview (Big Ideas) By 1600, Europe created a global economy. In 15th & 16th centuries, the cultural

differences between Europeans & Native American were so immense that conflict was inevitable. (huge human catastrophe)

Relationships between three major colonial powers & the Native Americans.

– Spain, France, & England

Page 46: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

explorers

Page 47: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

French ExplorationGiovanni Verrazano (1524) –

Atlantic coast & NY Harbor Jacques Cartier

(1535-36) – St. Lawrence River

Samuel Champlain (1608) – founds town of Quebec

Page 48: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

Jacques Marquette and Louis Joliet (1673) – Great Lakes and Mississippi river

Robert de La Salle (1682) – follows Mississippi River to its mouth

Page 49: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

French Explorer Routes

Page 50: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.

French ColonizationFrench ColonizationMotives: Trade & ConversionGOOD RELATIONS WITH

NATIVE AMERICANSNo one would come!

–Fur-traders & missionaries

–No Protestants (Huguenots)

Not a high priority for Paris

Page 51: Early Exploration of North America 30,000 BC – 1600.
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