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The Transition from Reformation to Exploration The Age of Exploration Ch 18
21

The Transition from Reformation to Exploration The Age of Exploration Ch 18.

Dec 14, 2015

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Page 1: The Transition from Reformation to Exploration The Age of Exploration Ch 18.

The Transition from Reformation to Exploration

The Age of ExplorationCh 18

Page 2: The Transition from Reformation to Exploration The Age of Exploration Ch 18.

Lesson 1: It’s a Whole New World

• The Reformation marked a time where the power of the Catholic church had declined

• During the Renaissance, artists and writers adopted a view of life that promoted the human’s ability to change and/or control the world

• This, along with the growing wealth of independent nations, made the concept of exploration finally realistic

Page 3: The Transition from Reformation to Exploration The Age of Exploration Ch 18.

CompassChinese Invention (Qin Dynasty)

221-206 BC• First used by Chinese fortune

tellers during the Qin dynasty• Used lodestones (mineral w/

iron oxide that aligned in a north-south direction

• Someone figured out that it was better at pointing you in the right direction than predicting your future

Zheng He was the first person recorded to use the compass

as a navigational tool• He may have discovered

“America” before Columbus

Page 4: The Transition from Reformation to Exploration The Age of Exploration Ch 18.

Technological Advances

As political and religious changes were happening, navigational devices and better ships made more distant voyages possible

(astrolabe & sextant)

Page 5: The Transition from Reformation to Exploration The Age of Exploration Ch 18.

Now the Europeans were ready to explore

-CARAVELMany mastsNew rudder

(easier to steer)Faster

Page 6: The Transition from Reformation to Exploration The Age of Exploration Ch 18.

Got a map?Claudius Ptolemy• Renaissance led to the study of

ancient Arab maps• Ptolemy drew maps, his book

Geography was discovered by Europeans in 1406

• Printing press invention allowed maps to be easily sold all over Europe

• His ideas on cartography (science of map making) and his system of longitude/latitude were very influential

Ptolemy’s East-SE Asia

Page 7: The Transition from Reformation to Exploration The Age of Exploration Ch 18.

Why Explore?• ambitious monarchs from France, Spain, England & Portugal wanted better (safer/faster) access to trade with the East•Portugal headed toward Africa, while Spain, England, & France headed west

Page 8: The Transition from Reformation to Exploration The Age of Exploration Ch 18.

Let the Race Begin in Portugal

Prince Henry the Navigator• Led the way• Developed a school focused

on navigation– Made advances in cartography

Bartolomeu Dias• Commissioned to find a

water route to India• Sailed around the tip of

Africa and into the Indian ocean

• Didn’t make it to India b/c his crew was afraid and made him stop

Page 9: The Transition from Reformation to Exploration The Age of Exploration Ch 18.

Success in India

Vasco da Gama• Successfully

returned from India with jewels and spices

• A new trade route was established

Page 10: The Transition from Reformation to Exploration The Age of Exploration Ch 18.

Spain’s turn

Christopher Columbus• August, 1492

– Nina– Pinta– Santa Maria

• Landed in the Bahamas– San Salvador then Cuba– Explored Puerto Rico, the

Virgin Islands, Jamaica, & Trinidad

• No riches & certain he found the East

“America”• A German geographer,

Martin Waldseemuller,accepted the claim of Amerigo Vespucci the he landed on the mainland before Columbus.

• He published a book and named the continent America in 1507

Page 11: The Transition from Reformation to Exploration The Age of Exploration Ch 18.

Are we there yet?

Ferdinand Magellan• Finished what Columbus

started• 1520- he headed south and

found a way around the Americas

• The passage is called the Strait of Magellan

• He named the Pacific Ocean b/c it was peaceful (or pacific)

• Unfortunately, he was killed but his crew continued back to Spain through the new route

First to circumnavigate the world

Page 12: The Transition from Reformation to Exploration The Age of Exploration Ch 18.

England Takes the Lead

John Cabot• 1497 – Henry VII sponsored

Cabot who explored Newfoundland

• Interest was limited until….

Queen Elizabeth – a visionary• Sir Humphrey Gilbert & Sir

Walter Raleigh were sent to colonize America

• Raleigh named the territory he explored Virginia

• The Chesapeake Bay region

Page 13: The Transition from Reformation to Exploration The Age of Exploration Ch 18.

Je m’appelle Jacques Cartier

• 1524 Giovanni da Verrazano mapped the East Coast

• Cartier sailed past Newfoundland and entered the St. Lawrence River

• Exploration halted because the French Protestants and Catholics were at war

Page 14: The Transition from Reformation to Exploration The Age of Exploration Ch 18.

Meanwhile….

Successful Spanish• Build a great empire in America• Enslave Native Americans

– To grow sugarcane– To mine gold/silver

• African slaves – were brought to work farms

• Cortes conquered the Aztec• Pizarro conquered the Inca

Become Enemies with England• Henry VIII breaks from the

Catholic Church• Spain tried to stop the spread

of Protestantism in the Netherlands

• The English came to the aid of the Dutch

• The Spanish Armada was defeated by England

• Now the English and Dutch were ready to explore again

Page 15: The Transition from Reformation to Exploration The Age of Exploration Ch 18.

The Spanish Defeat the Native Americans in Central and South America

Page 16: The Transition from Reformation to Exploration The Age of Exploration Ch 18.

The Commercial Revolution

Mercantilism• A country must gain

power by building up its supply of gold and silver

The best method: Export (sell) more than you

import (buy) Set up colonies to produce

goods not found in the mother country

The result: Trading Posts

Page 17: The Transition from Reformation to Exploration The Age of Exploration Ch 18.

Developing Market Economy

Why is Trade Important?• Promotes wealth• The need for trade creates the

idea for needing investors (someone who will give money upfront to start a business with an expectation to earn more money in return)

Cottage Industry – peasants hired to work from home• Merchants were frustrated

with artisans and guilds who charged too much for goods

• Peasants were hired for cheaper pay

• Called the cottage industry b/c they lived in cottages

Page 18: The Transition from Reformation to Exploration The Age of Exploration Ch 18.

Columbian Exchange

Global Exchange• Europe traded with

the world• People, goods,

technology, ideas, & diseases were exchanged

Page 19: The Transition from Reformation to Exploration The Age of Exploration Ch 18.

Products

Items to Europe• Corn• Potatoes• Squash• Beans• Tomatoes• Chocolate• Chili peppers• Peanuts• Tobacco

Items to America• Grains

– Wheat, barley, rye, oats, rice

• Coffee• Tropical fruits• Animals

– Pigs, sheep, cattle, horses, chickens

• Sugarcane – Brought from Asia to farm

Page 20: The Transition from Reformation to Exploration The Age of Exploration Ch 18.

“I think I feel under the weather”European diseases kill millions of Native Americans

• Smallpox• Measles• malaria

Page 21: The Transition from Reformation to Exploration The Age of Exploration Ch 18.

L2 The Scientific Revolution