Transcript Chapter 11
CHAPTER 1
The Atlantic World
(c. 700 B.C. – A.D. 1600)
Chapter 1 Section 1
The Native American World
I. Describe how humans settled the Americas and adapted to a
variety of environments in North America.
A.
Settlement of the Americas
1) People came from Asia across a “land bridge”
2) Population spread out across the Western
Hemisphere
a) North to Arctic Circle
b) South to the tip of South America
3) Native Americans
a) Settled in different regions
b) Distinct languages
I. Describe how humans settled the Americas and adapted to a
variety of environments in North America.
B.
North American Life
1) Compare Native American Societies
a) distinct cultures arose from differences in local
climate and terrain
b) adapted their ways to fit their environment
2) North – Ice
3) Northwest - Heavy rainfall – Fishing
4) California – Pacific Coast – Mountains and Valleys
5) Plateau – Rivers
6) The Great Basin – Mostly dry land
7) The Southwest – Dry and Drought
8) The Plains – Hunting and Farming
9) The Northeast – Woodlands and Lakes
10) The Southeast – Hunting and Farming, Swamps and
Atlantic Coast, Rivers and Woodlands
II. Compare the shared beliefs of Native Americans.
A.
Social Structure
1) Kinship – family relationships
a) provided medical care, child care, education
2) Clan – groups of families who are all descended from
a common ancestor
B.
Religion
1) Belief that the most powerful forces are spiritual
2) Believed that failure to follow traditional rituals would
result in misfortune and disaster
C.
Preserving Culture
1) Oral History – stories and traditions passed from one
generation to the next by word of mouth.
III. Explain the role of trade and land in Native American
economies.
A.
Trade
1) Barter – Act of trading goods for other goods
2) Trade promoted social and economic ties
B.
Land
1) Believed land could not be sold, traded, or owned
2) Right to use and respect land
Chapter 1 Section 2
The European World
I. Summarize life in Europe during the Early Middle Ages.
A.
Early Middle Ages
1) Middle Ages - medieval period, c. 500 to 1300 A.D.
2) After the Roman Empire collapsed
B.
European Invasions
1) Germanic tribes and Viking warriors
2) Out of Arabia came the Muslim Empire
a) Islam – religion based on the Koran
b) Prophet Muhammad
I. Summarize life in Europe during the Early Middle Ages.
C.
Feudalism
1) Political and economic system that characterized
the Middle Ages
2) Lord - powerful noble - owned large
landholdings
3) Serfs – peasants – provided life time servitude in
exchange for shelter and protection
4) Manor – the large estate of a Lord
I. Summarize life in Europe during the Early Middle Ages.
D.
Medieval Religion
1) Roman Catholic Church governed Christian life
2) Pope – leader of the church
3) Clergy – church officials
4) Pope and clergy were educated and could read
and study the Bible
II. Describe the changes that began in the Late Middle Ages.
A.
Late Middle Ages
1) c. 1000 A.D.
2) Period of increased trade and growth of cities
B.
The Crusades
1) Holy wars fought to free Jerusalem from the Turks
2) Impact was increased Europeans’ awareness of the world
and accelerated economic change
II. Describe the changes that began in the Late Middle Ages.
C.
Growth of Cities – Major Effects
1) Middle Class – created group of merchants, traders, and
artisans
2) Revived a money economy
3) Eventual break down of the feudal system
D.
Rise of Monarchs
1) Monarch – person who rules over a kingdom
2) Protected trade routes and kept peace
3) Magna Carta
a) granted liberty and justice
b) took power away from monarchs and gave power to
the people
II. Describe the changes that began in the Late Middle Ages.
E.
Rise of Universities
1) New sources of knowledge
2) Science and Math
3) Latin was translated into many languages
F.
“Black Death”
1) Rapid and ugly death to 1/3 of the entire European
population
2) Caused starvation, riots, and economic collapse
III. Analyze the changes brought about by the Renaissance.
A.
Renaissance – “Rebirth”
1)
2)
3)
4)
5)
6)
7)
Era of great creativity and change – quest for knowledge
Art, literature, science, philosophy, economics, politics
Michelangelo, da Vinci, Shakespeare
Milan, Venice, Florence
sculptors, poets, architects
Humanism – heroic, emotion, realistic, physical
Printing Press – Johann Gutenberg – communication and
new ideas on paper
8) Biggest Change – new spirit of questioning
III. Analyze the changes brought about by the Renaissance.
B.
Reformation
1) Movement led by Martin Luther to reform the Church
2) The Bible, not the Church, was the authority
3) Follower referred to as Protestants
Chapter 1 Section 3
The World of the West Africans
I. Describe the initial meetings between West Africans and
Europeans.
A.
Relationship based on trade
1) Mutually beneficial trade
2) Salt for GOLD
B.
West African Cultures
1) Geography and livelihoods
a) rainforest, resource-rich, mines
b) savanna – region of grasslands and scattered trees
c) desert – used caravans of camels
2) Family
a) kinship groups
b) lineage – descent in a line from a common ancestor
3) Religion
a) customs and ceremonies
II. Describe how a trading relationship developed between
Europe and the kingdoms of West Africa.
A.
Benin Kingdom
1) A wealthy kingdom famous for its art
2) Palm oil, ivory, and wood
B.
Songhai Kingdom
1) Empire located in the grasslands south of the Sahara
2) Askia Muhammad – famous monarch ruler
a) created a government with laws and taxes
3) Timbuktu – capital center of learning
III. Summarize how African slavery differed from the way
Europeans began to practice slavery.
A.
Europe
1) Land was scarce – in short supply – and very valuable
2) Land made you wealthy
B.
Africa
1)
2)
3)
4)
Land was plentiful
Land did not make you wealthy
Power was gained by the number of people you ruled
Growing kingdoms needed workers – shortage of labor –
and slaves were labor
5) Africans’ concept of slavery differed from slavery as it
developed in the Americas
Chapter 1 Section 4
The Atlantic World is Born
I. Identify Columbus and describe the circumstances that led to
his explorations.
A.
Christopher Columbus
1) Italian navigator whose voyage to America began a
permanent exchange among Native Americans, Europeans,
Asians and Africans
II. Describe the challenges the expedition faced.
A.
Search for a western route to the Indies (Asia)
1)
2)
3)
4)
5)
6)
Sent by Spanish Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand
Nina, Pinta, and Santa Maria – 1492
Sailed to the Bahamas – called natives “Indians”
Total of four trips to the Americas
Died never knowing how much he changed history
1507 – Amerigo Vespucci
III. Describe the positive and negative impact of Columbus’s
journeys.
A.
Columbian Exchange
1) Trade brought into existence between the Americas and
Europe, Africa, and Asia
B.
Native Americans devastated
1) Diseases causing death
2) Smallpox, typhus, measles
III. Describe the positive and negative impact of Columbus’s
journeys.
C.
Europeans Gain Wealth
1) Treaty of Tordesillas
a) benefited Spain and Portugal
2) Europeans wanted to:
a) obtain land
b) obtain natural resources
c) convert natives to Christianity
3) Natural Resources
a) Europeans planned to make finished products
b) Gold and Potatoes were two beneficial resources
III. Describe the positive and negative impact of Columbus’s
journeys.
D.
Africans Enslaved
1) Europeans seized West Africans as slaves to work on
plantations in the Americas
a) plantation – large farm that produced crops to sell
b) cash crops – sugar, pineapple, tobacco
2) Slavery’s affect on West Africa
a) slavery destroyed some societies including the Benin
Kingdom