Transcript HERE.

Chapter 4, Section 1
What motivated Europeans to
begin the Age of Exploration and
establish colonies?
Many Europeans read explorer Marco
Polo’s book and were fascinated by what
they imagined as the exotic East.
They had high
hopes of
expanding trade,
finding precious
metals, and
converting
indigenous
people to
Christianity.
Europeans had reached a higher level of ship design,
had more accurate maps, and had new tools like the
compass (China) that helped them make long-distance
voyages.
Portuguese sea captains heard reports of a
route to India around the southern tip of Africa.
They sought to dominate the spice trade.
Under the
sponsorship of
Prince Henry the
Navigator,
Portuguese fleets
began probing
southward along
the western coast
of Africa.
Christopher Columbus believed he could reach
Asia by sailing west instead of east around Africa.
He persuaded Queen Isabella of Spain to
finance an exploratory expedition.
In October 1492,
he reached the
Americas, where
he explored the
coastline of Cuba
and the island of
Hispaniola in the
Caribbean.
Ferdinand Magellan: In September 1519, he set
sail from Spain in search of a sea passage
through the Americas.
In October 1520, Magellan passed through the tip
of South America, later called the Strait of
Magellan, into the Pacific Ocean.
Conquistadores: The Spanish conquerors of the
Americas whose firearms, organizational skills, and
determination brought them extraordinary success.
Hernan Cortés arrived at Tenochtitlán (Mexico)
and was welcomed by the Aztec monarch
Montezuma.
Cortes and his
men had
superior
weapons, Indian
allies, and
carried small
pox. After four
months, the
Aztec
surrendered.
During the 30 years after the fall of the Aztec
Empire, the Spanish expanded their control to all
of Mexico.
Francisco Pizarro: Spanish conquistador who
defeated the Incans of the Central Andes with a
mix of steel weapons, gunpowder, horses, and
smallpox.
By 1535, Pizarro
had established a
new capital at Lima
for a new colony of
the Spanish
Empire.
The Dutch formed the West India Company. In
the 17th century, Dutch settlements were
established on the North American continent and
named New Netherland.
In 1664 the English seized the colony of New
Netherland from the Dutch and renamed it New
York.
Treaty of Tordesillas: (1494) The treaty called
for a boundary line extending from north to south
through the Atlantic Ocean.
This treaty gave
Portugal control
over its route
around Africa,
and it gave Spain
rights to almost
all of the
Americas.