Chapter 13 Section 1 - District Five Schools of
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Transcript Chapter 13 Section 1 - District Five Schools of
Bell Ringer
#1
Locate the following:
a. Portugal is located on the ____ continent, west of
____.
*Use Chapter 13, Section 1!
Exploration and Expansion
Motives and Means
Portugal and Spain
First European empires to explore new sea routes
Dutch Republic (the Netherlands), France, and
England
Second group of European empires to explore new
worlds
Motives and Means
Europe was stationary for
1,000 years
Fantasized about the
“exotic East” (Asiaspices/silks)
14th c (1300s)- Ottoman
Turks restricted Europe’s
travels west
Controlled the only land
route
Europeans were forced to
find a new route
Motives and Means
God, Gold, and Glory
God- Convert Natives to Catholicism
Cortes- Spanish conquistador
Gold- Economic Gains
Expand trade to Asia
Spices, silks, precious metals
Glory- Fame
Adventure
Secular (worldly) desires
The Portugal Trading Empire
1420- Prince Henry the
Navigator
Fleets (ships) sailed
South down the coast of
West Africa
Gold Coast
1488- Bartholomeu
Dias
Sailed around the tip of
Africa
Cape of Good Hope
The Portuguese Trading Empire
1498- Vasco de Gama
Continued Dias route
Cut across the Indian Ocean to
India
Calcutta (India), SPICES
1509- Portugal takes control of
the Spice Islands
Defeat Ottoman Turkish and
Indian fleets
Melaka- spice trade port
China would not let Portugal
colonize Asia
Treaty that allowed Portugal to
export spices
Bell Ringer
Identify the following:
a.
Christopher Columbus-
Define the following:
a.
Mercantilism-
*Use Chapter 13, Section 1!
#2
Voyages to the Americas
Christopher Columbus- Believed he could reach Asia
by sailing West (Portugal sailed East, around Africa)
Italian
Queen Isabella of Spain financed his voyage
1492- landed in the “Indies”
Cuba/Caribbean
Voyages to the Americas
1494- Treaty of
Tordesillas (TAWR-duh-SEEyuhs)
Spain and Portugal
divided world with
imaginary line
Portugal-East
(controlled trade
route around Africa
to Asia)
Spain- West (North
and South America)
Voyages to the Americas
John Cabot- Explored the New England coast for
England
Amerigo Vespucci (veh-SPOO-chee)- Named the New World
America
Ptolemy: world map, copy from 1482
The Spanish Empire
Conquistadors- Spanish “conquerors” of America
15oos- Spain established colonies
(settlements/communities)
1533- Spain controlled South America after Francisco
Pizarro defeated the Incans
1550- Spain controlled Mexico after Hernando Cortes
defeated the Aztecs
Natives were used as slave labor on sugar plantations
and in gold/silver mines
Depleted population due to forced labor, starvation, and
disease
Example: Mexico’s Population- 1519, 25 million; 1630, 1 million
New Spain (Spanish Empire)
Competition
Early 1600s (17th c)
Dutch Colony- New Netherland
Present day New York
French Colonies- Northern N.
America and Louisiana Territory
Present day Canada and Louisiana,
Arkansas, Missouri, Iowa,
Minnesota, North Dakota, South
Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas,
Oklahoma, Colorado, Wyoming, and
Montana
English Colonies- Atlantic
Seaboard
Present day Georgia, South Carolina,
North Carolina, Virginia (1st),
Maryland, Delaware, New Jersey,
New York, Pennsylvania,
Massachusetts (2nd), Connecticut,
Rhode Island, and New Hampshire.
Economic Impact
Gold and Silver
Plantations- Large farms
that used slave labor
Potatoes, Cocoa, Corn,
Tobacco, Sugar, Cotton,
Vanilla, Livestock
Columbian Exchangeextensive exchange
(trade) of plants and
animals between the Old
and New Worlds
Also brought European
diseases to the New World
Economic Impact
Colony- Settlement of people living in a new territory
Politically (government) and economically (trade) linked with
parent country
Mercantilism- 17th c. economic principle
The prosperity of a nation depended on a large supply of gold
and silver
Fueled by trade of natural resources found in the New World
Balance of Trade- difference in value of exports v. imports
Goal- export more than import (sell more than buy)
Colonies provided raw materials and a market for
manufactured goods
Bell Ringer
Identify the following:
a.
Dutch-
Define the following:
a.
Bureaucracy-
*Use Chapter 13, Section 3!
#3
Southeast Asia in the Era of the Spice Trade
Asian Mainland States
1500s-1700s
Mainland Asia was stable (no
wars, bad economy, etc)
China
Burma
Vietnam
Laos
Thailand
Cambodia
Malay Peninsula
Taken over by the Ottoman
Turks
Spice Trade
Spread Islam
Melaka (trade port)
The Arrival of Europeans
1511- Portugal seized
Melaka and Moluccas
(Spice Islands)
Established trading posts
along the coast
Early 1600s- Dutch drove
Portugal out of the spice
trade
Used the island of Java as
a fort to protect Dutch
possessions in Southeast
Asia
The Arrival of Europeans
Mainland States- part of
a continent
(distinguished from
peninsulas or offshore
islands)
See “Asian Mainland
States”
Mainland states united
and drove out Europeans
Maritime
(island/peninsula
nations) remained under
European control
Spice Trade
Religious and Political Systems
1500s-1800s
Maritime Nations and
the Philippines
Increased Islam
(Ottoman-Turks) and
Christianity (Europeans)
converts (changing from
one religion to another)
Mainland Nations
Buddhism was combined
with traditional beliefs
Religious and Political Systems
Buddhist style of kingship
King was considered superior to other human beings
Link between human society and universe
Burma, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia
Javanese style of kingship
King was sacred
Maintained the balance between the sacred and material world
Java Island
Islamic Sultans
Mortal, defender of the faith, aristocratic (wealthy/upper class)
Bureaucracy- body of non-elective government officials
Malay Peninsula, Indonesia
Chinese style of kingship
Emperor ruled according to the teachings of Confucius
Mortal, appointed by Heaven, talented and virtuous, link between Heaven and
Earth
China, Vietnam
Bell Ringer
Define the following:
a.
Plantation-
b.
Triangular Trade-
*Use Chapter 13, Section 2!
#4
Africa in an Age of Transition
The Slave Trade
African slaves
Southwest Asia
Domestic servants
Europe
Domestic servants
Americas
Increased demand
Plantation- large agricultural estates
Sugar Cane- difficult to grow/harvest; required more slaves
1st - Brazil & Caribbean Islands
Growth of the Slave Trade
1518- 1st ship of slaves brought to the
Americas
Triangular Trade- New global
economy
Africa to the Americas- Slaves
Americas to Europe- Raw Materials
(tobacco, molasses, sugar, cotton, etc)
Europe to Africa- Manufactured
Goods (guns, cloth, rum)
Early 16th to late 19th c.
10 million slaves
Middle Passage- Africa to America
Many slaves died
Effects of the Slave Trade
1st African slaves were prisoners
of war
Europeans traded with Slave
Traders
Africans who kidnapped other
Africans
Coastal regions and inland
Impact on African Societies
Depopulation
Youngest/Strongest men and
women
Increase in war
Lost faith in gods
Deterioration of art
Increase in human sacrifice
Bell Ringer
#5
Name the 5 European nations that colonized the
New World (in order)!
*Use Chapter 13
Colonization in North America
Spanish
New Spain –
Central America
Built a new
empire
Spanish churches
and homes
Spanish
Date
Explorer
Area
Reason
1492
Christopher
Columbus
Western sea route
to Asia (Indies)
Trade
1513
Juan Ponce de
Leon
Explored Florida
Keep out the
French
Fountain of Youth
1519
Hernando Cortes
Central America
Gold
God (Religion)
Columbus’
Route
Cortes’ Route
Portuguese
Brazil
1500
Portugal's side of the
Treaty of Tordesillas
Divided the world in
half (western- Spain,
eastern- Portugal)
Used for trade and
plantations
French
New France –
North America
Goals
Trade (fur)
Catholicism (convert
Natives)
No towns or families
Good relations with
Native Americans
Military alliances
French
Year
Explorer
Area
Reason
1534
Jacques Cartier
St. Lawrence River
(Canada/US
border)
Trade
1608
Samuel de
Champlain
Quebec, Canada
Permanent
settlement
1682
Robert Cavelier
Mississippi Valley
(Louisiana
Territory)
Trade with
Spanish
Robert Cavelier
English
3 Colonial Regions
New England
Focused on Puritan religion
Manufacturing/Trade
Middle (Mid Atlantic)
Religious diversity
Some farming and trade
Southern
Concerned only with
economy
Plantation system, cash
crops, slavery
English
Date
Name
Region
Significance
1607
John Smith
Southern
•Ship Captain
•Helped found
Jamestown, Va
1612
John Rolfe
Southern
Brought tobacco to
English Coloniesprimary cash crop
1630
John Winthrop
New England
Founded
Massachusetts for
Puritans
1681
William Penn
Middle (Mid
Atlantic)
Founded
Pennsylvania for
Quakers
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