Transcript Mappa Mundi
The Age of Exploration
Essential Questions
• What kinds of new knowledge and technical accomplishments made it
possible for Europeans to undertake great journeys of oceanic exploration
in the 1400s?
• How and why did Europeans benefit in unique ways in their overseas
explorations from the accomplishments of other civilizations?
• What motives did Europeans have for undertaking what were expensive
and enormously risky overseas ventures?
• Why was it that Portugal and Spain, of all the European nations, led the
way in the early phases of the Age of Exploration?
• Why were the Dutch, English, and French able to take the lead later in
overseas imperial expansion?
• Why was the “Columbian Exchange” such a turning point in so many ways
in world history, and why was it so much more beneficial for the Eastern
Hemisphere than for the Western Hemisphere?
The Historical Setting for Exploration
• Europe wanted trade
• World divided into
independent spheres
• Limited previous
contact with the
Americas had occurred
• Vikings
Vikings
Renaissance Ideas That
Influenced Exploration
• Most educated men
believed that the world
was round
• There were certainly
stories of other lands,
but they were not
focused on the
Western Hemisphere
Economic Developments
• Trade routes expanded
• Europeans developed a
taste for Asian goods
• The development
of banking
The Royal Exchange, London
New Technology: Ships
• Caravels
• Ship technology
• Armaments
Caravel
New Technology: Navigation
• Astrolabe
• Compass
• Practical knowledge of
winds and currents
Astrolabe
Cartography: Early and Medieval Maps
Ptolemaic map
Jerusalem maps
Mappa Mundi
Late Medieval and
Renaissance Cartography
Portolan map
Fra Mauro’s map
Cartography and Projection
• Hipparchus
and Ptolemy
• Mercator