Founding of the Thirteen Colonies
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Transcript Founding of the Thirteen Colonies
New World
Beginnings
33,000 B.C. - 1769 A.D.
The First Discoverers
The Bering Land Bridge
was formed during the Ice
Age by glacial ice caps
lowering the sea level.
Ice Age Migrations
Hunter-gatherers
from
Siberia crossed the land
bridge following wild game
and settled in the New
World.
These
intrepid travelers
became the ancestors of the
Native Americans – in this
sense they were the true
discovers of America.
The Corridor Closes
Around
10,000 B.C. the ice
caps began to melt and the
land bridge disappeared
cutting off the migrations.
The Filling of the New World
By the time of
the European
contact in 1492 it
is estimated that
72 million people
inhabited the two
continents.
Diversity of Culture
The Native Americans
developed a great
diversity of culture
with over two thousand
separate languages.
Civilizations ranged from hunter-
gathers to complex urbanized
agricultural civilizations.
The Native Americans established large,
bustling cities, made strikingly accurate
astronomical observations and had highly
developed systems of mathematics.
Development of Agriculture
The
size and
sophistication of
Native American
civilizations in
Mexico and South
America can best
be attributed to the
development of
agriculture.
Agrarian systems were based on
the “three sisters” planting
system of corn (maize), beans
and squash – with corn being the
most important staple crop.
Development Patterns
Native
American
(Indian)
civilization was
more highly
developed in
Central and
South America.
By the arrival of
the Europeans
much of North
America was
thinly populated
with vast areas
virtually
untouched.
Most
Native
Americans in
the North
lived in small,
scattered, and
impermanent
settlements.
The Iroquois Confederacy
One major exception to
this in North America
was the Iroquois
Confederacy which was
able to dominate its
neighbors through
military alliances,
sustained by political
and organizational
skills.
Indirect Discoverers
Vikings
establish
colonies of
Vinland in
Nova Scotia c. 1000 A.D.
The
Scandinavians lacked a
centralized Nation-State and
so did not support these
settlements.
The Crusaders
The
Christian
crusaders were
indirectly responsible
for the discovery of
America because they
brought back news of
valuable Far Eastern
spices, drugs, and silk
Marco Polo
The
Venetian
trader Marco
Polo also
brought back
stories of the
wealth of the
orient.
Reasons for Exploration
The Renaissance
Political
unification and
the rise of absolute
monarchs.
Nationalism
Reformation
and Counter-
Reformation
Italian spice monopoly and
the fall of Constantinople
to the Muslims.
Spanish Reconquista
Europeans
wanted to discover a
new, shorter route to eastern Asia
in order to
break
the hold that Muslim
merchants had on trade with Asia,
reduce the price of goods from
Asia and
gain more profits for themselves.
Early Exploration
Portugal
under
Prince Henry the
Navigator
wanted to
establish a trade
route to the East
around Africa.
The Caravel
The development
of the new sailing
ship the Caravel
allowed for closer
sailing to the
wind.
The new technology
allowed the Portuguese to
begin sailing south along
the coast of Africa.
Navigational Tools
Compass
Cross-staff
Quadrant
Bartholomew Diaz
In
1487, Diaz
rounded the Cape
of Good Hope at
the southern tip of
Africa, but the fear
of mutiny forced
him to return to
Portugal.
Vasco da Gama
Da
Gama, with the aid of an
Arab pilot, made a successful
journey across the Arabian Sea
to the Indian port of Calicut.
He
returned
with a great
profit in
spices.
The Plantation System
Plantation
slavery is
established in
Africa by the
Portuguese.
Spain and Glory
Spain
was united
into a single
nation-state when
the African
Moors were
expelled from the
Iberian
Peninsula.
This
event (the Reconquista) was
brought about by the unification of
the Houses of Aragon and Castile
with the marriage of Isabella of
Castille and Ferdinand of Aragon.
Christopher Columbus
Genovese
sailor /
navigator - he
persuaded Queen
Isabella of Castille of
the possibility of
finding a direct route
to Asia by the west
across the Atlantic.
He
set sail on August 3,
1492 with three ships - the
Niña, The Pinta, and the
Santa Maria.
He
landed on San Salvador island
on October 12 believing he had
reached the outskirts of the Indies.
Columbus would go
to his death believing
he had found a new
route to the Indies.
His name for the
native peoples,
Indians, would stick.
Catholic Conflict
The
Spanish and the Portuguese
sought intercession from the
Pope to avoid conflict over the
new lands.
Treaty of Tordesillas divided
the new lands between Spain in
the west and Portugal in the
Economic Contact
A new
interdependent global
economic system emerged after
Columbus's discovery
Europe provided markets,
technology and capital.
While the New World provided
the raw materials.
The Old and New World
Exchange
Plants and animals from
distant ecosystems were
introduced and
exchanged.
From America: beans,
peppers, maize (corn),
pumpkin and squash,
tomato, potato and
tobacco.
From Europe: apple,
peach, citrus, eggplant,
olive, sugar cane.
Population Explosion
The
introduction of
American plants around
the world resulted in
rapid population growth
in Europe.
Price Revolution
The flood of precious metal
from the New World to
Europe resulted in a price
revolution that raised prices
causing inflation.
Gold
and Silver
from the New
World also led
to the growth of
capitalism
Animals were brought
from Europe:
Horses
Pigs
Cattle
Europeans also brought diseases.
Smallpox
Malaria
Yellow
Fever.
Native American
populations were quickly
decimated.
It is estimated that 90%
of the native population
died within a century.
Explorers and Conquistadors
Spain became the leading
European explorer and
colonizer of the New World
Major Explorers
Ponce
de Leon
explored Florida
in search of the
“Fountain of
Youth.”
Coronado
explored the
desert southwest in
search of the “Seven
Cities of Cibola.”
Hernando
de Soto
explored the South and
crossed the Mississippi
River.
Vasco
Balboa
crossed the
Isthmus of
Panama and
saw the Pacific
Ocean.
Ferdinand Magellan sailed
around the tip of South
America and his crew
finished the first
circumnavigation of the
globe.
FERDINAND
MAGELLAN
Conquistadors
Spanish
Conquistadors both
explored and conquered
parts of the Caribbean,
Central America, South
America and Mexico.
Notable Conquistadors
Hernan
Cortes destroyed the
Aztec Empire in 1521.
Francisco
Pizarro defeated
the Incas in 1532.
The Encomienda System
The
institution of
encomienda allowed the
European governments to
give Indians to colonists if
they promised to
Christianize them.
The Spanish soldiers and
missionaries mistreated
and killed thousands of
Native Americans.
The Spread of Spanish Culture.
By the end of the 16th century
Spain began to fortify and settle
its northern borderlands in
order to protect its southern
domains from encroachments
by England and France.
A Spanish
expedition
established the settlement
of New Mexico in 1609.
By this time Mexico had
many large cities.
Pope’s Rebellion
In
1680 the Pueblo Indians
destroyed every Catholic
church in the province of
New Mexico , but the
Spanish returned by the
1700s.
Texas and California
The Spanish began to
establish strings of forts
and missions in Texas
and California during the
1700s.