Transcript Chapter 2
Chapter 2
The Age of Exploration
(1350-1550)
Chapter 2
The Age of Exploration
Section 1
Europeans Set Sail
The European Economy Grows
Black Death – plague swept through
Europe, killing approx. 30 million
Created a shortage of workers
Commercial Revolution – great change
in European economy; merchants and
craftspeople became more aggressive
about making profit
cities became rich trading centers
The European Economy Grows
(continued)
Capital – money or property used to
make more money; merchant families
wanted more – higher prices = more
profit
Medici family opened banks in Florence to
make loans to monarchs, nobles and other
merchants; bankers gained increasing influence
around Europe
Joint-stock companies – investors
share profits and losses of company;
helped merchants raise money
(reduced individual risk)
The Renaissance
Renaissance – rebirth of the arts and learning of ancient
Greece and Rome; began in Italy mid-1300s, spread
through Europe through early 1600s
Europeans used new wealth to support education and the
arts
Belief that human beings could achieve anything
motivated Europeans to explore the rest of the world
Leonardo da Vinci – “renaissance man;” Mona Lisa
Johann Gutenberg – movable type for printing presses
Made it easier and less expensive to copy books
Technological advances led to exploration
Magnetic compass; astrolabe – charted position of the stars = ship
position
Trade with Africa and Asia
Great wealth came from trade with Africa (gold,
ivory, salt, slaves) and Asia (silk and spices)
Long overland routes to Europe (ex. Silk Road)
Western European nations wanted to find sea
routes to Africa and Asia because land routes
were less reliable and had to depend on others
(those who controlled land); prices increased
because trade goods passed through hands of
many different merchants
Marco Polo’s book about his travels in Asia were
popular
Europeans wanted to learn more about the world,
spread Christianity and make a profit
The Portuguese Explore Africa
Portugal = leader in overseas exploration (early
1400s)
Prince Henry “the Navigator” built a navigation
school on the coast of Portugal (finest
mapmakers, sailors, and shipbuilders)
developed the caravel – small ship with triangular
sails; could sail against the wind; improved the
compass
Paid for expeditions to explore the west coast of
Africa – began the European trade in African slaves;
consequence = more warfare among West African
Kingdoms
Bartolomeu Dias – first to sail around southern
tip of Africa (Cape of Good Hope)
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The Great Age of
Exploration
Chapter 2
The Age of Exploration
Section 2
Voyages to the Americas
Columbus’s Bold Idea
Believed Asia (Indies) = west across the
Atlantic
Portuguese would not fund voyage because
the king preferred Dias’s route around Africa
After the Reconquista (ongoing struggle to drive
Moors from Spain), Ferdinand and Isabella
agreed to pay for voyage
bring back wealth, claim any lands he explored for Spain
Would become viceroy (royal governor) of lands
explored
Crossing the Ocean
Left Spain in August, 1492, land spotted
October, 1492 (33 days from Canary
Islands)
Nina, Pinta, and the Santa Maria
Voyage was daring because many
people believed that such a long
voyage would be impossible
Columbus’s First Explorations
Landed on island in Bahamas – called it
San Salvador (Holy Savior) – believed it to
be off the coast of China or Japan
Taino – natives on Hispaniola; he called
them Indians (believed he had landed in
the Indies)
Spent more than two months exploring;
built small colony on coast of Hispaniola –
La Navidad
Europe Learns of Columbus’s
Voyage
Ferdinand and Isabella excited about news of findings,
made Columbus admiral and a governor
Isabella wanted to convert Taino to Christianity
Columbus believed it was acceptable to enslave Taino
As a result of Columbus’s discovery, Spain persuaded
the pope to create the Line of Demarcation securing
its right to lands west of the line – Portuguese king
objected
Treaty of Tordesillas – signed by Spain and Portugal –
moved line giving Portugal more opportunity to claim
lands unexplored by other Europeans
As a result, Portugal was able to set up the colony of Brazil
Columbus’s Later Voyages
Returned to La Navidad in 1493 – found it
destroyed, everyone killed
Spent time exploring even though he was
governor
Living conditions poor partly due to difficulty
growing crops
Problems made Ferdinand and Isabella
unhappy
Columbus never made any further
discoveries, etc.
Chapter 2
The Age of Exploration
Section 3
The Race for Trade Routes
Portugal’s Great Discoveries
Vasco da Gama established trade route
between Portugal and India (found India had
long history of trade with Muslim and Italian
merchants) – Portugal won race for a new sea
route to wealth of Asia
Pedro Álvars Cabral accidentally landed in
South America; claimed land for Portugal thinking
it was a large island
Brazil’s eastern shore was on Portugal’s side of the
Line of Demarcation
Eventually founded forts, trading posts and settlements
Cabot and Vespucci Explore
John Cabot – Italian sailing for England –
found North America (present-day
Newfoundland)
Became the basis of England’s claim to land
in North America
Amerigo Vespucci – Italian sailing for
Spain – coast of S. America
German map-maker published his letters and
a map labeled with the name “America”
across the new continents in his honor – the
name stuck
Balboa Reaches the Pacific
Vasco Nuñez de Balboa arrived in Panama
after failing as a farmer in the Caribbean
Heard of another sea – traveled across land
until he saw (from a mountaintop) what he
named the South Sea
No way for ships to cross Panama
Attempted to have ships carried across mountains piece
by piece
Success threatened Spanish authorities –
charged with treason and executed
Sailing Around the Globe
Ferdinand Magellan (Portuguese captain sailing
for Spain) – believed there was a sea passage
through South America to “South Sea”
Sailed through narrow strait at the southern tip
of S. America – Strait of Magellan
Changed name to Pacific Ocean (peaceful)
Magellan killed in battle in the Philippines
Crew led by Juan Sebastián de Elcano were the
first to circumnavigate the world (18 sailors
remained)
Chapter 2
The Age of Exploration
Section 4
The Opening of the Atlantic
A Shift in Trade
Italy lost monopoly on overland trade as
Portuguese and Spanish began using the
Atlantic; greater profits made because traders no
longer dealing with third-parties (ex. Muslim
traders)
Portugal controlled as much as 75% of spice
trade between Europe and Asia
Other European nations got involved in trade
All began looking at Atlantic as gateway to the
wealth of the Americas
Portuguese started the European trade in
African slaves
The Columbian Exchange
Transfer of plants, animals and diseases to
the “New World;” plants and animals to the
“Old World” – Asia, Europe and Africa
Corn, tomatoes, potatoes, tobacco and cocoa to
Europe, etc.
Europeans brought horses (never seen by
natives before), cattle and pigs; wheat and
barley; rice and bananas
Natives had little or no immunity to diseases
(measles, smallpox, typhus) – hundreds of
thousands died
The Search for a Northwest
Passage
Spain and Portugal busy with Central and South
America, other European nations looking for
Northwest Passage through N. America to
Pacific
Verrazano (France) – sailed along coast from
present-day North Carolina to Maine
Jacques Cartier (France) – two trips to what
is now Eastern Canada – sailed up the St.
Lawrence River all the way to present-day
Montreal
The Search for a Northwest Passage
(continued)
Samuel de Champlain (France) – followed
Cartier’s old paths; visited the Great Lakes led by
Huron guides; founded small colony on the St.
Lawrence River = Quebec; explorations became
basis of France’s claim to much of Canada
Henry Hudson (England and Netherlands) – first
sailed to present-day New York; returned for
England – found huge bay (Hudson Bay)
Northwest Passage was not found by any of
these men, but explorations led to increased
interest in N. America
Important Info. From Sections 3&4
European race for sea route to Asia was won
by Portugal – started the European trade in
African slaves
Cabral accidentally discovered the coast of
what is now Brazil
French claims to much of Canada began with
Champlain’s explorations
Champlain discovered the Great Lakes with
the aid of Huron Indian guides
The failure of Verrazano, Cartier, Hudson and
others to find a Northwest Passage did not
dampen European interest in North America
Sections 3 and 4 (continued)
Balboa first saw the South Sea from a
mountaintop in Panama
After Balboa discovered the South Sea and
made alliances with American Indians in
what is now Panama, Spanish authorities
had him executed for treason
Balboa’s discovery of the South Sea
convinced Magellan to sail west to reach
Asia
The South Sea was renamed the Pacific
during the voyage of Magellan
Magellan discovered the passage he sought
through South America at the southern tip of
the continent
Sections 3 and 4 (continued)
The Strait of Magellan is the narrow sea
passage discovered in South America by
Magellan
Verrazano was an Italian sea captain who
sailed under the flag of France
Henry Hudson was an English captain
who sailed under the flags of England and
the Netherlands
The North American area explored in the
1500s by Jacques Cartier was what is
now eastern Canada