Rise of the Atlantic world
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Transcript Rise of the Atlantic world
Chapter 2
Beginnings of European Exploration
Dynamics for Expansion
Cultural
○ Renaissance
Economic
○ Desire to break from Italian
monopolies
○ Mercantilism / capitalism
expanding
Change
○ Catholic church
diminishing
○ Creation of nation states
○ Technological advances
Compass
Stern rudders
○ Desire for goods
African Peoples
Changes in Africa
Productive Trans-Saharan
Kinship
trade established
West Africa wealthy
○ Strong extended families
Farmers
○ Demand for Gold increasing
○ Intensive cultivation
○ More involvement from
Religion
Europeans
West Africans
○ Animistic spiritual truth
Art
Leading Powers
○ Moralistic tales
Mali
○ Music, ritual dances
○ Salt / gold trade
○ Timbuktu
○ Muslim
Songhai
○ Succeeded Mali Empire
Why is it important??
Portugal and the Atlantic
1440-1600
Leads the shift of power from
Mediterranean
Establishes direct contact
with resources (West Africa)
Prince Henry the Navigator
(mid-1400s)
○ Supported by merchants to
find a direct route
○ Encouraged mapping of
African coast
○ Leads to Dias/ Gama/ Cabral
○ Create direct link between
West Africans and Europeans
Slavery
○ Pre-established in Africa
Indebtedness within the
tribe/community
Traded through Middle
Eastern/ Saharan trade
○ Portuguese build outpost in
West Africa
Enticed by wealth of
slavery
Negative Consequences:
- Redraws political map of
Africa
- Introduction of guns/arms
- Leads to eventual
population demise
- Dehumanization, slaves
“property”
- Slave-labor plantation
- Replace Indians with
W. Africans
- Sugar plantations =
birth of European
Colonial System
• Heart of Atlantic
Economy
Explorer’s
Columbus
○ Initiates exploration of “new world”
○ Results in Treaty of Tordesillas (1493)
between Spain and Portugal (demarcation
line)
Drawn by the Pope
○ Enslaves Hispaniola, creates encomiendas
system
First Spanish Settlement
Cortes
○ Lands with Troops on Mexican coast,
Stunned by wealth and size of Tenochtitlan
○ Aztecs peaceful, Cortes NOT
○ Smallpox annihilates native population
Pizarro
○ Same as Cortes but in South America/ Incas
Consequences
Spain claims: Cuba, several Caribbean
islands, Mexico, SW America, South America
(mainly West of Demarcation line)
Massive amounts of wealth from Gold/Silver
Mercantilist policies
○ Natives have little or no power, mixing of
racial groups, slave- labor (plantations)
Devastating Effect on natives, conversion to
Catholicism)
Spain’s Exploratio
Columbian Exchange
To America
To Europe/Asia
Disease
Corn, types of beans
Sheep, horse, cattle
White/ Sweet potatoes
Swine, chickens
Manioc, tomatoes
Wheat, grains
Pumpkins, squash
Coffee, sugarcane
Peanuts
Fruits, garden vegetables
Vanilla, cacao
Weeds, insects rodents
Avocados, pineapples
From Africa: rice, yams
Chilies, tobacco, turkeys
○ Not all were easily accepted
1.
Consequences:
Europe weeds change physical environment
-deprives natives of food source
-settlers exhaust the soil
2. Mixing of peoples
3. SUGAR
France’s Exploration
Pre-Occupied with conflict
with England and issues with
Protestant Huguenots
1524
Verrazano tries to find
Northwest Passage through
new continent
Cartier continues mission
1534- 1542
Sails down St. Lawrence River
England’s Exploration
Claims
Canada, Northern US, and
parts of Mississippi River
Pre-Occupied with
break from Catholic
church
Henry VII ignores
Treaty of Tordesillas
Sends John Cabot 1497
Reaches Newfoundland,
Canada
Claims conflict with
Part II
Settlements
Interaction with
Natives
Spanish Explorations
Explorers
Vasco Nunez de Balboa
Isthmus of Panama
Ferdinand Magellan
Circumnavigation of
Florida
1565, St. Augustine
Ponce de Leon
New Mexico
the
1609, Santa Fe
world
Texas
Hernan Cortes
Mexico
Francisco Pissarro
Early 1700s
California
San Diego 1769
San Francisco 1776
Peru
Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca
Flordia, Texas, New Mexico
Alienated Natives
De Soto
Mississippi River, SE
Coronado
Grand Canyon
California, SW
Settlements in North America
Treatment of Native
Americans
Died due to enslavement and
disease
Incorporated natives in highly
organized empire
Rigid class system develops
Pure bloods = top of hierarchy
Other Claims
French
Explorers
Verrazano, 1524
East Coast of North America
Cartier, 1534-1542
St. Lawrence River
1st attempt at colonizing unsuccessful
Hudson River, NY
Ft. Nassau (Albany) 1614
Settlements
Le Salle, 1682
Mississippi/Louisiana
1926 Alliance w/ Iroquois
Settlements
Quebec, 1608
Fortified village
Dutch
Explorers
Henry Hudson, 1609
New Amsterdam
NY
Controlled by Dutch West
India Company
Champlain, 1608
Quebec, Canada
Father of “New France”
Treatment of Natives
Maintained relatively good relations
Partnership with Huron/ fur trade
French posed little threat to natives
Few colonists, farms or towns
A.
B.
Battle of Lake
Champlain
Beaver Wars
Iroquois
Confederacy
B. Hurons
A.
C.
French Jesuits
English Claims
Explorers
John Cabot, 1497
Newfoundland
Spanish/English Issues
Exploration on hold
Issues with Henry VIII
Spanish/Armada
Sir Francis Drake/ Sea Dogs
Treatment on Natives
Initially (Mass) tried to coexist
Shared ideas, crops
Eventual warfare
No respect for Natives
Called them “savages”
Took land to support growing
population
Early English
Settlements
Humphrey Gilbert
Failed Newfoundland
colony
Roanoke
Sir Walter Raleigh, 1587
NC Coast
Unsuccessful
“Croatan”
Important Changes
Preparedness important
Grown own food
Self-financing
Joint-stock companies
Jamestown
James Fort, 1607
James I chartered
Virginia Company 1607
*of London
In search of Gold and Northwest
Passage
Fear of Spanish, failed attempt
Problems
Arrival
Took extra month
Bad location
No freshwater
Survival
Slackers, John Smith
“hell on earth”
- murder?
- Cannibalism?
- Starvation and disease
High death rate
-Fraud
Native Relations
“they will work for trinkets, if not
gunpowder will force them”
13000 natives under Powhatan
prophecy
Protection
Built fort in 19 days, 600 trees
“Starving Time”
3rd year
7 out of 10 settlers die
Tobacco
John Rolfe
Financial prosperity
“Headright “system
- 50 acres for each person who
paid
-Indentured servants
Leads to plantation/ need for labor =
slave trade
Royal Colony
Virginia Company bankrupt
Charter revoked, now Virginia under
James I
Later English Settlements
Motivation
Economic gain
Religious freedom/ escape political
Settled by Separatists
Pilgrims
Virginia Company of London
persecution
Plymouth Colony
Puritan Colonies
Gives patent to Thomas Weston
Mayflower, 1620
102 people
Half separatists
Hardships
Survival
“1st Thanksgiving”
Two colonies
Settled by Protestants influenced
by John Calvin
Wanted to “purify” the church
Squanto
Massachusetts Bay Colony, 1629
More Puritans
Massachusetts Bay Company
Led by John Winthrop
Civil War in England (1630s) leads
to Great Migration
Given royal charter
Early Political Institutions
Plymouth
Mayflower Compact 1620
1st representative government in America
Represented colonial self-government
Early form of written constitution
Established powers and duties of government
Jamestown
Representative government
Same rights as in England
House of Burgesses, 1619
1st representative legislature in America
Burgess = is a person invested with all the
privileges of a citizen
Required approval of Company of London
Massachusetts
Representative
Limited Democracy
All free-men, members of Puritan Church, could
elect positions in Colonies
Elected governor, his assistants, and
representative assembly
Women and landless had limited or no rights
Colonial rulers autocratic (unlimited power)
Only had to answer to king
By 1614:
Spain, England,
France,
Netherlands all had
territory or colonies
established
Only possible due
to ravaging of native
population