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Clash of Cultures The European Invasion of the Americas

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Title: Clash of Cultures The European Invasion of the Americas


1
Clash of Cultures
  • The European Invasion of the Americas,
    1492-1680

2
Questions for Today
  • Why were Europeans the first to make contact
    with the Americas?
  • What were some of the major consequences of
    European exploration?
  • How did a few hundred Spaniards manage to defeat
    one of the strongest empires in the Americas?
  • How did these invaders treat the natives they
    encountered?

3
(No Transcript)
4
Why Europe?
  • Nationalist pride

5
Why Europe?
  • Nationalist pride
  • Commerce

6
Why Europe?
  • Nationalist pride
  • Commerce
  • Technology

7
Location of Portugal
8
Portuguese Voyages
9
Spain Before Unification
10
Christopher Columbus
11
Early Spanish Explorations
12
The Columbian Exchange
  • The ongoing trans-Atlantic exchange of goods,
    people, disease, and ideas

13
The Columbian Exchange
14
The Columbian Exchange
  • The ongoing trans-Atlantic exchange of goods,
    people, disease, and ideas
  • Animals

15
The Columbian Exchange
  • The ongoing trans-Atlantic exchange of goods,
    people, disease, and ideas
  • Animals
  • Technology

16
The Columbian Exchange
  • The ongoing trans-Atlantic exchange of goods,
    people, disease, and ideas
  • Animals
  • Technology
  • Religion

17
The Columbian Exchange
  • The ongoing trans-Atlantic exchange of goods,
    people, disease, and ideas
  • Animals
  • Technology
  • Religion
  • Crops

18
Mayan Smoking Tobacco
19
The Columbian Exchange
  • The ongoing trans-Atlantic exchange of goods,
    people, disease, and ideas
  • Animals
  • Technology
  • Religion
  • Crops
  • Disease

20
Smallpox Victims
21
Native Description of Smallpox
  • Large bumps spread on people, some were
    entirely covered. They spread everywhere, on the
    face, the head, the chest, etc. The pustules
    that covered people caused great desolation very
    many people died of them, and many just starved
    to death starvation reigned, and no one took
    care of others any longer. On some people, the
    pustules appeared only far apart, and they did
    not suffer greatly, nor did many of them die of
    it. But many people's faces were spoiled by it,
    their faces and noses were made rough.
  • c. 1555

22
Todays Focus
  • Cortés's Conquest of the Aztec (Mexica) Empire
  • The American Southwest, or Nuevo Mexico

23
Todays Focus
  • Cortés's Conquest of the Aztec (Mexica) Empire

24
Early Depiction of Tenochtitlan
25
Cortéss Route (in green)
26
Hernan Cortés and Malinche
27
Aztec Human Sacrifice
28
Native Drawing of the Spanish Conquest
29
Todays Focus
  • Cortés's Conquest of the Aztec (Mexica) Empire
  • The American Southwest, or Nuevo Mexico

30
European Explorations
31
A Franciscan Missionary
32
Remains of Mission at Pecos Pueblo
33
Summary and Conclusions
  • Europeans had the advantage in conflicts with the
    indigenous peoples of the Americas, thanks to
    more effective technology and disease
  • The Columbian Exchange dramatically altered life
    not only in the Americas, but also in Europe
  • By the 1600s, European powers like the Spanish
    (but also the French and Dutch) had established
    successful colonies in what they called the New
    World

34
THE END
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