Title: Age of Early European Explorations
1The Age of Early European Explorations Early
Conquests
1450-1750
2Satellite View of Europe
3REGIONS
4Continents by Size (sq. km.)
Asia 44,579,000
Africa 30,065,000
North America 24,256,000
South America 17,819,000
Antarctica 13,209,000
Europe 9,938,000
Oceania (incl. Australia)Â Â 7,687,000
5Europe A Peninsula of Peninsulas?
OR
A Peninsula of Asia?
6Europe An Asian Peninsula?
7Why exploration?
- Basic Resources and Trade
- Land, cash crops, new crops
- New trade routes to Asia
- Silk, spices, porcelain, etc.
- Expand influence of Christianity
- Missionary religion
- Franciscan and Dominican Monks
- Reconquista
8A Map of the Known World, pre- 1492
9Trade Winds
10Earlier Explorations
- Islam the Spice Trade à Malacca
- A New Player à Europe
- Nicolo, Maffeo, Marco Polo, 1271
- Expansion becomes a state enterprise à monarchs
had the authority the resources. - Better seaworthy ships.
- Chinese Admiral Zheng He the Ming Treasure
Fleet
11Motives for European Exploration
- Crusades --gtby-pass intermediaries to get to
Asia. - Renaissance --gtcuriosity about other lands and
peoples. - Reformation--gtrefugees missionaries.
- Monarchs seeking new sources of revenue.
- Technological advances.
- Fame and fortune.
12New Maritime Technologies
Better Maps Portulan
Hartman Astrolabe(1532)
Mariners Compass?
Sextant
13New Weapons Technology
Volta do mar
Return through The sea
14Prince Henry, the Navigator
1394-1460
West Africa
- School for Navigation, 1419
15Museum of Navigationin Lisbon
16Portuguese Maritime Empire
- Exploring the west coast of Africa.
- Bartolomeo Dias P, 1487
- -Cape of Good Hope
- Vasco da Gama P, 1498.
- Calicut.
- Admiral Alfonso de Albuquerque P(Goa, 1510
Malacca, 1511).
17Bartolomeu Dias- 1487
- nobleman of the Portuguese royal household was a
Portuguese explorer who sailed around the
southernmost tip of Africa in 1488 - the first European known to have done so
18De Gama- 1498
- a Portuguese explorer, one of the most successful
in the Age of Discovery and the commander of the
first ships to sail directly from Europe to
India. - For a short time in 1524, he was the Governor of
Portuguese India, under the title of Viceroy (GOA)
19Alfonso de Albuquerque- 1510
- Portuguese nobleman, an admiral whose military
and administrative activities as second governor
of Portuguese India conquered and established the
Portuguese colonial empire in the Indian Ocean. - He is generally considered a world conquest
military genius, given his successful strategy
he attempted to close all the Indian ocean naval
passages to the Atlantic, Red Sea, Persian Gulf,
and to the Pacific - The Terrible, The Great, The Caesar of the East
20Christoforo Colombo 1451-1506
Genoese mariner
21Christopher Columbus
- explorer, colonizer, and navigator, born in the
Republic of Genoa - Under the auspices of the Catholic Monarchs of
Spain, he completed four voyages across the
Atlantic Ocean that led to general European
awareness of the American continents in the
Western Hemisphere - Those voyages, and his efforts to establish
permanent settlements in the island of
Hispaniola, initiated the process of Spanish
colonization, which foreshadowed the general
European colonization of the "New World".
22Columbus Four Voyages
23Christopher Columbus (14521-1504)
- In the context of emerging western imperialism
and economic competition between European
kingdoms seeking wealth through the establishment
of trade routes and colonies, Columbus'
far-fetched proposal to reach the East Indies by
sailing westward received the support of the
Spanish crown, which saw in it a promise, however
remote, of gaining the upper hand over rival
powers in the contest for the lucrative spice
trade with Asia - Instead of reaching Japan as he had intended,
Columbus landed in the Bahamas archipelago, at a
locale he named San Salvador. Over the course of
three more voyages, Columbus visited the Greater
and Lesser Antilles, as well as the Caribbean
coast of Venezuela and Central America, claiming
them for the Spanish Empire - The Land Grab begins
24What if Columbus would not have made it to the
New World?
25Other Voyages of Exploration
26Voyages of Exploration
- Vasco Nunez de Balboa--gtPacific Ocean
- Fernao de Magalhaes (1480-1521)--gtService of
Spain - James Cook (1728-1779)--gtPolynesia and Hawaii
- British, French, Dutch, Russians?
- Trade and Conflict would follow
27Vasco Nunez de Balboa
- Spanish explorer, governor, and conquistador.
- Crossed the Isthmus of Panama to the Pacific
Ocean in 1513, becoming the first European to
lead an expedition to have seen or reached the
Pacific from the New World - Founded a settlement in present-day Colombia in
1510, which was the first permanent European
settlement on the mainland of the Americas
28Fernando de Magallanes
- Portuguese explorer Served King Charles I of
Spain in search of a westward route to the "Spice
Islands" (modern Maluku Islands in Indonesia). - Magellan's expedition of 15191522 became the
first expedition to sail from the Atlantic Ocean
into the Pacific Ocean - the first circumnavigation of the Earth?Magellan
himself did not complete
29Ferdinand Magellan Circumnavigation Early 16c
30John Cabot / Giovanni Caboto
- Italian navigator and explorer whose 1497
discovery of parts of North America is commonly
held to have been the first European encounter
with the continent of North America since the
Norse Vikings - Position of the Canadian and United Kingdom
governments is that he landed on the island of
Newfoundland
31Atlantic Explorations
Looking for El Dorado
32Sebationo Cabato
- 1525?with the command of a fleet which was to
determine from astronomical observation the
precise demarcation of the Treaty of Tordesillas
and then to convey settlers to the Moluccas - Expedition consisted of four ships with 200 men
- Voyage might have resulted in a second
circumnavigation of the world. Upon landing in
Brazil, however, rumors of the wealth of the
Incan king caused Cabot to abandon his charge and
instead further explore the interior of the RÃo
de la Plata
33James Cook (1728-1779)
- British explorer, navigator and cartographer
- Made detailed maps of Newfoundland prior to
making three voyages to the Pacific Ocean - First European contact with the eastern coastline
of Australia and the Hawaiian Islands, as well
New Zealand - Saw action in the Seven Years' War, and
subsequently surveyed and mapped much of the
entrance to the Saint Lawrence River during the
siege of Quebec
34Why would the 'Columbian Exchange' be considered
the tsunami of unintentional "bio-terrorism"??
35The Columbian Exchange
Squash Avocado Peppers Sweet Potatoes
Turkey Pumpkin Tobacco Quinine
Cocoa Pineapple Cassava POTATO
Peanut TOMATO Vanilla MAIZE
Syphilis
Trinkets
Liquor
GUNS
Olive COFFEE BEAN Banana Rice
Onion Turnip Honeybee Barley
Grape Peach SUGAR CANE Oats
Citrus Fruits Pear Wheat HORSE
Cattle Sheep Pigs Smallpox
Flu Typhus Measles Malaria
Diptheria Whooping Cough
36Cycle of Conquest Colonization
Explorers
Conquistadores
OfficialEuropeanColony!
Missionaries
PermanentSettlers
37Treasuresfrom the Americas
38African Trade 15c-17c
39Pre-19c European Trade with Africa
40EuropeanNationalism
Source for Raw Materials
MissionaryActivity
Industrial Revolution
European Motives For Colonization
Markets forFinishedGoods
Military NavalBases
SocialDarwinism
Places toDumpUnwanted/Excess Popul.
EuropeanRacism
HumanitarianReasons
Soc. Eco.Opportunities
WhiteMansBurden
41European Explorers in Africa
19c ? Europeans Map the Interior of Africa
42What is next for Africa?
Berlin Conference-gt1884
43The Age of Early European Explorations Conquests
1450-1750
44European Geography and Topography
1450-1750
45REGIONS
46Northern Peninsulas
Scandinavian Peninsula
Jutland Peninsula
47Southern Peninsulas
CrimeanPeninsula
Iberian Peninsula
Italian Peninsula
Balkan Peninsula
Anatolian Peninsula
48Why is access to water important?
49Bodies of Water
ArcticOcean
AtlanticOcean
North Sea
Baltic Sea
English Channel
CaspianSea
Bay ofBiscay
BlackSea
BosporusStrait
Adriatic Sea
AegeanSea
TyrrhenianSea
Strait ofGibraltar
Mediterranean Sea
50The Mediterranean Sea Mare Nostrum
Strait of Gibraltar the Pillars of Hercules
- 2,400 miles long 1,000 miles wide
- Crossroads of 3 Continents
Caesarea on the Israeli coast
51Rivers
Volga R.
Don R.
Thames R.
Elbe R.
Vistula R.
Oder R.
Rhine R.
Dnieper R.
Seine R.
Loire R.
Danube R.
Po R.
Tagus R.
Tiber R.
Ebro R.
52The Danube River
Where Buda Pest Meet
The Danube
- Flows through the 12 countries of Germany,
Austria, Slovakia, Hungary, Serbia, Croatia,
Bosnia and Herzegovina, Slovenia, Bulgaria,
Romania, and the Ukraine.
53The Volga River
- The longest river in Europe --gt 2,300 miles.
54Why are most of the capitals of Europe on major
rivers?
55Capitals on the Rivers (1)
Paris, right bank of the Seine
London on the Thames
Prague on the Vltava
Budapest on the Danube
56Capitals on the Rivers (2)
Moscow on the Moscow River
Berlin on the Spree
Rome on the Tiber
Vienna on the Danube
57Answer
They are Europes lifeline!
58MoutainsPeaks
Ural Mts.
Carpathian Mts.
Caucasus Mts.
Alps Mts.
Pyrennes Mts.
Dinaric Alps
Apennines Mts.
Mt. Vesuvius
Mt. Olympus
Mt. Etna
59The Alps
- Cover most of Switzerland, Austria, and parts
of Italy and France.
60The Caucasus Mountains
- The origin of the word Caucasian.
61Ural Mountains The Great Divide?
1500 miles
- Divides the European and Asian sections of
Russia.
62Siberian Lowlands
Plains
Northern European Plain
Steppes
63Siberia --gt Permafrost
- Average temperatures of January vary from 0
to -50C, and in July from 1 to 25C
64Climate
65Europes Natural Regions
66The North European Plain
67The Northern European Plain --gt An Invasion Route
into Asia ( Vice Versa?)
68Steppes Europes Breadbasket
69The Steppes
- Many changes, yet little changes
70Many lands cleared for farming
71Tundra The Not-So-Barren LandBelow the Arctic
Circle
72Land Use
73Agricultural Activity
74REGIONS
75European Geography and Topography
1450-1750