Title: AP World History 1450
1AP World History 1450 1750 CEPeriod 4 Review
AND Sikhism!
- All of the text save for the articles are
straight from the AP Board, and are the MINIMUM
that you need to know for Period 4.
2Period 4 Global Interactions, c. 1450 to c. 1750
- Key Concept 4.1. Globalizing Networks of
Communication and Exchange - The interconnection of the Eastern and Western
hemispheres made possible by transoceanic
voyaging marked a key transformation of his
period. Technological innovations helped to make
transoceanic connections possible. Changing
patterns of long-distance trade included the
global circulation of some commodities and the
formation of new regional markets and financial
centers. Increased transregional and global trade
networks facilitated the spread of religion and
other elements of culture as well as the
migration of large numbers of people. Germs
carried to the Americas ravaged the indigenous
peoples, while the global exchange of crops and
animals altered agriculture, diets, and
populations around the planet. - I. In the context of the new global circulation
of goods, there was an intensification of all
existing regional trade networks that brought
prosperity and economic disruption to the
merchants and governments in the trading regions
of the Indian Ocean, Mediterranean, Sahara, and
overland Eurasia. - II. European technological developments in
cartography and navigation built on previous
knowledge developed in the classical, Islamic,
and Asian worlds, and included the production of
new tools, innovations in ship designs, and an
improved understanding of global wind and
currents patterns all of which made
transoceanic travel and trade possible.
3Example of New Tools and Ships
Portolan maps and Caravel Ships were used by the
Portuguese and Spanish explorers in the 15th and
16th centuries. Portolan maps had lines radiating
out from compass points.
4Key Concept 4.1.
- III. Remarkable new transoceanic maritime
reconnaissance occurred in - this period.
- A. Official Chinese maritime activity expanded
into the Indian Ocean region with the naval
voyages led by Ming Admiral Zheng He, which
enhanced Chinese prestige. - B. Portuguese development of a school for
navigation led to increased travel to and trade
with West Africa, and resulted in the
construction of a global trading-post empire. - C. Spanish sponsorship of the first Columbian and
subsequent voyages across the Atlantic and
Pacific dramatically increased European interest
in transoceanic travel and trade. - D. Northern Atlantic crossings for fishing and
settlements continued and spurred European
searches for multiple routes to Asia. - E. In Oceania and Polynesia, established exchange
and communication - networks were not dramatically affected because
of infrequent European - reconnaissance in the Pacific Ocean.
- IV. The new global circulation of goods was
facilitated by royal chartered European monopoly
companies that took silver from Spanish colonies
in the Americas to purchase Asian goods for the
Atlantic markets, but regional markets continued
to flourish in Afro-Eurasia by using established
commercial practices and new transoceanic
shipping services developed by European merchants.
5Key Concept 4.1.
- A. European merchants role in Asian trade was
characterized mostly by transporting goods from
one Asian country to another market in Asia or
the Indian Ocean region. - B. Commercialization and the creation of a global
economy were intimately connected to new global
circulation of silver from the Americas. - C. Influenced by mercantilism, joint-stock
companies were new methods used by European
rulers to control their domestic and colonial
economies and by European merchants to compete
against one another in global trade. - D. The Atlantic system involved the movement of
goods, wealth, and free and unfree laborers, and
the mixing of African, American, and European
cultures and peoples. - V. The new connections between the Eastern and
Western hemispheres resulted in the Columbian
Exchange. - European colonization of the Americas led to the
spread of diseases including smallpox, measles,
and influenza that were endemic in the Eastern
Hemisphere among Amerindian populations and the
unintentional transfer of vermin, including
mosquitoes and rats. - B. American foods became staple crops in various
parts of Europe, Asia, and Africa. Cash crops
were grown primarily on plantations with coerced
labor and were exported mostly to Europe and the
Middle East in this period.
6American Crop Maize
- For western civilization, the story of corn
began in 1492 when Columbus's men discovered this
new grain in Cuba. An American native, it was
exported to Europe rather than being imported, as
were other major grains The word "corn" has many
different meanings depending on what country you
are in. Corn in the United States is also called
maize or Indian corn. In some countries, corn
means the leading crop grown in a certain
district. Corn in England means wheat in
Scotland and Ireland, it refers to oats. Corn
mentioned in the Bible probably refers to wheat
or barley. At first, corn was only a garden
curiosity in Europe, but it soon began to be
recognized as a valuable food crop. Within a few
years, it spread throughout France, Italy, and
all of southeastern Europe and northern Africa.
By 1575, it was making its way into western
China... Although corn is indigenous to the
western hemisphere, its exact birthplace is far
less certain. An archeological study of the bat
caves in New Mexico revealed corncobs that were
5,600 years old by radiocarbon determination...
The original wild form has long been extinct.
Evidence suggests that cultivated corn arose
through natural crossings to produce modern
races. Corn is perhaps the most completely
domesticated of all field crops. Its perpetuation
for centuries has depended wholly on the care of
man. It could not have existed as a wild plant in
its present form. Corn was the most important
cultivated plant in ancient times in America.
Early North American expeditions show that the
corn-growing area extended from southern North
Dakota and both sides of the lower St. Lawrence
Valley southward to northern
7American Crop Maize
- Corn is perhaps the most completely domesticated
of all field crops. Its perpetuation for
centuries has depended wholly on the care of man.
It could not have existed as a wild plant in its
present form. Corn was the most important
cultivated plant in ancient times in America.
Early North American expeditions show that the
corn-growing area extended from southern North
Dakota and both sides of the lower St. Lawrence
Valley southward to northern Argentina and Chile.
It extended westward to the middle of Kansas and
Nebraska, and an important lobe of the Mexican
area extended northward to Arizona, New Mexico
and southern Colorado. It was also an important
crop in the high valleys of the Andes in South
America. -
The great variability of the corn plant led to
the selection of numerous widely adapted
varieties which hardly resembled one another. The
plant may have ranged from no more than a couple
of feet tall to over 20 feet. It was not like the
uniform sized plant that most people know today.
For the Aztecs, Mayas, Incas and various Pueblo
dwellers of the southwestern United States, corn
growing took precedence over all other
activities...
8Maize Continued
- Argentina and Chile. It extended westward to the
middle of Kansas and Nebraska, and an important
lobe of the Mexican area extended northward to
Arizona, New Mexico and southern Colorado. It was
also an important crop in the high valleys of the
Andes in South America. The great variability of
the corn plant led to the selection of numerous
widely adapted varieties which hardly resembled
one another. The plant may have ranged from no
more than a couple of feet tall to over 20 feet. - Origin, History, and Uses of Corn (Zea mays)
Lance Gibson and Garren Benson, Iowa State
University, Department of Agronomy, Revised
January 2002.
9Cash Crop Sugar!
- White Gold, as British colonists called it, was
the engine of the slave trade that brought
millions of Africans to the Americas beginning in
the early 16th-century. The history of every
nation in the Caribbean, much of South America
and parts of the Southern United States was
forever shaped by sugar cane plantations started
as cash crops by European superpowers. Profit
from the sugar trade was so significant that it
may have even helped America achieve independence
from Great Britain. Today more sugar is produced
in Brazil than anywhere else in the world even
though, ironically, the crop never grew wild in
the Americas. Sugar cane native to Southeast
Asia first made its way to the New World with
Christopher Columbus during his 1492 voyage to
the Dominican Republic, where it grew well in the
tropical environment. Noting sugar cane's
potential as income for the new settlements in
the Americas Europeans were already hooked on
sugar coming from the Eastern colonies Spanish
colonizers snipped seeds from Columbus' fields in
the Dominican Republic and planted them
throughout their burgeoning Caribbean colonies.
By the mid 16th-century the Portuguese had
brought some to Brazil and, soon after, the sweet
cane made its way to British, Dutch and French
colonies such as Barbados and Haiti. It wasn't
long, however, before the early settlers realized
they were lacking sufficient manpower to plant,
harvest and process the backbreaking crop. The
first slave ships arrived in 1505 and continued
unabated for more than 300 years. Most came from
western Africa, where Portuguese colonies had
already established trading outposts for ivory,
pepper and other goods. To most of the European
merchants, the people they put on cargo ships
across the Atlantic a horrendous voyage known
as the Middle Passage were merely an extension
of the trading system already in place. Sugar
slavery was the key component in what historians
call The Triangular Trade, a network whereby
slaves were sent to work on New World
plantations, the product of their labor was sent
to a European capital to be sold and other goods
were brought to Africa to purchase more slaves.
By the middle of the 19th century, more than 10
million Africans had been forcibly removed to the
New World and distributed among the sugar
plantations of Brazil and the Caribbean.
10Cash Crop Sugar! Continued
- During those three centuries, sugar was by far
the most important of the overseas commodities
that accounted for a third of Europe's entire
economy. As technologies got more efficient and
diversified, adding molasses and rum to the
plantation byproducts, sugar barons from St.
Kitts to Jamaica became enormously wealthy. The
importance of those sugar-rich colonies,
especially those belonging to Britain and France,
had enormous consequences for the map of the
Americas during the 1700s. Britain lost its 13
American colonies to independence in part because
its military was busy protecting its sugar
islands, many historians have argued. As opposed
to the slaves working plantations in the U.S.
South, Africans on Caribbean sugar plantations
(and the islands themselves) outnumbered their
European owners by a wide margin. The British
planters lived in constant fear of revolt and
demanded soldiers for protection. Several
decisive battles of the Revolutionary War would
have turned out differently had Britain thrown
its full might behind the war, experts believe.
Sizable garrisons were also stationed in the West
Indies to guard the few sugar holdings Britain
had left at the end of the Seven Years' War in
1763. In carving up the Americas after the
fighting stopped, King George III had decided to
cede a few of his Caribbean sugar islands to
France in order to secure a sizable chunk of
North America. In swapping sweet and profitable
Guadeloupe for the barren, sugar-free wasteland
of Canada, plus most of the land east of the
Mississippi River, many Englishmen thought the
King got a raw deal. http//www.livescience.com/49
49-sugar-changed-world.html
11Cash Crop Sugar! Continued
12Domesticated Animal Cattle
- The Europeans who first settled in America at
the end of the 15th century had brought longhorn
cattle with them. By the early 19th century
cattle ranches were common in Mexico. At that
time Mexico included what was to become Texas.
The longhorn cattle were kept on an open range,
looked after by cowboys called vaqueros. In 1836,
Texas became independent, the Mexicans left,
leaving their cattle behind. Texan farmers
claimed the cattle and set up their own ranches.
Beef was not popular so the animals were used for
their skins and tallow. In the 1850s, beef began
to be more popular and its price rose making some
ranchers quite wealthy. http//www.historyonthene
t.com/American_West/cattle_industry.htm
A Mexican cattle ranch
13Food Brought by African Slaves Rice
- A rice variety that made many a colonial
plantation owner rich was brought to the United
States from West Africa, according to preliminary
genetic research. The finding suggests that
African slaves are responsible for nearly every
facet of one of the first rice varieties grown in
the U.S., as well as one of the most lucrative
crops in early American history. West Africans
had been growing varieties of rice for several
thousand years before the start of the slave
trade with the colonies... Ship masters wanting
to deliver healthy slaves to the U.S. bought rice
in Africa as provisions for the voyage Once in
the colonies, slaves grew leftover rice in their
own garden plots for food. In 1685 plantation
owners in the Carolinas started experimenting
with a rice variety that produced high yields and
was easy to cook... The slaves used their
rice-growing know-how to convert the swampy
Carolina lowlands to thriving rice plantations
replete with canals, dikes, and levies, which
facilitated periodic flooding of the fields The
so-called Carolina Gold variety quickly became a
high value export crop, primarily to Europe...
http//news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/11/0
71128-rice-origins.html
14Key Concept 4.1.
- C. Afro-Eurasian fruit trees, grains, sugar, and
domesticated animals were brought by Europeans to
the Americas, while other foods were brought by
African slaves. - D. Populations in Afro-Eurasia benefited
nutritionally from the increased diversity of
American food crops. - E. European colonization and the introduction of
European agriculture and settlements practices in
the Americas often affected the physical
environment through deforestation and soil
depletion. - VI. The increase in interactions between newly
connected hemispheres and intensification of
connections within hemispheres expanded the
spread and reform of existing religions and
created syncretic belief systems and practices. - A. As Islam spread to new settings in
Afro-Eurasia, believers adapted it to local
cultural practices. The split between the Sunni
and Shia traditions of Islam intensified, and
Sufi practices became more widespread. - B. The practice of Christianity continued to
spread throughout the world and was increasingly
diversified by the process of diffusion and the
Reformation. - C. Buddhism spread within Asia.
- D. Syncretic and new forms of religion developed.
- VII. As merchants profits increased and
governments collected more taxes, funding for the
visual and performing arts, even for popular
audiences, increased. - Innovations in visual and performing arts were
seen all over the world. - B. Literacy expanded and was accompanied by the
proliferation of popular authors, literary forms,
and works of literature in Afro-Eurasia.
15What does it mean to be a Sikh?
- Sikhism emerged in 16th-century India in an
environment permeated with conflicts between
Hindus and Muslims. Its founding teacher, Guru
Nanak Dev, was born in 1469 to a Hindu family.
His most famous saying was, "There is no Hindu,
there is no Muslim, so whose path shall I follow?
I shall follow the path of God." Today, there are
about 23 million Sikhs worldwide, making Sikhism
the fifth largest religion in the world. - Sacred Text Adi Granth.
- Beliefs Monotheistic Like Jews, Muslims, and
Protestant Christians, representations of God in
images is banned. Like Hinduism, Sikhism believes
in the concepts of karma and reincarnation.
Establishment of a Sikh state is a matter of
religious doctrine. - Main Holiday Guru Gobind Singh's Birthday -
January 5
16Sikhism Continued
- Practices
- 1. Uncut hair, which is kept covered by a turban,
or dastaar. The dastaar is worn by men and some
women to cover their long hair. - 2. The Kirpan is a ceremonial sword, symbolizing
readiness to protect the weak, and defend against
injustice and persecution. The kirpan is normally
worn with a cloth shoulder strap called a gatra.
The kirpan exemplifies the warrior character of a
Sikh. - 3. The Kara is a steel bracelet, symbolizing
strength and integrity. - 4. The Kangha is a small wooden comb, symbolizing
cleanliness and order. The kangha is used to keep
the hair clean and is normally tucked neatly in
one's uncut hair. As a Sikh combs their hair
daily, he or she should also comb their mind with
the Guru's wisdom. - 5. Kachhera are cotton boxer shorts, symbolizing
self-control and chastity prohibition of
adultery. - www.religionfacts.org
- http//www.sikhismguide.org/fiveks.aspx
17Sikhism Continued
Above is the Khanda a double edged sword. It is
a metaphor for divine knowledge.
18Renaissance Art and Shakespeare
- Why is Shakespeare considered a Classical
playwright? - How did Renaissance art differ from medieval art?
How did it represent the philosophy of Humanism?
If you can answer those questions then move on!
19Key Concept 4.2 New Forms of Social
Organizationand Modes of Production
- Although the worlds productive systems continued
to be heavily centered on agricultural production
throughout this period, major changes occurred in
agricultural labor, the systems and locations of
manufacturing, gender and social structures, and
environmental processes. A surge in agricultural
productivity resulted from new methods in crop
and field rotation and the introduction of new
crops. Economic growth also depended on new forms
of manufacturing and new commercial patterns,
especially in long-distance trade. Political and
economic centers within regions shifted, and
merchants social status tended to rise in
various states. Demographic growth even in
areas such as the Americas, where disease had
ravaged the population was restored by the
eighteenth century and surged in many regions,
especially with the introduction of American food
crops throughout the Eastern Hemisphere. The
Columbian Exchange led to new ways of humans
interacting with their environments. New forms of
coerced and semi-coerced labor emerged in Europe,
Africa, and the Americas, and affected ethnic and
racial classifications and gender roles. - I. Traditional peasant agriculture increased and
changed, plantations expanded, and demand for
labor increased. These changes both fed and
responded to growing global demand for raw
materials and finished products. - A. Peasant labor intensified in many regions.
20Frontier Peasant Settlements in Siberia
- The American West and Russia's Far East both
were just across a mountain barrier from their
country's original area of settlement. Both
hinterlands were immense, sparsely populated
regions that tempted the adventurous and
restless. In the 19th century, the United States
enticed settlers to its western territories via
the Homestead Act. The Czars similarly offered
Russian peasants the inducement of free land on
the Siberian frontier. but much much earlier!
"Fewer than two hundred thousand natives
scattered in tiny settlements and nomadic
stopping places across Siberia's five and a third
million square miles were all that barred their
advance," notes Dr. Lincoln, a professor at
Northern Illinois University. Both Siberia and
the American West were first explored by
"mountain men" fur traders. Indeed, Dr. Lincoln
notes, the Siberian fur trade literally made
Russia's fortune. Until merchant-adventurers,
such as the famed Stroganov family, began
shipping back Siberian pelts, Russia was a poor
nation on the fringe of European affairs. But in
the 17th century, a fur hat was the mark of a
European gentleman, and the Siberian sable -- an
animal the ancient Greeks called the "golden
fleece"
21Frontier Peasant Settlements in Siberia
- gave Russia its first export commodity Life on
Siberia's frontier was as raw and rough as in
Dodge City or Tombstone When they'd exhausted
Siberia's animal stock, Russian fur traders
hopped across the narrow straits separating Asia
from North America. - Only when they'd finished exploiting Alaska's
fur-trading possibilities did the Czars sell off
their North American territories to the United
States. http//articles.baltimoresun.com/1994-0
2-01/features/1994032183_1_siberia-golden-fleece-f
ur
Siberian Bear Hunter 19th Century
22Chattel Slavery
- Chattel is movable property.
- A slave is a person without freedom, who is
treated as property. - As a result of the European Age of Exploration,
West Africans were transported as chattel slaves
to the Americas. Their journey (if they survived)
was called the Middle Passage. They played an
integral part of Triangular Trade. - Muslim Arabs bought and sold chattel slaves in
Eastern Africa and Southeast Asia.
23The Creation of Mulattoes and Mestizos
24Key Concept 4.2
- B. Slavery in Africa continued both the
traditional incorporation of slaves into
households and the export of slaves to the
Mediterranean and the Indian Ocean. - C. The growth of the plantation economy increased
the demand for slaves in the Americas. - D. Colonial economies in the Americas depended on
a range of coerced labor. - II. As new social and political elites changed,
they also restructured new ethnic, racial, and
gender hierarchies. - Both imperial conquests and widening global
economic opportunities contributed to the
formation of new political and economic elites. - B. The power of existing political and economic
elites fluctuated as they confronted new
challenges to their ability to affect the
policies of the increasingly powerful monarchs
and leaders. - C. Some notable gender and family restructuring
occurred, including the demographic changes in
Africa that resulted from the slave trades. - D. The massive demographic changes in the
Americas resulted in new ethnic and racial
classifications.
25Key Concept 4.3. State Consolidation and Imperial
Expansion
- Empires expanded and conquered new peoples around
the world, but they often had difficulties
incorporating culturally, ethnically, and
religiously diverse subjects, and administrating
widely dispersed territories. Agents of the
European powers moved into existing trade
networks around the world. In Africa and the
greater Indian Ocean, nascent European empires
consisted mainly of interconnected trading posts
and enclaves. In the Americas, European empires
moved more quickly to settlement and territorial
control, responding to local demographic and
commercial conditions. Moreover, the creation of
European empires in the Americas quickly fostered
a new Atlantic trade system that included the
trans-Atlantic slave trade. Around the world,
empires and states of varying sizes pursued
strategies of centralization, including more
efficient taxation systems that placed strains on
peasant producers, sometimes prompting local
rebellions. Rulers used public displays of art
and architecture to legitimize state power.
African states shared certain characteristics
with larger Eurasian empires. Changes in African
and global trading patterns strengthened some
West and Central African states especially on
the coast this led to the rise of new states and
contributed to the decline of states on both the
coast and in the interior. - I. Rulers used a variety of methods to legitimize
and consolidate their power. - Rulers used the arts to display political power
and to legitimize their rule. - B. Rulers continued to use religious ideas to
legitimize their rule i.e. Aztec human
sacrifice. Ouch!
26Art as a Display of Political Power
Louis XIV The Sun King 1638 - 1715
27Key Concept 4.3
- C. States treated different ethnic and religious
groups in ways that utilized their economic
contributions while limiting their ability to
challenge the authority of the state. - D. Recruitment and use of bureaucratic elites, as
well as the development of military
professionals, became more common among rulers
who wanted to maintain centralized control over
their populations and resources. - E. Rulers used tribute collection and tax farming
to generate revenue for territorial expansion. - II. Imperial expansion relied on the increased
use of gunpowder, cannons, and armed trade to
establish large empires in both hemispheres. - A. Europeans established new trading-post empires
in Africa and Asia, which proved profitable for
the rulers and merchants involved in new global
trade networks, but these empires also affected
the power of the states in interior West and
Central Africa. - B. Land empires expanded dramatically in size.
- Examples of land empires
- Manchus
- Mughals
- Ottomans
- Russians
28Key Concept 4.3 Continued
- C. European states established new maritime
empires in the Americas. - Examples of maritime empires
- Portuguese
- Spanish
- Dutch
- French
- British
- III. Competition over trade routes, state
rivalries, and local resistance all provided
significant challenges to state consolidation and
expansion.
29Janissaries in the Ottoman Empire
- Janissaries were a force of elite infantry loyal
to the Ottoman emperor. The Janissaries were
christian slaves, taken from their villages
between the ages of seven and ten, and raised to
be loyal soldiers of the emperor, whose personal
property they were. The Janissaries were trained
bowmen whose loyalty and lack of political
connections within the Empire made them
invaluable to the stronger sultans. Their loyalty
was gained both through their strict training,
which took up to ten years, and the prospect of
great rewards for good service. Some two thirds
of the Grand Viziers of the Ottoman Empire up at
least until the sixteenth century had been
Janissaries, as were many other officials of the
empire. It was only when the line of Sultans
began to weaken that the Janissaries became
kingmakers. The first Janissaries were probably
recruited by Orkhan, as a personal bodyguard.
Their numbers grew, reaching ten thousand in the
fifteenth century. Rickard, J. (10 October
2000), Janissaries (Ottoman Empire),
http//www.historyofwar.org/articles/weapons_janis
saries.html
30Mustafa Kemal Atatürk wearing the traditional
Janissary uniform.
31Piracy in the Caribbean
- The great era of piracy in the Caribbean extended
from around 1560 up until the 1720s. Why? The
Caribbean was a center of European trade and
colonization from the late 15th Century. In the
Treaty of Tordesillas the non-European world was
divided between the Spanish and the Portuguese
along a north-south line 270 leagues west of the
Cape Verde Islands. From the 1560s the Spanish
adopted a convoy system a treasure fleet
(flota) would sail annually from Seville,
carrying passengers, troops, and European goods
to the colonies of the new world. The purpose was
to transport a year's worth of silver to Europe.
This made the returning fleet a tempting target,
although pirates were more likely to shadow the
fleet to attack stragglers than try and seize the
main vessels. The United Provinces and England
were defiantly anti-Spanish for much of the time
from the 1560s, while the French government was
seeking to expand its colonial holdings (the
French had the first non-Spanish hold in the
Caribbean at St. Augustine, although it was
short-lived). Aided by their governments English,
French and Dutch traders and colonists ignored
the treaty to invade Spanish territory "No peace
beyond the line." The Spanish could not afford a
sufficient military presence to control the area
or enforce their trading laws, especially after
the defeat of the Spanish Armada by those pesky
British!
32Piracy in the Caribbean Continued
- In the Caribbean the use of privateers was
especially popular. The cost of maintaining a
fleet to defend the colonies was beyond national
governments of the 16th and 17th centuries.
Private vessels would be commissioned into a
'navy' with a letter of marque, paid with a
substantial share of whatever they could capture
from enemy ships and settlements, the rest going
to the crown. These ships would operate
independently or as a fleet and if successful the
rewards could be great when Francis Drake
captured the Spanish Silver Train at Nombre de
Dios (Panama's Caribbean port at the time) in
1573 his crews were rich for life. This
substantial profit made privateering something of
a regular line of business. Specific to the
Caribbean were pirates termed buccaneers. The
original buccaneers were escapees from the
colonies, forced to survive with little support
they had to be skilled at boat construction and
sailing and hunting. They operated with the
partial support of the non-Spanish colonies and
until the 1700s their activities were legal, or
partially legal and there were irregular
amnesties from all
33Piracy in the Caribbean Continued
- nations. Their crews operated as a democracy the
captain was elected by the crew and they could
vote to replace him. The captain had to be a
leader and a fighter in combat he was expected
to be fighting with his men, not directing
operations from a distance. Spoils were evenly
divided into shares when the officers had a
greater number of shares, it was because they
took greater risks or had special skills. Often
the crews would sail without wages "on account"
and the spoils would be built up over a course
of months before being divided. They typically
outmanned trade vessels by a large ratio. There
was also for some time a social insurance system,
guaranteeing money or gold for battle wounds at a
worked-out scale. One undemocratic aspect of the
buccaneers was that sometimes they would force
specialists like carpenters to sail with them for
some time, though they were released when no
longer needed (if they had not volunteered to
join by that time). Note also that a typical poor
man had few other promising career choices at the
time apart from joining the pirates.
34Piracy in the Caribbean Continued
- The pirates were egalitarian and liberated slaves
when taking over slave ships. The decline of
piracy in the Caribbean paralleled the decline of
mercenaries and the rise of national armies in
Europe. Following the end of the Thirty Years War
national power expanded. The famous pirates of
the early 18th century were a completely illegal
remnant of a golden buccaneering age. Contrast
this with the earlier example of Henry Morgan, a
pirate who was knighted and made governor of
Jamaica! As Spanish presence waned in the
Caribbean, other nations expanded. The English
had expanded beyond Barbados, with successful
colonies on St. Kitts and Nevis, Antigua, and
Bermuda. The French were well established on
Guadeloupe, Hispaniola and Martinique. The Dutch
had remained an almost baseless trading presence
in the area but following the Spanish decline
they became established at Curaçao and Aruba.
35Piracy in the Caribbean Continued
36HW Questions
- Fill in your Period 4 chart for Sikhism. Your
COMPLETED chart is due this Thursday! - Briefly describe the impact of American maize
(corn) and sugar in global history. - Why did some Russians begin to settle Siberia?
How was this similar to the settlement of the
American western frontier? - What were the causes and consequences of piracy
in the Caribbean? - Were there more changes or continuities within
period 4 (1450 1750 CE) ? Focus on at least 2
regions of the world. (No more than 2 paragraphs) - Complete the visual timeline (see the next slide)
37Period 4 Visual Timeline
Period Four Timeline 1450 CE 1750 CE Your group
must create a visual timeline for the following
events. Keep it simple! If you do it on the
computer, you can email it to all of your group
members.
Date Event
1464 Sonni Ali became ruler of the Songhai Empire, West Africa
1492 Columbuss first voyage
1517 Martin Luther posted the 95 Theses
1600 Spanish Armada
1631 Shaj Jahan built the Taj Mahal for his late wife Mumtaz
1633 Galileo Galilei put on trial
1648 30 Years War ended
1492 Columbuss first voyage
1517 Martin Luther posted the 95 Theses
1600 Spanish Armada
1633 Galileo Galilei put on trial
38Key Vocabulary
- Buccaneers
- Convoy System
- Janissary
- Maize
- Privateers
- Rum
- Sugar Cane