The Age of Exploration - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 44
About This Presentation
Title:

The Age of Exploration

Description:

The Age of Exploration – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:95
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 45
Provided by: Bria4313
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Age of Exploration


1
The Age of Exploration
2
Life Found on Mars!
Unbelievable but true This recent photo from the
unmanned space exploration to Mars shows
conclusive proof that savage, almost humanlike,
alien life-forms exist among the rich mineral
deposits on the surface of Mars.
3


Barack Obama Wants You Eager to be the first to
make contact with the newly discovered aliens,
the United States Government has sanctioned the
first privately owned space vehicles to make the
journey to Mars. Volunteers are wanted for the
first manned missions to Mars.
4
Would you volunteer for the mission? Yes or No?
___________Why/Why not? _________________________
__________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
___________________________________What sort of
people do you suppose would volunteer for this
kind of mission?__________________________________
__________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
___________________What would they have to gain?
__________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
__________What, if anything could go wrong?
__________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
__________What technological advances would have
to occur before this could actually
happen?__________________________________________
__________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
__________________
5
Exploration and Navigation
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vb3fYF6YvesA
6
The biggest reasons for the Age of Exploration
The 3G Theory
  1. Desire for spices, and the profit from selling
    and trading them. Expanding economies of Europe
    and increased trade in Asia, led to the need for
    new raw materials. (GOLD)
  2. Competition between European powers. The Desire
    to be first to explore and conquer new places for
    their country (GLORY)
  3. To diffuse (spread) Christianity Protestantism
    (England Holland) Catholicism (Spain, Portugal
    France). (GOD)

7
The search for spices
  • During the Middle Ages, the Crusaders who fought
    the Muslims in the Middle East learned of spices,
    and brought them back to Europe.
  • The Europeans wanted cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg,
    and most of all pepper to spice and preserve
    meat, make perfume(s).
  • The chief source of spices was the Moluccas (in
    modern day Indonesia) which they called the Spice
    Islands.

8
The Muslim Situation
  • Europeans wanted spices.
  • Following the fall of Constantinople (it became
    Istanbul), Europe no longer had their gateway to
    the East.
  • Trading over land was expensive and dangerous.
  • Muslims and Italian sailors controlled the trade
    by sea.
  • Other European sailing powers (England, France,
    Spain and Portugal) wanted in on the riches of
    the spice trade, but had to find a way to get
    there.

9
Improved technology leads to better sailing
techniques
  • European cartographers (mapmakers) created much
    better maps and charts of the sea and its
    currents.
  • Europeans mastered the use of the astrolabe, an
    instrument developed by the Greeks and mastered
    by the Muslims, to determine their latitude at
    sea.
  • The caravel, a ship that combined European body
    styles with Muslim triangular sails and Chinese
    rudders, made ships much faster and able to
    travel farther.

10
Portugal
  • By the 1400s, Portugal was strong enough to
    expand into Muslim controlled North Africa.
  • Prince Henry, known as Henry the Navigator,
    hoping to spread Christianity and find Muslim
    gold, began a school for cartographers, sailors
    and captains at Sagres.

11
Portugal (continued)
  • In 1487, Bartolomeu Diaz, rounded the southern
    tip of Africa. He ended the myth that the sea
    was full of monsters, and it gave hope to those
    who wished to sail to India. He named the tip of
    Africa the Cape of Good Hope.

12
Bartolomeu Diaz
Cape of Good Hope
13
Portugal (continued)
  • In 1497, Vasco da Gama led four ships around the
    southern tip of Africa, and on his next voyage,
    made it to the port of Calicut, in western India.
  • The spices he brought back sold at 3000 of the
    money he put into it.
  • His sailors paid a heavy price, they discovered
    scurvy, a disease caused by lack of vitamin C.

14
Vasco da Gama
15
Spain
  • An Italian sailor from Genoa wished to sail for
    Portugal. He had an idea that since the world
    was round, a relatively new concept at the time,
    that if he sailed westward, that he would reach
    India faster. His name was Christopher Columbus.
  • Portugal refused to sponsor him, so he got help
    from the Spanish King Ferdinand and his wife
    Isabella, who were famous for expelling the
    Muslim Moors from Spain.

16
Ferdinand and Isabella sponsor the voyages of
Columbus.
17
Spain (continued)
  • Columbus made two huge errors
  • Underestimating the size of the world greatly
  • Not knowing that two continents lay in his way
  • He had three ships the Nina, the Pinta, and the
    Santa Maria. He sailed west and ran into the
    islands of the Caribbean. Since he thought he
    was in the Indies, he called the people he found
    there Indians.

18
Naming the New World
  • In 1507 a German cartographer read reports of a
    new world written by an Italian sailor named
    Amerigo Vespucci. He labeled the region
    America after Vespucci. The region that
    Columbus had found became known as the West
    Indies.

19
The Grande Exchange
  • Introduced to the Americas
  • 1. DISEASES rapidly devastated human
    populations that had no resistance to Old World
    Diseases, killing 50-90 of native populations
    50 epidemics in Valley of Mexico 1519-1820 often
    carried to villages by other natives, arriving
    before actual contact with Spanish
  • smallpox, measles, whooping cough, bubonic
    plague, malaria, yellow fever, diphtheria,
    influenza
  • 2. ANIMALS no large mammals in Middle America
    introduced new means of transportation/labor
    horse became indispensable to plains Indians new
    food sources
  • horses, pigs, sheep, goats, cattle, rats (spread
    disease, decimated native small animals)
  • adapted quickly
  • competed with Indians for food
  • destroyed vegetation

20
The Grande Exchange (continued)
  • Brought to the Americas
  • 3. PLANTS
  • sugar cane - harmed both man and environment
    forbearer of plantation system with slave labor
    and the initial assault on tropical rainforests
  • from 1650 until beginning of 20th century,
    Caribbean region was the world's center of cane
    sugar worldwide demand
  • changed ethnic make up of much of Latin America
  • grains - wheat, millet, barley, sorghum, rice
    adapted well to many areas, enhanced native diets
  • chick peas (garbanzos), soybeans
  • fruit - peaches, pears, oranges, melons, limes,
    bananas
  • vegetables - onions, radishes, salad greens,
    yams, peas, leeks, parsley
  • European clover, grasses, many other plants
    widely used in our modern American landscape
  • weeds - Kudzu (legume brought for forage from
    Japan - has taken over in the Gulf and South
    Atlantic US)
  • 4 INSECTS
  • Asian cockroaches, Japanese beetle, Dutch elm
    disease, Killer bees, Gypsy moth

21
The Grande Exchange (continued)
  • Brought to the Americas
  • 5. TECHNOLOGIES
  • Alphabet/ writing
  • iron-edge tools -didn't shatter like those made
    of obsidian by Indians
  • farming equipment - plow drastically changed
    agricultural practices
  • wheel
  • gunpowder
  • ranching - changed landscape walled ranches with
    tile roofs, adobe brick buildings surrounded by
    corrals and pastureland cowboys, gauchos
  • Other new institutions
  • towns - relocated Indians from their land into
    villages and towns changed building patterns
    that used wood and charcoals led to more
    deforestation
  • government structures/policies encomienda -
    system that gave the right to a conquistador to
    collect tribute from Indians
  • religion (Catholic)
  • 6. PEOPLE
  • Spanish, Portuguese - main colonizers of Middle
    and South America
  • Africans - necessary as native population
    decreased worked on plantations eventually
    replaced Indians as the dominant ethnic group in
    the Caribbean infused much of their culture into
    many areas of the Americas
  • British, Irish, French, Germans, Dutch, Asians,
    Indians (from India)

22
The Grande Exchange (continued)
  • Brought Back to Europe
  • PLANTS
  • maize (corn) from Mexico
  • introduced in Africa and south of equator as
    early as 1550
  • fed Africans that provided the manpower for
    American plantations
  • grows where rainfall was sufficient in S. Europe,
    especially important to Greeks and Serbs
  • led to population growth necessary to provide
    labor for industrialization
  • potato from Peru
  • basic food for people all over the world no
    other single crop has played such a decisive role
  • N. Europe potatoes dominated the diet of the poor
    in the 19th/20th century. This in turn
    contributed to population growth which led to
    industrialization of Germany and Russia Maize
    (corn) and potatoes had a fundamental advantage
    over the different sorts of grain in Europe -
    they produced more calories per acre, feeding up
    to 4 times as many people.
  • sweet potatoes
  • tomatoes
  • adapted well to Mediterranean climate
  • vitamin content supplemented diet
  • what would Italian food be without tomatoes?
  • healing plants
  • quinine from Peruvian bark
  • Ipecac from Amazon roots
  • today some 500 prescription drugs derived from
    American herbs, other plants

23
Line of demarcation- The Treaty of Tordesillas
  • Portugal and Spain fought over who got what in
    the Americas finally Pope Alexander VI stepped
    in and ordered both Catholic monarchs to settle
    the problem.
  • On June 7, 1494, the Spanish and the Portuguese
    signed a treaty to divide the world in two. The
    dividing line ran through the Atlantic with Spain
    gaining lands to the west including all the
    Americas. Brazil was granted to Portugal. The
    eastern half including Africa and India was given
    to Portugal.

24
(No Transcript)
25
Circumnavigating the Globe
  • In 1519, a minor Portuguese noble named Ferdinand
    Magellan set out from Spain with five ships and
    hundreds of men.
  • He discovered the Strait of Magellan, and sailed
    into the Pacific he named it because it means
    peaceful- Ocean.
  • He faced several mutinies, and was murdered in
    the Philippines.
  • In1522, one ship and 18 sailors returned to
    Spain, and were credited with being the first to
    sail all the way around the globe, or
    circumnavigate it

26
Voyage of Magellan
27
Spain (continued)Cortez the Killer
  • In 1520, Hernan Cortez (also spelled Cortes) and
    his conquistadors went to the new world in
    search of gold. They found the Aztec Empire in
    what is today Mexico.
  • With the use of guns, and with the help of the
    fact that the Aztecs had no immunity to the
    diseases (smallpox) the Spaniards carried, the
    Aztec Empire was almost completely eliminated.

28
Spain (continued)
29
Spain (continued)
30
Spain (continued)
  • Soon after Cortez, Francisco Pizarro followed.
    He went to South America to what is now Peru. He
    destroyed the Inca culture for their gold.
  • Spain sent ships back and forth to the new world
    to take the gold home and make themselves the
    richest nation in the world. These ships came to
    be known as the Spanish Armada.

31
Pizarro destroys the Inca Empire
32
Encomienda
33
Encomienda System
  • A hierarchical social order emerged with the
    Indians and slaves at the bottom, the mestizos
    and mulattos in the middle and the Europeans and
    their descendants at the top. Royal protection of
    the Indian was generally ineffective. Because
    Spaniards and creoles looked down on manual
    labor, they developed several labor systems to
    force Indians to work for Spanish landowners.

34
The English, Dutch, and French in the New World
35
The English, Dutch, and French in the New World
(continued)
  • French Captain Jaques Cartier explored the
    St. Lawrence River and established
    the area now know as Quebec (Canada).

36
Francis Drake
  • Eager to get into the race for new land and
    glory, Queen Elizabeth sends out explorer Sir
    Francis Drake, who becomes the first Englishman
    to circumnavigate the globe.

37
Sir Francis Drake (continued)
38
The English, Dutch, and French in the New World
(continued)
  • The Northern European countries spread
    Protestantism to the New World.
  • England sent protestants looking for religious
    freedom to what is now the U.S.
  • France settled in the areas founded by Cartier,
    most notably, Quebec.
  • Cash crops
  • Mercantilism

What plant is this?
French seaport at the height of Mercantilism in
the 17th century
39
The English, Dutch, and French in the New World
(continued)
  • Like the Spanish encomienda system who used the
    slave labor of the Aztec and Mestizo people, the
    Northern Europeans wished to plant cash crops
    which required lots of labor.
  • Europeans began plantation systems in the
    Caribbean and the Americas which has destroyed
    the economies of the people who first lived
    there, as well as destroyed the enviornment
  • African slaves were imported (slavery was based
    on race).
  • Both leave behind a rigid class system that lasts
    for generations.

40
Trade in Africa
  • Made possible by outposts established along the
    coast.
  • Slave ports.
  • Trade in slaves, gold, and other products with
    peoples of the interior.

41
Triangular Trade
  • Linked Europe, Africa, and the Americas.
  • Traded in slaves, sugar and rum.
  • Europe also mined precious metals (gold and
    silver) from the new world to give it wealth and
    power like the world has never known.

42
The Middle Passage
43
Trade in Asia
  • Colonization was done by small groups of
    merchants who obtained the rights from the
    monarch.
  • Dutch East India Company
  • British, Portuguese, and Dutch trading companies
    invest heavily in trade in the east.

44
The Dutch East India Company
-joint stock company -still exists today
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com