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Warm up #7. What was the colonial settlement experience? Did it match the motives that the Europeans had for Exploration and Colonization?. T/C. KBAT American Identity Seminar Asdkfja;ldkfja ; A;sdklfjasd;lkfj;a As’dlkfjasldkfj A’sdlfkja’sdlfkas Colonial Notes – from Stations
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Warm up #7 • What was the colonial settlement experience? Did it match the motives that the Europeans had for Exploration and Colonization?
T/C • KBAT • American Identity • Seminar • Asdkfja;ldkfja; • A;sdklfjasd;lkfj;a • As’dlkfjasldkfj • A’sdlfkja’sdlfkas • Colonial Notes – from Stations • Passenger List • Exploration Notes • New England Settlement Notes and Documents • Jamestown Settlement Notes and Documents • Benchmark 1
The Value of Spices • Pepper and other spices (like cinnamon, cloves, & nutmeg) were extremely expensive in Europe • Spices were used for flavoring food, but also as a preservative (to slow the rotting process) • Spices came mostly from the “Spice Islands” (modern-day Indonesia)
The Quest for Cheaper Spices • The spice trade was controlled by the Muslims (remember, they were between Europe and Indonesia), so Europeans needed to find a way to “cut out the middleman” and bypass Muslim traders • Europeans (especially Spain and Portugal) began to explore Africa’s Atlantic coastline to see if they could go around Africa to reach Indonesia
Why Now and Not Sooner? • Sea exploration had become possible thanks to new inventions: • Improved map-making methods • The astrolabe, an instrument (invented by a Muslim) for determining latitude • Better ship designs • Better weapons for defense (naval cannons)
Portuguese Exploration • Portugal went east • 1415-1460: Prince Henry the Navigator sent ships to explore along African coast • 1488: Portuguese reached Cape of Good Hope at the southern tip of Africa • 1497: Vasco de Gama sailed around the Cape of Good Hope and reached India; trip to India took 10 months but returned a profit of 3000% • Beginning in 1502, Portuguese captured several port cities in Asia to use as trading outposts
What Did They Find in Asia? • A heavy trade network already existed between China, Southeast Asia, India, and East Africa • Cultures that were heavily dominated by Chinese and Indian influences • Buddhism, Hinduism, and Islam were already strongly rooted in the area, little interest in Christianity
European Successes in Asia • The Portuguese • 1511: Portugal captured the Strait of Malacca, giving them control of the spice trade • Focused on controlling ports so that ships could sail from Europe to Indonesia in short legs; they did not move inland to create colonies • The Dutch • Challenged the Portuguese spice monopoly; captured Strait of Malacca in 1641 • The Dutch East India Company was formed by a group of wealthy investors to control the spice trade • The Spanish • 1521: Spain claimed the Philippines and quickly colonized and converted the natives to Catholicism
European Failures in Asia • India: Mughal Dynasty was too strong for Europeans to conquer until the 1750s • China • China was so advanced that Europeans had little to offer in trade that they wanted; Chinese only wanted gold or silver • Strictly limited European access to China until well into the 1800s • Japan • At first, welcomed Europeans and traded heavily with them • The shoguns became suspicious of Europeans’ intentions, however, and banned them from Japan in 1638
Spanish Exploration • Spain went west • In 1492, Christopher Columbus convinced Spain to back his effort to reach Asia by sailing west across the Atlantic • He discovered the Americas and established Spain’s claim to two “new” continents; Portugal would claim part of South America (modern day Brazil) under the Treaty of Tordesillas in 1500
Christopher Columbus • In Oct. 1492, Columbus landed in West Indies • Enslaved and tortured the natives and made them mine for gold • Named governor by the Spanish king, Columbus would later be removed from office due to corruption and abuse of power charges • Within 50 years of his arrival, 90% of the native Carib population had died from exposure to European diseases like smallpox, measles, and influenza
Hernán Cortés • Arrived in Mexico in 1519 to open diplomatic relations with the Aztec Empire • By 1521, had destroyed Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan, killed the Aztec emperor Montezuma, and broken Aztec power
Francisco Pizarro • Sent to explore Peru in 1532 • Captured the Incan emperor Atahualpa and held him for ransom; the Inca paid the ransom but Pizarro killed Atahualpa anyway • War that followed resulted in the destruction of the Incan Empire
Spanish Advantages Over Natives • So how did a few hundred Spaniards defeat millions of natives? • superior military technology • horses • armor • Guns & cannons • rivalries between native groups kept them from cooperating • disease decimated the native population and destroyed their religious faith systems
The Spanish Empire • Spain developed an American empire stretching from Northern California to South America • Managing the Empire • Split empire into provinces, each governed by a viceroy • Council of the Indies set up in Spain to oversee the viceroys
Spain Gets RICH! • Spain limited colonists to trading only with Spanish merchants • Colonists traded raw materials for Spanish manufactured goods • Spanish wealth came from exploiting American gold, silver, & sugar resources using slave labor
Slavery Under Spanish • Encomienda system: viceroys were empowered by the king of Spain to enslave natives in order to “save their souls” through Christianity • In 1542, Spain outlawed enslavement of natives, but it was too late – many had already died and the abuses continued anyway • Natives were forced into a form of serfdom after 1542 • By the 1530s, Spanish had begun importing African slaves to replace native ones
The Catholic Church in America • The Catholic Church’s Jesuit priests helped control the native population • Forcibly converted natives to Christianity • Worked to destroy native cultures and religious practices and replace it with Spanish
Beyond the Americas • The Americas, however, still blocked Europeans from reaching Asia by sailing west • How to get around the Americas? • Go North? • English, Dutch and French looked for a “Northwest Passage” around Canada, but never found one • Go South? • In 1520, Spaniard Ferdinand Magellan sailed around the southern tip of South America and into the Pacific
Ferdinand Magellan • Magellan’s fleet would go on to be the first to circumnavigate (or sail completely around) the globe (although it would take 3 years to do it, Magellan was killed along the way, and only 18 sailors and 1 ship would complete the voyage)