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The European Voyages of Discovery. Motives and circumstances The Portuguese explorations The Spanish explorations Comparing the Portuguese and Spanish experiences Ironies and tragedies . I. Motives and Circumstances. Basic motives: gold, God, and glory
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The European Voyages of Discovery Motives and circumstances The Portuguese explorations The Spanish explorations Comparing the Portuguese and Spanish experiences Ironies and tragedies
I. Motives and Circumstances • Basic motives: gold, God, and glory • Long-term trends: recovery from the plague; development of market economy; emergence of strong monarchies • Singular events: the Crusades, Marco Polo, rise of the Ottoman Turks • New technology: the magnetic compass; devices to determine latitude; stern-post rudder; triangular sail
Portuguese explore the coast of Africa in the time of Henry the Navigator
A Japanese portrait of some Portuguese sailors and their ship
Replica of Columbus’ ship, a caravel redunda with square sails
In four voyages Columbus explored the islands and coastline of central America, looking for a way to reach the Far East
The Treaty divided the Atlantic Ocean with an imaginary line, defining the spheres of future Portuguese and Spanish colonization
The Portuguese established trading posts along the coasts of the continents they explored
The Spanish conquered and settled the interior of the Americas. As time passed, in Spanish territory, a mixture of native and European peoples and cultures emerged.
Spanish explorer Coronado marched from Mexico into lands the would become the southwestern United States, and as far north as Kansas
IV. Ironies and tragedies • The Portuguese, distracted by their African discoveries, were not the ones to discover America • Portuguese technology enabled Spain to make the great voyages and discoveries in America continued
Columbus based his voyage on a false estimate of the earth’s circumference Columbus believed to the end of his life he had reached the Far East America was accidentally named after Amerigo, not Columbus continued
When Portugal and Spain agreed to divide the unexplored world, Portugal unexpectedly got Brazil The Spanish explored North America, but finding no gold there did not establish permanent settlements continued
The Spanish and Portuguese expected the natives to be their slaves, loyal subjects of their kings, and converts to their Christian faith—but the great majority died off due to European diseases and overwork To replace the American natives as a source of labor, Europeans shipped millions of enslaved Africans across the Atlantic Ocean to America
In October 1992 the five-hundredth anniversary of Columbus’ voyage was commemorated • Italian-Americans celebrated the accomplishments of the great sailor • Native Americans did not celebrate • Some people proclaimed “the Columbian Exchange,” the valuable mixing of peoples, crops, animals, languages, and customs that resulted from the first lasting contact between Europe and America • Everyone acknowledged that in 1492 the world entered a modern phase of global interconnection in which the life of each people is linked to that of all others