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Explore the origins of the United States and pre-Columbian civilizations, including the impact of Columbus' discovery and European exploration. Delve into the conquests, colonizations, and exchanges that shaped the New World, from religious influences to the encomienda system and the fate of indigenous peoples. Discover the lasting effects on Latin America and the interplay of freedom, inequality, and hierarchies in the early modern world.
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I. Pre-Columbian Civilizations • A. Where does the history of the United States begin? • B. The discovery of Columbus?- Americas inhabited prior to arrival • C. Pre-Columbian Civilizations? • 1. Theory of Origins • a. Bering Strait • 2. Dispersal & diversity • a. Maize Agriculture=complex societies
I. Pre-Columbian Civilizations • b. 600 social systems • c. Examples: • 1. In North America • Southwest-permanent homes • Great Plains-nomadic, teepees • Eastern Woodlands-small villages Anasazi Mississippi Valley Chaco Canyon Cahokia Mounds
Pre-Columbian Civilizations Examples: Meso America Olmecs 1500 BC-300BC
Aztecs 1325-1521 A.D. Quetzacoatl Tenochtitlan
Inca Machu Picchu, Peru
II. Did Columbus Really “Discover” America? • A. Ocean Travel Possible long before 1492 • B. Vikings 1000 AD- Christianity arrives to North America • 1. Erik the Red- Greenland • 2. Leif Erikson- Vinland, Christian missionary • C. What prepared Europeans for role as explorers of NA? • 1. 1096 Crusades- organize & finance large expeditions • 2. Launch explorations to Middle East and Orient in Search of Riches & Trade • 1271 Marco Polo • 3. Portuguese Experience • Prince Henry the Navigator • Trade gold, ivory, slaves in Africa- 1488 • 1498 Vasco de Gama around the coast of Africa • 4. Christopher Columbus • Expeditions • Significance of 1492 • Columbian Exchange • Two Views of Columbus
Irony of Unintended Consequences • Case Study: Island of Hispaniola • 1496 Estimated Population1.1 million • 50 years later 200 Exploitation in mines Crippling effect of disease Significance of 1492-discuss
Demographic consequences of European arrival in the Americas • “Columbian exchange” of goods and people • Devastation of Indian population • Causes • War • Enslavement • Disease • Displacement
III. European Exploration • 1. Americas first an obstacle • A. Search for all water route through America spurs explorations • 1. Ferdinand Magellan: sailed @ South America • 2. Vasco Nunez de Balboa: across Panama • B. Rumors of a Northwest Passage spurs explorations in NA • C. But Religious wars occupy Europe until the 1600’s so little English settlements are established
III. European Exploration • 2. New World Extraction • a. Spanish conquistadores- Case Study of the 3 G’s (Gold, Glory and God) • 1. Hernando Cortez 1521 • Fall of the Aztec Empire • Montezuma, Quetzalcoatl • Factors: Indian allies, superior technology, biological, psychological • 2. Pizzaro defets Incas in Peru 1532
Cycle of Conquest & Colonization Explorers Conquistadores Missionaries EuropeanColonialEmpire Permanent Settlers
III. European Exploration: impact-Religion Lasting impact of introduction of Western Faith in Latin America today
III. European Exploration: impact-Indian freedom, European freedom • Indian conceptions of freedom • Basis in collective belonging, self-determination, mutuality • Absence of basis in individual autonomy, private property • European incomprehension of • European conceptions of freedom • Christian liberty • Freedom from sin • No freedom of religious choice • Freedom and inequality in early modern England • Emphasis on ordered, hierarchical society • Gender hierarchies • Class hierarchies • Unequal distribution of freedoms
ENCOMIENDA SYSTEM • 1. Spanish practice of securing an adequate and cheap labor supply – land and Indians to work the land “granted” to deserving subjects of the King • 2. Conquistador controlled Indian populations • Required Indians to pay tribute from their lands • Indians often rendered personal services as well. • 3. In return the conquistador was obligated to • protect his wards • instruct them in the Christian faith • defend their right to use the to live off the land • 4. Encomienda system eventually decimated Indian population. • 5. Repartiemento system replaced encomienda
Father Bartolomé de Las Casas • Believed Native Americans had been treated harshly by the Spanish. • Indians could be educated and converted to Christianized. • Believed Indian culture was advanced as European but in different ways. • Advocated use of slaves from Africa, later regretted- Dark Continent
Recap: Fate of the New World • 1492 Spain (Voyage of Columbus) • 1521 Spain (Cortes conquers Mexico) • 1599 Spain (Colonizes northward) • 1600’s Rival settlements from France, Holland, England…etc. • Spain’s hold on the New World uncontested for over 100 years • Riches from New World made Spain a leading world and wealthy power but inflation wore away at Spanish economy and had all but dwindled by mid 1600’s. Also adventurers at sea often attacked Spanish galleons (under Royal orders from England) for the bullions- sea dogs: like Sir Francis Drake. The defeat of the Spanish Armada by Protestant England sealed Spain’s fate and cemented the virtually uncontested role Protestants would play in populating the shores of North America.
Pueblo Revolt Sources of Pueblo resentment of colonial authorities Labor exploitation Pressure to convert to Catholicism Assault on Pueblo religious traditions Failure to protect Pueblos from drought, external attacks The 1680 Revolt Popé Unity of Pueblo rebels against forced conversions Defeat and ouster of Spanish colonizers European Exploration: The Spanish Empire
Pueblo Revolt Aftermath of revolt Eradication of Spanish cultural presence Collapse of Pueblo unity Return of Spanish colonial rule Easing of colonial practices toward Pueblos SIGNIFICANCE: Native Americans not passive participants of history- their resistance and efforts to preserve land and way of life forced the Europeans to respond and adapt their conquest and colonization practices. European Exploration: The Spanish Empire
IV. France in the New World • Principle rival to Spain • A. Jacques Cartier (1534) • St. Lawrence River • Settlements abandoned • Riches in Fur trade • Claim established • B. Samuel de Champlain (1608) • Settlement at Quebec • Huron/Algonquin Allies • Acculturation, intermarriage • C. Robert La Salle (1682) • Mississippi River • Louisiana Territory • D. Extraction vs. settlement • French Huguenots prohibited
V. Dutch in the New World • New Amsterdam (1625) • First Europeans to establish colonies between the Connecticut and Delaware Rivers • Aristocratic society with large feudal estates along the Hudson River granted to stockholders who promised to have fifty adults living on the estate within four years. Hard to find volunteers to work the land. • Dutch Company ran the colony • In England, James (the Duke of York) granted proprietorship over the general area. Unable to raise enough defenders for the colony, Gov. Stuyvesant surrendered without firing a shot. • Colony renamed New York
VI. Background in England • A. Political Explanation: Tudor Kings= Rise of Nation-State/Competition & Power • A. King Henry VIII- 1530’s • 1. Navy • 2. Search for an heir • a. Catherine • b. Anne Boleyn • 3. Crown over Church • 4. Protestant England • B. Queen Elizabeth • 1. Sea Dogs • Sir Francis Drake • 2. Supports colonization • Virginia
VI. Background in England • B. Religious Explanation: preparing the way for a Protestant America • Roots • Mentality: State Churches, no freedom of conscience • Message: Early reformers- sola fida • Means: Gutenburg Printing Press- (moveable type) the means allowing for the production and distribution of the Bible in mass quantities- sola scriptura, & in own language • Means: Cross-cultural trade and communication=spread of movement • Birth of the Reformation: • Case Study: Martin Luther- 95 Thesis
VI. Background in England • B. Religious Explanation: preparing the way for a Protestant America • Result of the Reformation: • Diverse Protestant groups • Religious wars and persecution in Europe • Seek religious freedom- “freedom of conscience” supports political dissent • Examples: Separatists vs. Puritans emigrate to America
VII. First English Attempt at Settlement • Private Investment: (Not financed by Crown) • Sir Walter Raleigh • 3 attempts • Failed 3rd Attempt in 1587 • Promises to return with supplies • Cut off by Spanish Armada • Mysterious disappearance • Croatoan
VIII. The Lure of ColonizationPush/Pull Factors to America • 1. Cheap Land • Enclosure Movement in England • Overpopulated • Rising Prices • 2. Economic Opportunity • Rigid class system in Eng. • Aspiration & ambition • Laws of entail & primogeniture • 3. Religious Freedom • 4. Prior Experience • Conquest of Ireland
IX. First English Settlements • A. What factors will help influence the fate of the first English settlements? • B. Survival Experiences • Geography • Climate • Flora & fauna • Needs: food, shelter, protection • C. Dependency on tribes • Peace v. aggression • Result: 3 Distinct Colonial Regions • New England, Middle & Southern Colonies