1 / 53

Transatlantic Encounters and Colonial Beginnings

Transatlantic Encounters and Colonial Beginnings. 1450-1690. Questions. How did the people in Mesoamerica and the Andes region compare and contrast with the people in North America ? What forces led to the Age of Exploration?

lela
Download Presentation

Transatlantic Encounters and Colonial Beginnings

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Transatlantic Encounters and Colonial Beginnings 1450-1690

  2. Questions • How did the people in Mesoamerica and the Andes region compare and contrast with the people in North America? • What forces led to the Age of Exploration? • What are the similarities & differences among the Spanish, French, & British patterns of colonization in America? • What were the advantages & disadvantages of Spanish, French, & English colonial patterns in terms of long-termcolonization in America?

  3. Early Inhabitants of the Americas • Migration began 35,000-15,000 years ago • Cut off from the Eastern Hemisphere • Agriculture independently invented • Nomadic hunters and gatherers • Spread throughout North and South America

  4. Early Mesoamericans • 3,000 BCE – settlement in Central and South America • Crops such as maize, squash, beans, tomatoes, and potatoes are cultivated • Settlements developed into large, complex societies • Few animals were domesticated • Human labor supplied the work of agriculture • Religious centers developed into cities along the Gulf of Mexico • 1,200 BCE – emergence of the Olmec

  5. The Maya • Emerged during the 3rd century BCE • Lived in modern day Guatemala, Belize, Honduras, El Salvador, and southern Mexico • Developed a system of writing • Made advances in math and astronomy • Developed an accurate calendar • Organized into city-states

  6. Teotihuacan and the Aztecs • Teotihuacan was a center of religion and government • Believed to be the first great city of the Western Hemisphere • Population estimated to have been between 125,000-200,000 • The Toltecs unified central Mexico after the decline of Teotihuacan • The Aztec replaced the Toltec after the exile of the Toltec leader Topilzin

  7. The Aztec • The main city was Tenochtitlan with an estimated population of 300,000 at its height • The Aztec drained swamps, constructed irrigation works and terraces, and used floating gardens (chinampas) • Chinampas boosted agricultural production • The Aztec rose to power through military might and aggressive expansion • Imposed a tribute system on conquered peoples to support Tenochtitlan

  8. Andean Civilizations • The Chavin emerged in the region of modern day Peru around the time of the Olmec in Mesoamerica • After the decline of the Chavin, the Moche flourished from 100-700 CE • The Moche built an irrigation system and cultivated maize, beans, manioc, sweet potatoes, and coca • The Inca became the most powerful civilization in the Andes region • A system of roads connected the empire, and runners carried messages so the ruler could keep in touch with his subjects

  9. The People of North America • No major civilization controlled large amounts of land in North America • Different languages and lifestyles emerged in North America • Some groups were nomadic hunters of bison, deer, whales, seals, and walruses (in the Arctic region) • Some groups gathered nuts, berries, and roots to supplement fish or meat • Development of agriculture did allow permanent settlements to grow

  10. The Anasazi • Developed in the southwestern United States • Used river water to irrigate their crops of maize, beans, squash, and sunflowers • By 700 CE, the Anasazi constructed permanent pueblos (stone and adobe buildings) • Most pueblos contained a ritual enclosure called kivas • Villages were connected by roads • The Anasazi abandoned the area by about 1300

  11. Eastern Woodland Cultures • Agricultural societies emerged in the woodlands east of the Mississippi River • Cultivated maize and beans • Lived in an environment with abundant trees and rain • Many built earthen mounds used for ceremonial stages, dwellings, and burial sites • The largest mound settlement was at Cahokia • Mound settlements began to be abandoned around 1300 – the same time the Anasazi began to abandon their dwellings

  12. The People of North America • By 1450 most people lived in small kinship-based groups • Variety of languages spoken • Observed different customs • Nomadism and subsistence agriculture was common • Population estimated to be 10-25 million at the time of contact with Europeans • Settled societies generally traced lineage through matrilineal descent • Nomadic groups generally traced lineage through patrilineal descent

  13. The Iroquois Confederacy • North American group that came closest to mirroring the organizations of the Aztecs and Inca • Loose alliance of the Mohawks, Oneidas, Onondagas, Cayugas, and Senecas • Bound together by a common Iroquois language • Had the political and military organizational skills to dominate its neighbors • Hiawatha was leader who first organized the Iroquois

  14. Voyages of European Exploration

  15. The Columbian Exchange

  16. Portuguese and Spanish Voyages • Portugal began explorations in the early 1400s • Henry the Navigator led ventures down the African coast and established a navigation school • Navigation technology and advances in ship design pushed exploration forward • Bartholomew Dias and Vasco Da Gama set out to sail around the tip of Africa • In 1500, Pedro Cabral reached South America and claimed Brazil for Portugal • Christopher Columbus sailed across the Atlantic for Spain

  17. The Treaty of Tordesillas • Did Portugal or Spain control newly discovered lands? • In 1493, the Pope drew an imaginary line from north to south • Spain claimed all lands to the west of the line • Portugal claimed all lands to the east of the line • Brazil became Portugal’s only claim in the Eastern Hemisphere • Spain began to explore and colonize the Americas

  18. Spanish Empire in the Americas • Conquistadors set out in search of gold and to convert Native Americans to Christianity • Hernan Cortes conquered the Aztec in 1519 • Francisco Pizarro conquered the Inca in 1532 • Native populations were decimated by disease • At the end of the 16th Century, Spain had a massive empire in the New World

  19. A World Transformed • Native Americans were eager for European trade; they were not initially victims of Spanish exploration • They became dependent on and indebted to Europeans • Disease decimated perhaps 95% of Native American population

  20. Spanish Conquests & Colonies The Spanish used the encomienda system to create large cash crop plantations using Native American & African slave labor

  21. From Plunder to Settlement • By 1650, 1/2 million Spaniards immigrated to the New World • Mostly unmarried males came to New World; intermarriage led to mixed-bloodmestizos&mulattos • Distinguished between social classes: peninsulares & creoles • The Spanish gov’t operated strict control over the colonies

  22. Spanish Settlements in North America Spanish missionaries focused heavily on converting Native Americans & establishing missions • Juan Ponce de Leon came to FL in 1513, searching for wealth and the fountain of youth • Francisco Cornoado searched for the seven golden cities of Cibola in 1540 • Hernan De Soto led an army in search of gold across the Southeast, and discovered the MS River • In 1565, St. Augustine, FL became the first permanent settlement in North America • Missions were established in FL and in NM and CA

  23. Dutch Exploration and Settlement • Organized joint-stock companies like the Dutch East India Company • Initial Dutch explorations focused on East and Southeast Asia • In the late 17th century, the Dutch entered the trans-Atlantic slave trade • In 1624, the Dutch West India Company established the colony of New Netherland • Henry Hudson sailed into New York Harbor and claimed the area for the Netherlands

  24. Dutch Exploration and Settlement • Interested in extending trading network • Little interest in conquest • Took a practical approach with Native Americans that did not involve conquest or religious conversion • New Netherland was not a democracy • Land given to patroons who ruled like medieval lords • No elected assembly, but more religious freedom • Developed a diverse population • Women had some legal rights

  25. French Explorations and Settlements • In 1608, Samuel de Champlain founded Quebec; French Empire eventually included St. Lawrence River, Great Lakes, Mississippi • Because the fur trade was the basis of the colonial economy, Indians became valued trading partners (not exploitive like Spain) • Jesuit priests tried to convert the natives to Christianity • Population grew slowly in the French colonies due to the cold Canadian climate

  26. Like Spain, the French gov’t encouraged converting Native Americans & establishing missions

  27. British Beginnings in the New World • Britain was late in their attempts to explore and colonize the New World • Internal struggles and religious conflict took focus off colonization • Queen Elizabeth I brought stability to Britain • Defeat of the Spanish Armada made Britain a superior naval power • Britain’s first attempt at colonization was a failure (the “Lost Colony”)

  28. British Beginnings in North America • In the 1600s, English settlers arrived in North America • Several joint-stock companies were formed to begin English settlement • English colonization differed from Spanish & French because the English gov’t had no desire to create a centralized empire in the New World • Different motivations by English settlers led to different types of colonies

  29. Migrating to the English Colonies • 17th century England faced major social changes: • The most significant was a boom in population – led to competition for land, food, and jobs • British gov’t supported efforts to relocate their surplus population to North America (preserved law and order at home)

  30. Migrating to the English Colonies • Motives for migration to America: • Religious: purer form of worship • Economic: Escape poverty or the threat of lifelong poverty • Personal: to escape bad marriages or jail terms • Migration to America was facilitated by the English Civil War & Glorious Revolution

  31. Four Colonial Subcultures • The values of the migrants dictated the “personality” of the newly created colonies; led to distinct (not unified) colonies • The Chesapeake • New England • Middle Colonies • The Carolinas & Georgia

  32. By the early 1600s, Spain, England, & France had large territorial claims in North America (but these colonies were not heavily populated, especially in Spanish & French claims) These colonial claims came largely at the expense of the Native Americans already living there

  33. Governments in North America • Govt’s in English colonies had more independence from Britain than Latin American colonies • Colonial govt’s were all organized differently • Govt’s had assemblies, often with two houses • Colonists came to think they should share the right to determine colonial rules and regulations • No authoritarian viceroys were established • Large urban areas did not develop until much later

More Related