1 / 36

NEW WORLD ENCOUNTERS

NEW WORLD ENCOUNTERS. America: Past and Present Chapter 1. Native American Histories before Conquest. 20,000 years ago--Siberian hunters become first American inhabitants 14,000 years ago--Humans reach tip of South America. These Paleo-Indians did not suffer from many communicative diseases.

loan
Download Presentation

NEW WORLD ENCOUNTERS

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. NEW WORLD ENCOUNTERS America: Past and Present Chapter 1

  2. Native American Histories before Conquest • 20,000 years ago--Siberian hunters become first American inhabitants • 14,000 years ago--Humans reach tip of South America. • These Paleo-Indians did not suffer from many communicative diseases

  3. Routes of the First Americans

  4. The Environmental Challenge:Food, Climate, and Culture • Native Americans enjoyed an abundant supply of meat • Some suggest they over-hunted and caused the extinction of several large species • Climatic warming probably played a much bigger role • 5,000 years ago-- Agricultural Revolution • Crops include maize, squash, and beans • Shift from nomadic hunting and gathering to permanent villages or large cities

  5. Mysterious Disappearances • Anasazi Culture—Chaco Canyon • Sophisticated irrigation • Well-built roads for transportation • Adena and Hopewell Peoples—Ohio Valley • Large ceremonial mounds • Extensive trade network • Cahokia—Mississippi Valley • Large ceremonial mounds • Far-flung trade network

  6. Aztec Dominance • Aztecs settle valley of Mexico • Center of large, powerful empire • Highly organized social and political structure • Rule through fear and force

  7. Eastern Woodland Cultures • Atlantic Coast of North America • Native Americans lived in smaller bands • Agriculture supplemented by hunting and gathering • Likely were the first natives encountered by English settlers

  8. Locations of Major Indian Groups and Culture Areas in the 1600s

  9. A World Transformed • Large numbers of whites profoundly altered Native cultures • The rate of change varied from place to place • Native traditions changed radically for cultural survival

  10. Cultural Negotiations • Diversity of language groups, ethnicities • Define place in society through kinship • Communal, charismatic, sociopolitical formation • Diplomacy, trade, war organized around reciprocal relationships

  11. Confederacies of Eastern North America • Hurons--Southern Ontario near Lakes Ontario and Erie • Iroquois--Central New York • Powhattans--Chesapeake

  12. Threats to Survival: Trade • Native Americans were eager for European trade • They became dependent on and indebted to Europeans • Commerce also influenced warfare patterns

  13. Threats to Survival: Disease • Contact brings population decline among American Indians • Cause: Lack of resistance to epidemic disease • smallpox • measles • influenza • Rate as high as ninety-five percent

  14. West Africa: Ancient and Complex Societies • Diversity of sub-Saharan Cultures • Islam • Strong traditional beliefs • A history of empires • Mali • Ghana • Daily life centered on elder-ruled clans

  15. Trade Routes in Africa

  16. Beginnings of theSlave Trade • 15th-century Portuguese chart sea lanes from Europe to sub-Saharan Africa • Native rulers sell prisoners of war to Portuguese as slaves

  17. How Many Slaves? • 17th century--ca. 1,000 Africans per year • 18th century--5.5 million transported to the Americas • By 1860--ca. 11 million • Before 1831, more Africans than Europeans came to the Americas.

  18. Europe on the Eve of Conquest • 10th Century --Leif Ericson settles “Vinland” • Late 15th-century--preconditions for overseas settlement attained • rise of nation-states • spread of new technologies • spread of old knowledge. • 1492--Columbus initiates large-scale European colonization

  19. Building New Nation-States • Population growth after 1450 • “New Monarchs” forge nations from scattered provinces • Spain • France • England • “Middle class” a new source of revenue • Powerful military forces deployed

  20. Imagining a New World • Spain the first European nation to achieve conditions for successful colonization • Unified under Ferdinand and Isabella • 1492--Jews and Muslims expelled • Conquest of Canary Islands provides rehearsal for colonization

  21. Myths and Reality • Columbus persuades Queen Isabella to finance westward expedition to “Cathay” • 1492--Initial voyage • Three subsequent voyages to find cities of China • 1506--died clinging to belief he had reached the Orient • Made possible Spanish dominion in America

  22. The Conquistadores • Independent adventurers commissioned by Spanish crown to subdue new lands • By 1512--Major Caribbean islands decimated • By 1521--Cortés destroys Aztec Empire • 1539-42--de Soto explores Southeast • 1540-42--Coronado explores Southwest

  23. Voyages of European Exploration

  24. From Plunder to Settlement • Encomienda System rewards Conquistadors • Large land grants • Indian inhabitants provide labor or tribute • Appointed officials answer only to Crown • Catholic Church • Protects Indian rights • Performs mass conversions • By 1650, 1/2 million Spaniards in New World • Unmarried males intermarry • Mixed-blood population emerges

  25. The French Claim Canada • 1608--Samuel de Champlain founds Quebec • French Empire eventually includes St. Lawrence River, Great Lakes, Mississippi • French Crown makes little effort to foster settlement • Fur trade underpins economy • Indians become valued trading partners

  26. The English Enter the Competition • Claims New World territory under Henry VIII (r. 1509-1547) • Achieves preconditions for colonization under Elizabeth I

  27. Birth of English Protestantism • English rise influenced by Protestant Reformation • 1517--Martin Luther sparks reform in Germany • 1536--John Calvin’s Institutes published in Geneva • Reformation pits European Protestants against Catholics

  28. The English Reformation • Tudor monarchs bring political unity • Reformation under Henry Vlll (r. 1509-1547) strengthens Crown • Protestant reform accelerated under Edward VI (r. 1547-1553) • Death of Mary I (r. 1553-1558) cuts short English Catholic Counterreformation • Elizabeth I (r. 1558-1603) consolidates English Reformation

  29. Militant Protestantism • Lutheran Reformation • God speaks through Bible, not Pope or priests • Justification by faith alone for salvation • Calvinist Reformation • John Calvin stresses God’s omnipotence • Predestination—some persons chosen by God for salvation • Calvinist Christianity expands in northern Europe • France—Huguenots • Scotland—Presbyterians • England—Puritans

  30. Woman in Power • Elizabeth I (1558-1603) a very capable monarch • Elizabeth introduces Via Media • Protestant Doctrine • “Catholic” Ritual • Ends religious turmoil in England • Elizabeth’s excommunication by Pope prompts Spanish crusade against England • England aligned with Protestant nations against Catholic powers

  31. Religion, War, and Nationalism • Spanish hostility makes Elizabeth the symbol of English, Protestant nationhood • Sea Dogs’ seizure of Spanish treasure makes them English heroes • Elizabeth's subjects raid Spain's American empire • 1588-- Spanish Armada defeated

  32. Irish Rehearsal for American Settlement • English experiences in Ireland shaped how they would conquer the New World • To the English the Irish were wild and barbaric • They would view Native Americans the same way

  33. English Conquest of Ireland • Ireland was a laboratory for English colonization • Irish viewed as backward • English under Elizabeth seize Irish land

  34. English Brutality • English ethnocentrism benign when Irish docile • English brutally crush frequent Irish resistance such as massacre of women and children • English adventurers compare Native Americans with “wild” Irish

  35. An Unpromising Beginning: Mystery at Roanoke • Sir Walter Raleigh established Roanoke colony in 1584 • He named the region Virginia after the Virginia Queen • The colony failed and Raleigh tried again in 1587 • The colonists disappeared without a trace and their fate remains a mystery

  36. Campaign to Sell America • By 1600 no English settlements in New World • Richard Hakluyt advertises benefits of American colonization • Claimed that England needs American colonies

More Related