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Bell Peppers. Bell peppers and everyday life: Creative ways to teach economic geography Sriram Khé Western Oregon University. A few facts …. The botanical name is capsicum Native to Central and South America May have originated in Bolivia
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Bell Peppers Bell peppers and everyday life: Creative ways to teach economic geography Sriram Khé Western Oregon University sriram khé
A few facts … • The botanical name is capsicum • Native to Central and South America • May have originated in Bolivia • Currently grown in many tropical countries as well as in the more temperate climates of the Southwest United States and in the Mediterranean area. • The original name is chili • Said to be derived from a Nahuatl word, tchili, meaning red • Note that the name Chile, the country, is derived from a word meaning snow sriram khé
Some like it hot! Hot Peppers: A. AnaheimB. Hungarian WaxC. JalapeñoD. Carribean Sweet Peppers: A. Bell PepperB. Sweet BananaC. Pimento E. HabaneroF. CayenneG. Super ChileH. Serrano sriram khé
Chile or Pepper? • Notice that the name for the plant in the original areas was NOT PEPPER! • But … chili … • So, why did this crop, which had a unique geography (South America) get a name change to pepper? • Bell pepper … • Jalapeño pepper … sriram khé
Pepper … • The original pepper • Now referred to as black pepper • Botanically piper nigrum • Pepper comes from the sanskrit word pippali, which refers to the berry • Became péperi in Greek • And piper in Latin sriram khé
Pepper … • Indigenous to the west coast of India • Through traders it then spread to • Burma • Indonesia • Malaysia • Now, even in Brazil and China! http://www.calicutnet.com/articles/sources/malabar%20history/KERALA%201498AD.htm sriram khé
Pepper … Via Piperatica • Was a highly prized commodity • So highly that it was on par with gold, and was referred to as “black gold” • The Visigoths demanded 3,000 pounds of pepper as ransom when they sacked Rome http://archserve.id.ucsb.edu/arthistory/152k/roads.html sriram khé
Pepper … • In 1400 pepper made up 60% of the Venetian spice trade, and spices were handled at a profit margin of about 40%. • In 1426 the new Mamluk Sultan Barsbay decided to make pepper a royal monopoly. • All pepper from the Orient was unloaded at Jiddah, which the Mamluks now controlled. • From here it was shipped to Egypt, and offered for sale to the Venetians, who dominated the spice trade from Egypt by this time. • The final blow came in 1453 when the Ottoman Turks took Constantinople, shutting down the small overland trade The greatest extent of the Mamluk sultanate (1250–1517). sriram khé
The Renaissance • So, instead of the land route, Europeans—patricularly the Portugese, Spaniards, and Italians—wanted to sail ships to India to get the pepper • Remember, pepper was literally worth its weight in gold • With maritime explorations, the race started to figure out the shortest sea route from Europe to the land of black gold (India) • In 1498 Vasco da Gama was the first to reach India • Reached Kozhikode (Calicut) on the west coast sriram khé
Da Gama’s Route sriram khé
Kerala sriram khé
So, bell pepper? • Christopher Columbus set out to India in 1492 • Ended up in the West Indies, which he thought was India • He thought that the chili with the seeds inside was a variation of pepper • “ plenty of ají, which is their pepper, which is more valuable than [black] pepper, and all the people eat nothing else, it being very wholesome” (Turner, 2004) • Took these chilies back to Iberia and told the king he brought pepper with him • Europeans liked this new pepper • Thanks to Columbus for lots of confusions! sriram khé
Portuguese trade in chili • Despite Spain's early claim to the chili pepper, the Portuguese appear to be the first traders to have spread the chili pepper globally. • Portugal's maritime power - rounding the Cape of Good Hope and reaching India in 1498 - set a course for the chili pepper to leave South America. • The Spanish-born Pope Alexander VI brokered the Treaty of Tordesillas in 1494 • Effectively split the world in half between Spain and Portugal • By the 1500s they were regularly exporting chili peppers from Brazil • The only part of South America which Portugal could claim under the Treaty. http://yaleglobal.yale.edu/about/chili.jsp sriram khé
The end of (black) pepper? • India is the largest consumer and exporter of red hot chili peppers • Exporting over 51,900 tons of chili peppers annually • In all, India produces close to 8 million tons of dry chili pepper a year. • The top growing states for chili peppers in India are Andra Pradesh, Orissa, Mahrashtra, West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, and Rajasthan. sriram khé
Economic Geographyof pepper • Notice the interplay between economics and geography • Commodity is geography-specific • Pepper in India • Chili in South America • Value of the commodity • Trade involved • Money to be made • Find better access to the geography • Navigate a new path to India • Better yet, build the Suez Canal for easier access to the new “black gold”! sriram khé
So … • Story of bell pepper is more than a mere story • An exploration of historical economic geography • More such stories • Story of coffee • Wonderful threads linking history, geography, economics, and politics • Time for coffee? sriram khé