1 / 71

Early Exploration SOL 4 a-f

Early Exploration SOL 4 a-f. Chapter 3 & 4. I. Technology-which aided exploration. Maps—accurate 2. Latitude/Longitude 3. Astrolabe/Compass 4. Ship Design. II. Financing Exploration. Subsidies 2. Joint Stock Company. III. Economic Motive--Mercantilism.

salim
Download Presentation

Early Exploration SOL 4 a-f

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. Early ExplorationSOL 4 a-f Chapter 3 & 4

  2. I. Technology-which aided exploration • Maps—accurate 2. Latitude/Longitude 3. Astrolabe/Compass 4. Ship Design

  3. II. Financing Exploration • Subsidies 2. Joint Stock Company

  4. III. Economic Motive--Mercantilism • The theory and system of political economy prevailing in Europe after the decline of feudalism, based on national policies of accumulating bullion, establishing colonies and a merchant marine, and developing industry and mining to attain a favorable balance of trade.

  5. IV. Maintaining Wealth • Balance of trade • How to maintain balance of trade • 1. Reduce imports with tariffs • 2. Export finished products instead of raw materials • 3. become self-sufficient

  6. V. Roles of a colony in the Mercantilist Theory • Free or Cheap raw materials • Labor source • markets

  7. VI. Why people wanted to explore! 1. Gold 2. Glory 3. God

  8. Explorers from Spain • King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella financed Columbus from Genoa. He wanted to get to Asia by sailing west. In Aug. of 1492, the Nina, Pinta, and Santa Maria set sail. On October 12, 1492, he landed on the island of San Salvador, but he thought he was in India. He named the are “Indies” and the people “Indians”

  9. Explorers of Spain Con’d • Major changes in culture due to the exchange of plants, animals, products, and diseases. • Gold and silver mined in S. America helped Spain become a world power.

  10. Explorers of Spain Con’d • 4 days to the New World!! • The diet changed because of new foods. Horses changed the life of the natives. But diseases especially smallpox wiped out the Natives of Spanish America.

  11. Explorers from Spain cont…… • 1492—Columbus • 1513—Vasco Balboa—Panama & Pacific • 1579—Magellan—named Pacific • 1513—Ponce de Leon—Florida • Cortes—Aztecs, Montezuma • 1530—Pizarro--Inca

  12. Christopher Columbus

  13. Vasco Balboa • Spanish Explorer 1st to see Pacific Ocean

  14. Magellan • Philippines • Crew was the 1st to Circumnavigate The world

  15. Juan Ponce de Leon • Florida

  16. Cortes • Spanish • Conquered Aztecs

  17. Pizarro • Conquered the Incans

  18. Early Explorations • Spain and Portugal often claimed the same lands. To solve conflict the Pope solved it by drawing a line down the Atlantic Ocean known as the Line of Demarcation. Portugal got everything to the east of the line and Spain to the west.

  19. Spain and Portugal eventually signed a treaty moving the line a little more to the west.

  20. Explorers from Portugal • Portugal has a • prime location • on the • Atlantic Coast!!

  21. Prince Henry the Navigator—School to train navigators • Claimed the Azores Islands, established trade markets on the west coast of Africa (slave trade)

  22. Prince Henry the Navigator

  23. Bartolomeu Dias (1488-Sailed around the Cape of Good Hope)

  24. Vasco da Gama (1498-Cape-India-back)

  25. Pedro Alvares Cabral (1500-Brazil) Sugar Plantations—the Spanish acknowledged his claim (the coast is east of the line, but the majority of the country is west of the line)

  26. Finding these direct routes to the riches of the East not only saved time but money—they could buy direct instead of dealing with the Arabs and the Italians

  27. Other Famous Explorers • 1497-1503—Amerigo Vespucci (Florence) realized the area Columbus discovered was not Asia, but was a “New World”. (A German actually named the land after him)

  28. 1513—Vasco Nunez de Balboa—crossed the Isthmus of Panama and saw an ocean. He named it the South Sea (Now the Pacific Ocean)—he sailed for Spain

  29. 1519—Ferdinand Magellan—sailed south along the coast of South America, passed through the southern strait (now named for him) and saw a very large, “calm” ocean. He named it the Pacific meaning passive. He eventually reached the Philippines where he died in battle, but the crew made it back—1st to circum navigate!! He was Portuguese but sailed for Spain!

  30. TRADE • Portugal with Asia— • Portugal moved into East Indies…then China, Japan, and the island of Ceylon (Sri Lanka) • Small trade compared to Brazil where plantations had been set up for sugar exports

  31. Trade Con’d • Large labor crop—needs a large labor force—where are you going to get the workers??? Portugal goes to Africa • At first--friendly as the interest in the slave trade grew gradually. Slaves were eventually transported to colonies.

  32. Triangular Trade • 1. Goods shipped to Africa for slaves who were captured by African tribes and brought to the West Coast.

  33. Triangular Trade Con’d • 2. The Middle Passage-the time while the slaves were on the Atlantic • Most brutal part of the triangle • Slaves chained in overcrowded areas in the bottom of the ship • Little food or water • No provision for sanitation and many died

  34. 1500’s—2,000 slaves/year transported 1780’s—80,000/year Triangular Trade Con’d

  35. Triangular Trade cont… • 3. Goods would be purchased in America for slaves and the goods (raw materials) brought home and made into products that could be taken to Africa and traded for slaves • Africa’s population rapidly declined • Some African kingdoms did rise in rebellion to the Europeans to protest slavery

  36. African slavery was different from European slavery: • It varied from voluntary service to enforced captivity of POWs • Children of enslaved women were often considered free because often their fathers were free • Slaves were allowed to buy their freedom • They were treated as people with a role in society

  37. To Obtain Weapons/ goods To avoid being the victim Why Africans turned on neighbors to aid in slavery:

  38. Portugal Falls Apart • 1. Weak government—no control over officials at home or abroad • 2. Population declined—so many people were sailors—gov’t sent youngest, strongest males; poor ships—many were destroyed about ½ of those who went out returned • 3. Spain took over Portugal until 1640

  39. The Spanish Empire • Empire mostly in Americas and Philippines • Exploration: • Juan Ponce De Leon—Florida 1513

  40. Hernando Cortes—Aztecs—defeated Montezuma and destroyed city of Tenochtitlan (today Mexico City) Easy defeat due to horses and guns • Franco Pizarro—1530 into Peru and destroyed the Inca

  41. The Spanish Empire cont… • Spain established settlements where other European powers used the colonies for trade. Spain established governments with viceroys—representatives to the monarch

  42. To oppress the natives and slaves—encomienda system-the right to demand labor=slavery • Spain got mineral wealth from colonies, but killed many natives from disease. They had to begin importing slaves to compensate.

  43. No foreigners were allowed in Spanish colonies—wealth was appealing to other countries. • Treasure ships were a target and England as well as other powers encouraged piracy and even established colonies in the New World.

  44. Other colonies… • Portuguese, Dutch, and British established trading companies along the coast of Africa, India, and Asia • Portuguese and Spain—developed a few colonies in the New World

More Related