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Transformation in the Atlantic World, 1400-1625

Explore the pivotal events and influences shaping the rise of the Atlantic world, from Columbus’s landing to religious upheavals and European societal changes. Discover the interplay between African, European, and Native American cultures during this transformative period.

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Transformation in the Atlantic World, 1400-1625

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  1. Chapter 2 The Rise of the Atlantic World, 1400-1625

  2. Introduction • Oct. 12, 1492 • Columbus and crew landed on the island of San Salvador • Ended isolation of the Western Hemisphere from Europe and Asia

  3. 4 important questions • What forces were transforming West Africa before the advent of the Atlantic slave trade? • How did European monarchs use commerce and religion to advance their nations’ fortunes?

  4. 4 important questions (cont.) • What role did the Columbian exchange play in the formation of an Atlantic world? • How did relations with Native Americans affect the success of early European colonizing efforts?

  5. African and European Peoples • West Africa: Tradition and Change • Grasslands of the Sahara Dessert and east of the West African coast, kingdoms arose that rivaled those in Europe in size and wealth • 14th Century • Mali • Dominated entire region • Lucrative trade with Europe and the Middle East • Timbuktu=leading city (center of Islamic learning)

  6. West Africa: Tradition and Change (cont.)

  7. West Africa: Tradition and Change (cont.) • By 16th century Mali was conquered by Morocco • 15th century=small states on Guinea and Senegambian coast grew in population and importance • Gold was mined and traded • mid-1400’s=Portuguese arrived on the coast looking for gold and slaves

  8. West Africa: Tradition and Change (cont.) • West African leaders ranged from powerful emperors (who claimed demigod status) to heads of small states (who ruled by persuasion) • Kinship groups formed the most important unit holding people together

  9. West Africa: Tradition and Change (cont.) • Men could marry more than one woman • Allowed high-status men to establish kinship networks with other important families through their several wives • High mortality rate in West Africa=led to many marriages • Frequent famines and tropical disease epidemics • Shortage of people placed a high premium on the production of children

  10. West Africa: Tradition and Change (cont.) • Children helped with food production • Most food was obtained by farming • Children, men, and women all farmed • Yams, rice, other grains • 15th century=market economy had developed • Farmers trading surplus crops for artisan-made goods

  11. West Africa: Tradition and Change (cont.) • Religion and spirituality permeated African culture and inspired artistic endeavors • Sophisticated art and music (much of 20th century jazz is based on) • 1500’s=Islam was starting to spread beyond the kings and upper class to the common people of the grasslands • Christianity (intro. by Portuguese in 1400’s and 1500’s) made limited headway until the 19th century

  12. European Culture and Society • Europe was at height of the Renaissance (a great cultural revival) in the late 1400’s • Trying to map the world and understand natural science and astronomy • Society was hierarchical (kings at the top and peasants-75% of the people at the bottom) • Population increases in the 16th and 17th centuries made land in Europe scarce and valuable

  13. European Culture and Society (cont.) • Upper classes enclosed more of the fields and made them private property • Displaced country people drifted to the small towns (dirty, crowded, diseases) • Nuclear families were replacing kinship networks • Father ruled over wife and children as the king ruled over his subjects

  14. European Culture and Society (cont.) • New business enterprises and organizations (joint stock companies) broke the bonds of social reciprocity • Emerging entrepreneurs favored “unimpeded acquisition of wealth” and unregulated competition • They “insisted that individuals owed one another nothing but the money necessary to settle each market transaction.”

  15. Religious Upheavals • Most Europeans in 1492 were Christians • Roman Catholic Church • Headed by a pope • Administered by a hierarchy of clergy who did not marry • By 15th century, selling indulgences (blessings that would shorten the repentant sinner’s time in purgatory) for donations to the church

  16. Religious Upheavals (cont.) • Protestant Reformation • 1517 • Martin Luther • Denounced indulgences and other corrupt practices • Broke from the Catholic Church • Preached that one could not buy or earn salvation good works (or donations to the church)

  17. Religious Upheavals (cont.) • God alone decided who was saved and who was damned • Christians must have faith in his love and justice

  18. Religious Upheavals (cont.) • John Calvin • French Protestant leader • Emphasizing the doctrine of predestination (God’s foreknowledge of who was saved and who was damned)

  19. Religious Upheavals (cont.) • Counter-Reformation • Modern Roman Catholic Church was born • Aimed to clean out corruption and stimulate religious zeal • Attempting to suppress Protestantism • European countries divided into rival Protestant and Catholic camps

  20. The Reformation in England, 1533-1625 • King Henry VIII • Ruled 1509-1547 • Reformation began in England under Henry VIII • Asked the pope to annul his marriage • Pope refused

  21. The Reformation in England, 1533-1625 (cont.) • Henry VIII then pushed through Parliament the laws of 1533-1534, which dissolved his marriage • Also, the laws declared the king head of the Church of England (Anglican)

  22. The Reformation in England, 1533-1625 (cont.) • Religious strife continued in England for more than 100 years • Henry’s son and successor (Edward VI) leaned toward Protestantism • 1547-1553

  23. The Reformation in England, 1533-1625 (cont.) • Mary I • “Bloody Mary” • tried to restore Catholicism • Often burned Protestants at the stake • 1553-1558 • Turned majority of English against Catholicism

  24. The Reformation in England, 1533-1625 (cont.) • Elizabeth I • 1558-1603 • 1/2 sister of Mary I • Anti-Catholicism

  25. The Reformation in England, 1533-1625 (cont.) • The English differed on how Protestant the Church of England should be • Puritans (Calvinistic Puritans) • Wanted to remove all vestiges of Catholicism • Believed in predestination • Felt that only the saved should belong to the church • Each congregation to be self-governing and free from interference from bishops and church hierarchy

  26. The Reformation in England, 1533-1625 (cont.) • “Nonseparating” Puritans • Remained with the Church of England • Hoping to reform the Church of England • Separatists • Withdrew • A “pure” church had to be entirely free of Anglican “pollution”

  27. The Reformation in England, 1533-1625 (cont.) • Puritanism with its message of righteousness and self-discipline appealed to landowning gentry, small farmers, university-educated clergy, intellectuals, merchants, shopkeepers, and artisans

  28. The Reformation in England, 1533-1625 (cont.) • Elizabeth managed to satisfy most of English Protestants (both Puritan and Anglican) • Her successor (James I) did not • James I (1603-1625) was completely against Puritans

  29. Europe and the Atlantic World, 1400-1600 • Portugal led the way in Europe’s ocean expansion (1400-1500) • Advances in maritime technology • Caravel • Magnetic compass • Prince Henry the Navigator • Sent Portuguese sailors farther down the coast of Africa

  30. Europe and the Atlantic World, 1400-1600 (cont.) • Fought Muslims • Seek opportunities for profitable trade • Established a gold-processing factory at Arguin • Rounded Africa’s Cape of Good Hope • Developed valuable commercial links with India

  31. Europe and the Atlantic World, 1400-1600 (cont.) • These Portuguese voyages brought Europeans face to face with black-skinned Africans and an entrance into the already flourishing slave trade

  32. The “New Slavery” and Racism • Slavery existed in West Africa before the arrival of Europeans • Not based on racial differences between masters and slaves • Slaves were often eventually absorbed into the owners’ families • First Muslims from North Africa, then Europeans turned African slavery into an “intercontinental business”

  33. The “New Slavery” and Racism (cont.) • European slavers bought war captives from African slave-trading kings • This encouraged those rulers to engaged in warfare with their neighbors, using the guns they had obtained from earlier slave sales

  34. The “New Slavery” and Racism (cont.) • Nearly 12 million Africans were shipped across the Atlantic under horrific conditions to labor in the Western Hemisphere • The new slavery was based on race • Dehumanized black Africans in the eyes of white Europeans • Regarded slaves as property (not as persons)

  35. To American and Beyond, 1492-1522 • Christopher Columbus insisted that Europeans could reach Asia by sailing westward across the Atlantic • King and Queen of Spain were anxious to break Portugal’s monopoly of trade around Africa • They financed Columbus’ voyages

  36. To American and Beyond, 1492-1522 (cont.) • 1492 trip=Columbus landed on the island of Guanahani in the West Indies (he called it San Salvador) • On a subsequent voyage, he claimed and colonized for Spain the island of Hispaniola • Even after his last expedition (1498-1502), he did not realize he had discovered a new world

  37. To American and Beyond, 1492-1522 (cont.) • John Cabot • 1497 • Explored and claimed the north Atlantic coast for England

  38. To American and Beyond, 1492-1522 (cont.) • Later explorers eventually realized that a big landmass (America) blocked the way to Asia • They focused discovering a water route through or around the Americas to reach Asia

  39. To American and Beyond, 1492-1522 (cont.) • Balboa • Crossed the Isthmus of Panama • Reached the Pacific • 1513 • Magellan • 1519 • sailed around the tip of South American and reached the Philippines before being killed

  40. To American and Beyond, 1492-1522 (cont.) • Verrazano • Explored the coast of North America • 1524 • Cartier • Sailed up the St. Lawrence • Looking for supposed Northwest passage to Asia • 1534

  41. Spain’s Conquistadores, 1492-1536 • Early Spanish explorers soon became conquerors • Columbus • Exported Indian slaves from Hispaniola • Gave grants to Spaniards to extract labor from native population

  42. Spain’s Conquistadores, 1492-1536 (cont.) • Hernan Cortes • 1519 • Landed in Mexico • Subjugated the mighty Aztec Empire • Francisco Pizarro • 1532-1536 • Conquered the Incas

  43. Spain’s Conquistadores, 1492-1536 (cont.) • Spanish conquerors were awestruck by the civilizations they encountered (size, govt., wealth, etc.) • Spanish conquerors fanned out over the Caribbean and the Americans from Mexico to Chile • Subduing and enslaving the native peoples and enriching themselves and Spain

  44. Spain’s Conquistadores, 1492-1536 (cont.) • The Indian population was nearly decimated • Forced labor • Warfare • Starvation • Alien diseases (small pox & measles) • When shortages of Indian slaves developed, the Portuguese delivered African substitutes • In 1519=Central Mexico’s population was between 13 and 25 million • By 1600=it was 700,000

  45. The Columbian Exchange • “Columbian Exchange” or the “biological encounter” of Europe, Africa, and America had tremendous impact on the peoples, animals, and plants of all 3 areas

  46. The Columbian Exchange (cont.) • Diseases • Disease-causing microbes • Europeans and Africans brought with them • Wiped out whole tribes of Indians who lacked natural immunity • Made it easier for Europeans to conquer and colonize • Animals • Horses, cattle, sheep

  47. The Columbian Exchange (cont.) • Plants • Wheat, coffee, sugar • Food • Rice and yams from Enslaved Africans • Corn, potatoes, tobacco, turkeys • Transplanted crops and animals enriched human diets but also caused environmental change and damage to the new habitants

  48. The Columbian Exchange (cont.) • Peoples mingled • 300,000 Spanish colonists who arrived in the Americas in the 16th century were 90% male • Many took Indian wives and produced mestizo populations of Mexico and Latin America • European planters begot mulatto children with enslaved African women • Children of mixed Indian-African ancestry were also common

  49. The Columbian Exchange (cont.) • The Americas produced fabulous wealth for Spain and her colonists in the 16th century • Gold and silver from Mexican mines • sugar cane from West Indians plantations • sheep and cattle from Mexican ranches • Span’s kings became wealthy • Failed to use the wealth wisely limited the long-term benefit for their nation

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