1 / 35

Europe Reaches Out

Europe Reaches Out. The Age of Exploration. Entire populations and cultures have been transplanted in recent centuries. 59 million inhabitants of Great Britain 270 million English-speakers in U.S. 30 million in S. Africa 28 million in Canada 18 million in Australia. .

viveca
Download Presentation

Europe Reaches Out

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. Europe Reaches Out The Age of Exploration

  2. Entire populations and cultures have been transplanted in recent centuries 59 million inhabitants of Great Britain • 270 million English-speakers in U.S. • 30 million in S. Africa • 28 million in Canada • 18 million in Australia.

  3. 39 million inhabitants in Spain • 250 million Spanish speakers in Latin America • Largest Spanish city is Mexico City (half the population of all of Spain) 10 million inhabitants in Portugal • 160 million Portuguese speakers in Brazil • Largest Portuguese city is Sao Paulo (more inhabitants than Portugal)

  4. Largest French city is still Paris • But the second largest is Montreal.

  5. 16 million inhabitants in Holland, 10 million Afrikaans speakers in S. Africa. • There are 5 million Jews in Israel, 5 million in the U.S. • The second largest Polish city is Chicago. • 30 million blacks in the U.S. (only 6 countries in Africa have greater population)

  6. The Impulse Toward Exploration • Tantalizingly brief gap between several medieval events and the European Age of Exploration • China closed itself to outsiders in 1368 • China's great voyages to Asia and Africa ended in 1431 • Last ship to Norse colony in Greenland sailed in 1406 • Columbus sailed in 1492.

  7. Factors in Exploration • Accidental discovery. • Desire to bypass Moslem world. • Disruptions of overland routes (somewhat overrated). • Intra-European rivalry. • Curiosity.

  8. Major Events in Exploration • African coast-route to India. • Trans Atlantic voyages. • Northwest and Northeast Passage. • Pacific voyages. • Circumnavigations

  9. Circumnavigating the Globe • Ferdinand Magellan (Spain) 1519-22 • Sir Francis Drake (England) 1577-80 • Sir Thomas Cavendish (England) 1586-88 • Simon de Cordes (Holland) 1598-1600 • Oliver Van Noort (Holland) 1598-1601 • George Spilberg (Holland) 1614-17 • James LeMaire and William Cornelius Schouten (Holland) 1615-17

  10. Some Observations • Most of these voyages were for military purposes (harassing the Spanish) rather than discovery • This pattern is very similar to the early days of space exploration • Not until the mid-1700’s were there circumnavigations largely aimed at exploration • Drake and his fellow pirates would now be called state-sponsored terrorists

  11. A Geographical Oddity • The easiest way to sail around the world is from west to east, with the wind • Almost all early voyages were from east to west around South America • Objective: secrecy in entering the Pacific • Spanish tried and failed to establish settlements at the Straits of Magellan (weather poor, can’t raise crops, etc.)

  12. A Geographical Oddity

  13. The First Two (Three) -Time Circumnavigator • William Dampier (between 1679 and 1711) seems to have been the first to circumnavigate more than once (three times) • Odds of surviving a circumnavigation were very poor in early voyages • The prevention of scurvy was not discovered until around 1800

  14. The First Two -Time Circumnavigating Ship • The Dolphin (1764-66 and 1766-68) was the first ship to circumnavigate the globe twice • It took almost 250 years after Magellan for shipbuilding technology to be able to build a ship capable of surviving two voyages

  15. The First Commercial Round-the-World Traveler • By the 1600’s a globe-girdling network of European trade routes was in place • It was rarely necessary to circle the globe • There were only about 25 circumnavigations to 1800 • Giovanni Carreri (1693-98) sailed to Mexico, crossed overland, then booked passage across the Pacific and back to Europe

  16. Why Did They Do It? • Why did people risk their lives in tiny boats to trade halfway around the world? • Nowadays: bulk cargo. Ship more valuable than cargo, but cost recovered by many voyages (Exxon Valdez: 10 million gallons = $10 million) • 1600’s: cargo far more valuable than ship • “My ship came in” - one good voyage could set you up for life.

  17. Strange ideas were not so strange • Does it seem bizarre that Cartier could sail up the St. Lawrence hoping to reach China? • There was no clear idea how rivers were fed or what made them flow. • The coastline of Europe is one of the most complex in the world. • The one thing Europeans were not prepared for was long regular coastlines without geographical oddities!

  18. Innovations that aided exploration • Stern-post rudder • Lateen and square sails in combination • Compass • Discovery of Trade Winds

  19. Innovations derived from exploration • New foodstuffs: coffee, tea, potatoes, tomatoes, chocolate, squash, maize. • Improvements in shipbuilding, charting, navigation. • General stimulus to discovery.

  20. The Compass Crisis • Compasses often pointed quite far from true north • Queen Elizabeth offered a prize to anyone who could solve the problem • The court physician, William Gilbert, in 1600 published De Magnete

  21. De Magnete, 1600 • Considered the first great work on magnetism • Gilbert deduced the overall form of magnetic fields and concluded that the Earth had two magnetic poles • Earth's magnetic field varies in space and time. It changes measurably in a human lifetime

  22. Why Compasses Don’t Point True North • North Magnetic Pole is not at the geographic pole • Declination in Wisconsin is nearly zero • Declination in Maine is 20 degrees West • Declination in Seattle is 20 degrees East

  23. Latitude and Longitude Latitude (N-S) is easy to determine by observing the stars

  24. Latitude and Longitude Longitude (E-W) cannot be determined by simple observation • In a night, every observer at a given latitude sees the same stars • What differs is when they see the stars • The key to longitude determination is time

  25. Longitude = Accurate Time • Circumference of Earth =25,000 miles, so: • One hour = 1040 miles at the equator • One minute = 17 miles at the equator • One second = 0.3 miles at the equator • Clock has to be accurate to seconds over a span of months, on a rolling ship, in all weather and climate.

  26. Astronomical Methods • Eclipses of Moon: Everyone who sees the Moon sees the same thing • Too rare for most purposes • Eclipses of Jupiter’s moons: frequent but hard to observe • Method never panned out

  27. An Unexpected Spinoff • The Dutch astronomer Roemer found eclipses ran early or late • Discrepancy = time for light to cross Earth’s orbit • First evidence that light had a measurable speed

  28. The Final Solution - A Good Clock • One of the great technological stimuli of all time • John Harrison, 1761 • Need high-quality steel for springs • Need accurate tools to make gears and other parts • With good steel and accurate machine tools, what else can you make?

  29. Anything at All

  30. The Other Immigrants • Rats and ships are synonymous • Dogs (for companionship) and pigs (for food) were common passengers on early voyages • Rats, dogs and pigs wreaked havoc on many island ecosystems • Horses were reintroduced to the Americas by the Spanish and were utilized by Indians far outside the zone of immediate contact • The most significant travelers were microscopic

  31. Pre-Contact America • Pre-contact population of Americas once estimated at perhaps 5-10 million • Estimates based on • Observed population at time of contact • Stereotype that Indians could not sustain a complex society • Early estimates now known to be at least 10 times too small • May have been more people in the Americas than Western Europe

  32. Conquest of the Americas • Europeans greatly outnumbered • Weapons advantage potentially offset by numbers • European mortality high from disease • Spanish had been expelling Arabs for 700 years • No reason to expect native societies to collapse upon conquest • Not the slam dunk we sometimes think

  33. The Micro-Immigrants • Indians isolated from Old World disease pool • Introduced diseases: smallpox, chicken pox, measles, cholera, malaria • Effects extended far beyond contact areas • Overall mortality may have been 80%+ • Why didn’t diseases travel other way as well? (Syphilis?)

  34. The Course of One Epidemic

  35. Two Important Points about Disease in the New World • First Europeans did not know they were carrying contagious diseases • Europeans did not know that Indians lacked immunity to European diseases • Would things have been different if they had known? Maybe not, but you can’t judge people for what they might have done

More Related