1 / 18

Discovery & Settlement of the New World

Discovery & Settlement of the New World. Coach Crews – AP US History. Pre-Columbian Era. Hunter gatherers who crossed over the Bering Strait land bridge Over 15,000 years they spread across America population around 1500 CE: 100 million in Central and South America. Pre-Columbian Era.

xylia
Download Presentation

Discovery & Settlement of the New World

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. Discovery & Settlement of the New World Coach Crews – AP US History

  2. Pre-Columbian Era • Hunter gatherers who crossed over the Bering Strait land bridge • Over 15,000 years they spread across America • population around 1500 CE: 100 million in Central and South America

  3. Pre-Columbian Era • Agricultural revolution sparks innovation and establishment of permanent settlements • Religion centered around corn, the sun, and water due to their importance • Power and authority derived from control of resources

  4. Pre-Columbian Era • Mound Builders – ancestors of Creeks, Choctaws, & Natchez • Mounds served as territory or religious markers • Mississippian Culture – along Miss. River & Ohio Valley • Burial mounds, farming, fishing led to substantial dwellings • Pueblo people – Anasazi • Rio Grande valley, baked mud huts, terraced gardens

  5. Pre-Columbian Era • Northeastern United States • Seneca, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, Mohawk • Farming led to accumulation of food surplus and population growth • “Three Sister” farming • High yield bean that grew on corn stalks w/ squash at base • Farmers were female, males were hunters, trade developed between hunters and farmers

  6. Pre-Columbian Era • Iroquois League of Five Nations • Largest military unification in east • Aztecs • Capital city: Tenochtitlan (present-day Mexico City) • Used military and diplomacy to conquer and form alliances • Other cultures paid tributes to the Aztecs

  7. Pre-Columbian Era • Incas • Empire covered 2,500 miles; present day Columbia, Ecuador, Peru, Argentina • Massive architecture: buildings and bridges • Largest empire by 1500 CE but allowed local groups to maintain sovereignty • Gave allegiance to Sapa Inca (believed to be descendent of sun-god)

  8. Columbus • Europeans knew little of the Americas (hence “New World”) • Scandinavians explored Newfoundland in 1000 CE but colonies failed due to lack of nation-state support

  9. Columbus • Crusades in 11th-14th centuries led to Muslim control of trade routes • Became expensive to travel to Asia • New route was sought for trade • Christopher Columbus born in Italy • Printing press led to proliferation of novels about Asia • Marco Polo wrote about his adventures to Asia • Inspired others to travel

  10. What Columbus thought the world looked like……

  11. Columbus • Columbus became interested; pitched ideas to multiple countries but failed to gain support. • Spain supported him to help spread Christianity • Made many demands in the event he was susccessful • “Tierra, tierra”: land is spotted Oct 12, 1492 • Called it San Salvador; thought he was in the East Indies and called natives Indians • Impressed the king and queen; funded more trips in later years

  12. Cortes Defeats the Aztecs • Conquistador: conqueror • Commissioned with expanding the Spanish empire into Mexico • Formed military alliances with Aztec enemies • Held Montezuma captive and ruled empire through him • Guns, swords, etc impressed and frightened Aztecs

  13. Cortes Defeats the Aztecs • 1520 CE – Aztec people fight back; rebellion is crushed by Cortes • Tenochtitlan was destroyed, Christian churches built in place of temples. • Francisco Pizzaro conquered the Incas in Peru and Spain took control of most of Central and South America

  14. Europe and the Impulse for Exploration

  15. Commerce • Manorial system declined and cities became the center of commerce in Europe • Printed documents replaced oral agreements; middle class became more business savvy • Mercantilism – nation’s strength is dependent on wealth • Leads to overseas exploration

  16. Technology • New inventions made exploration possible • Compass, Astrolabe, Cross staff, Quadrant, Chip board, Hourglass • New ship building techniques • Caravel – fast merchant ships • Carrack – larger supply ships • Spanish galleon – used to carry gold; heavily armored

  17. Ride of Nation States & Exchanges • Nations formed around people with common languages, cultures, histories, etc. • Citizens paid taxes for protection and growth of commerce • Columbian exchange – introduction of new ideas, products, diseases between Europe and New World • Led to 90% destruction of Native population.

More Related