Chapter Introduction Section 1: Exploration and Expansion Section 2: The Atlantic Slave Trade Section 3: Colonial Latin America Visual Summary.

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Transcript Chapter Introduction Section 1: Exploration and Expansion Section 2: The Atlantic Slave Trade Section 3: Colonial Latin America Visual Summary.

Slide 1


Slide 2

Chapter Introduction
Section 1: Exploration and
Expansion
Section 2: The Atlantic Slave
Trade
Section 3: Colonial Latin America
Visual Summary


Slide 3

How are the Americas
linked to Africa?
The demand for enslaved Africans increased
dramatically after Europeans began to settle
in the Americas. The Cape Coast Castle in
Ghana is one of the forts where enslaved
Africans were held until ships arrived to take
them to the Americas. This fort could hold
about 1,500 slaves usually locked in dark,
crowded dungeons for many weeks. Today,
the Cape Coast Castle contains a museum
that allows people to learn about slavery. In
this chapter you will learn about the
exploration of new lands and its global
impact.
• Why might people want to visit the Cape
Coast Castle?
• Does slavery occur in any parts of the
world today?


Slide 4


Slide 5


Slide 6

Exploration and
Expansion
In what ways did European
nations prosper through
exploration in the fifteenth
century?


Slide 7

The Atlantic Slave
Trade
How did European
expansion and the slave
trade affect the people of
Africa?


Slide 8

Colonial Latin America
How did Portugal and
Spain profit from their
colonies in Latin America?


Slide 9


Slide 10

The BIG Idea
Competition Among Countries Europeans began
exploring the world in the 1400s, and several
nations experienced economic heights through
worldwide trade.


Slide 11

Content Vocabulary
• conquistadors
• encomienda
• Columbian Exchange

Academic Vocabulary
• overseas
• percent


Slide 12

People and Places
• Hernán Cortés

• Ferdinand Magellan

• Portugal

• John Cabot

• Vasco da Gama

• Amerigo Vespucci

• Melaka

• Montezuma

• Christopher Columbus

• Francisco Pizarro

• Cuba


Slide 13

Do you think spreading religion is a
justifiable reason for colonizing
native peoples?
A. Yes

B. No

A. A
B. B
0%
B

A

0%


Slide 14

Motives and Means
Europeans began to explore distant
lands, motivated by religious zeal and
the promise of gold and glory.


Slide 15

Motives and Means (cont.)
• Five European powers, led by Portugal and
Spain, engaged in an age of exploration. All
rose to new economic heights.
• Motives for European exploration include
“God, glory, and gold”
– Economic interests – Europeans wanted
to expand trade and locate spices and
precious metals.

European Voyages of Discovery


Slide 16

Motives and Means (cont.)
– Religious zeal – Explorers such as Hernán
Cortés were interested in sharing the
Catholic faith with native peoples.
– There was an increased desire for grandeur,
glory, and the spirit of adventure.

European Voyages of Discovery


Slide 17

What prevented Europeans from
traveling overland to Asia?
A. There was a lack
of technology.

0%
D

0%
A

D. The pope forbade
transactions with
non-Christians.

A
B
C0%
D
C

C. The climate was too harsh.

A.
B.
0%
C.
D.
B

B. The Ottoman Turks
controlled trade routes.


Slide 18

A Race for Riches
Portuguese and Spanish explorers
took the lead in discovering new lands.


Slide 19

A Race for Riches (cont.)
• Portugal took the lead in European
exploration under the leadership of Prince
Henry the Navigator.
• Portuguese ships traveled along the western
coast of Africa, finding gold and other goods.
• Vasco de Gama traveled around the Cape
of Good Hope, the southern tip of Africa, and
landed in India in 1498.


Slide 20

A Race for Riches (cont.)
• The Portuguese captured the important port
city of Melaka on the Malay Peninsula,
which enabled the Portuguese to control the
spice trade that had been dominated by Arab
traders.

• The Portuguese used seamanship, guns,
and treaties to control the spice trade.
However, they did not have the people,
wealth, or desire to expand their empire
in Asia.


Slide 21

A Race for Riches (cont.)
• Christopher Columbus was an explorer
who sailed for Spain. Columbus searched for
a western route to Asia and landed at Cuba
and Hispaniola in 1492.
• The Spanish explorer Ferdinand Magellan
sailed around the tip of South America and
into the Pacific Ocean. Magellan is credited
with being the first person to circumnavigate
the globe.


Slide 22

A Race for Riches (cont.)
• In 1494, Portugal and Spain signed the
Treaty of Tordesillas, separating control of
the newly discovered lands.
• John Cabot, a Venetian, explored the New
England coastline of the Americas for
England.
• The writings of Amerigo Vespucci, a
Florentine mapmaker, led to the use of the
name “America” for the newly discovered
lands in the western hemisphere.


Slide 23

Why did Spain and Portugal sign the
Treaty of Tordesillas?
A. To convert all native peoples
to Catholicism

0%
D

C

D. To prevent non-Catholic
nations from exploring
the new lands

B

C. To divide control of
the new lands

A. A
B. B
C.0% C0%
0%
D. D

A

B. To defend all new lands
from England and France


Slide 24

The Spanish Empire
The great Aztec and Inca civilizations
succumbed to the Spanish.


Slide 25

The Spanish Empire (cont.)
• The Spanish conquistadors established an
overseas empire in the Americas.
• In 1519 Hernán Cortés and his Spanish allies
were welcomed into Tenochtitlán by the Aztec
monarch Montezuma. The Spanish were
expelled from the city one year later.
• When the Spaniards left, smallpox devastated
the Aztec capital. The Spanish returned and
captured the city, and the Aztec Empire was
destroyed.


Slide 26

The Spanish Empire (cont.)
• In 1530 Francisco Pizarro led an expedition
into the Inca Empire. Like the Aztec, the
Incas were no match for Spanish disease,
guns, and horses.
• Pizarro established a new capital for the
Spanish colony at Lima.

• The Spanish used a system of colonial
administration called the encomienda
system— the right of landowners to use
Native Americans as laborers.


Slide 27

The Spanish Empire (cont.)
• Spanish landowners could use Native
Americans for labor in return for protection
and converting them to Christianity.
• Native American political and social
structures were torn apart and replaced by
European systems of religion, language, and
government.
• The exchange of plants, animals, and
disease between Europe and the Americas
is known as the Columbian Exchange.


Slide 28

Which of the following was sent from
the Americas to Europe?
A. Wheat
B. Horses

0%
D

A

0%

A
B
C
0%
D
C

D. Potatoes

A.
B.
C.
0%
D.

B

C. Cattle


Slide 29

European Rivals
The Portuguese and Spanish found
new rivals in the Dutch, French, and
English for trading rights and for
new lands.


Slide 30

European Rivals (cont.)
• The Dutch formed the East India Company
to compete with the English and Portuguese
for the Indian Ocean trade.
• The Dutch also formed the West India
Company to compete with the Spanish and
Portuguese in the Americas.
• By the early seventeen century, the Dutch
established settlements in North America
such as New Netherland.


Slide 31

European Rivals (cont.)
• In the 1600s, the French colonized parts of
present-day Louisiana and regions of
Canada.
• The English began to settle the eastern
seaboard of North America and islands in
the Caribbean Sea.
• In 1664, the English seized the harbor of
New Netherland from the Dutch and
renamed it New York.


Slide 32

Which European power colonized the
region of Canada?
A. England
B. France

0%
D

A

0%

A
B
C
0%
D
C

D. Spain

A.
B.
C.
0%
D.

B

C. The Netherlands


Slide 33


Slide 34

The BIG Idea
Human Rights European expansion affected Africa
with the dramatic increase of the slave trade.


Slide 35

Content Vocabulary
• colony

• plantations

• mercantilism

• triangular trade

• balance of trade

• Middle Passage

• subsidies

Academic Vocabulary
• transportation

• primary


Slide 36

People and Places
• King Afonso
• Benin


Slide 37

Do you think slavery still exists in the
world today?
A. Yes
B. No
A. A
B. B
0%
B

A

0%


Slide 38

Trade, Colonies, and Mercantilism
The slave trade increased as
enslaved Africans were brought to
the Americas.


Slide 39

Trade, Colonies, and Mercantilism (cont.)
• The nations of Europe created trading
empires and established colonies in the
Americas and in the East.
• Colonies were an integral part of
mercantilism, an economic theory based
on gold and a limited amount of wealth in
the world.


Slide 40

Trade, Colonies, and Mercantilism (cont.)
• Colonies provided raw materials and
markets for finished goods.
• To bring in more gold, nations tried to have a
favorable balance of trade and export more
goods than they imported.
• To encourage exports, governments granted
subsidies and improved transportation
systems.


Slide 41

Trade, Colonies, and Mercantilism (cont.)
• Slavery had existed since ancient times, and
African slaves served as domestic servants
in Southwest Asia.
• The demand for slaves changed dramatically
with the introduction of sugarcane. Labor
was needed to work the plantations where
sugarcane was grown.

Atlantic Slave Trade, 1500–1600s


Slide 42

Trade, Colonies, and Mercantilism (cont.)
• Slaves became an important commodity in
the triangular trade that connected Europe,
Africa, and the Americas.
• As many as 10 million African slaves may
have been brought to the Americas between
1500 and the late 1800s.

Atlantic Slave Trade, 1500–1600s


Slide 43

Trade, Colonies, and Mercantilism (cont.)
• One reason for the high number of exported
slaves was the high mortality rate, especially
during the Middle Passage, the journey
across the Atlantic Ocean.
• The slave trade devastated the population of
African communities near the coastal regions.

• Some African rulers, such as King Afonso,
protested but were ignored by
African and European slave traders.
Atlantic Slave Trade, 1500–1600s


Slide 44

What caused the demand for slaves
to increase?
A. The Treaty of Tordesillas
B. The need to populate
the Americas

0%
D

A
B
C0%
D
C

0%
A

D. To maintain a balance of
trade between Africa
and Europe

A.
B.
C.
0%
D.
B

C. The introduction of
sugarcane


Slide 45

Effects of the Slave Trade
The slave trade led to depopulation,
increased warfare, and devastation for
many African states.


Slide 46

Effects of the Slave Trade (cont.)
• Effects of the slave trade in Africa:
– depopulated areas
– increased warfare
– loss of the strongest and youngest men
and women


Slide 47

Effects of the Slave Trade (cont.)
• Benin was transformed from a brilliant
society into a brutal, war-ravaged region
following the introduction of slavery.
• The use of enslaved Africans was widely
accepted until the Society of Friends began
to condemn it in the 1770s.
• The French abolished slavery in the 1790s;
the English abolished slavery in 1807; and
slavery continued in the United States until
the 1860s.


Slide 48

Which group condemned slavery and began
an anti-slavery movement in Europe?
A. Beninnites

0%
D

0%
A

D. European Anti-Slavery
Coalition

A
B
C
0%
D
C

C. Society of Friends

A.
B.
C.
0%
D.

B

B. French Revolutionary
Society


Slide 49


Slide 50

The BIG Idea
Competition Among Countries Portugal and Spain
reaped profits from the natural resources and products
of their Latin American colonies.


Slide 51

Content Vocabulary
• peninsulares

• mulattoes

• creoles

• mita

• mestizos

Academic Vocabulary
• labor

• draft


Slide 52

People and Places
• Brazil
• Juana Inés de la Cruz


Slide 53

Colonies needed the support of a
parent country to be successful.
A. Agree
B. Disagree
A. A
B. B
0%
B

A

0%


Slide 54

Colonial Empires in Latin America
The Portuguese and Spanish built
colonial empires in Latin America and
profited from the resources and trade
of their colonies.


Slide 55

Colonial Empires in Latin America (cont.)
• In the 1500s, Portugal controlled Brazil,
while Spain’s colonial possessions included
parts of North America, Central America, and
most of South America.
• The area of Central and South America
became known as Latin America, and a
unique social class system emerged.

Colonial Latin America to 1750


Slide 56

Colonial Empires in Latin America (cont.)
• Colonial Latin America Social Order:
– Peninsulares: Spanish and Portuguese
officials born in Europe; they held all
important government positions.
– Creoles: Descendants of Europeans who
were born in Latin America; they controlled
business and land.
– Mestizos: The offspring of European and
Native American intermarriage.


Slide 57

Colonial Empires in Latin America (cont.)
– Mulattoes: The offspring of Africans and
Europeans.
– Conquered Native Americans and
enslaved Africans.


Slide 58

Colonial Empires in Latin America (cont.)
• Europeans utilized the Native Americans as
labor. They used the encomienda system
and mita to sustain a viable labor force.
• Gold and silver from the colonies offered
immediate wealth to the Europeans.
Products, such as tobacco, sugar, and
animal hides were traded to Europe in return
for finished products.


Slide 59

Colonial Empires in Latin America (cont.)
• To control their colonial possessions in the
Americas, Portugal and Spain used
governor-generals to develop a bureaucracy
and carry out imperial policies.
• Catholic missionaries were also instrumental
in converting and maintaining order within
the colonial territories.
• The Catholic Church provided an outlet other
than marriage for women. Many nuns like
Juana Inés de la Cruz, urged convents to
educate women on subjects beyond religion.


Slide 60

How did the Spanish and Portuguese
monarchs control their colonial
possessions?
A. By appointing Native
Americans as local rulers

0%
D

A

D. By paying tribute to the local
Native American rulers

0%

C

C. By maintaining a large army

A. A
B. B
C.0% C 0%
D. D
B

B. By appointing Europeans
to governor-general positions


Slide 61


Slide 62

EARLY EXPLORATION of West
Africa, India, and the Americas


Motivated by religious zeal, gold,
and glory, Europeans began to
explore distant lands.



The Portuguese sailed east around
Africa to India.



Spanish ships sailed west to the
Americas.



Spanish conquistadors seized lands
ruled by the Aztec and Inca.



Diseases introduced by Spanish explorers killed much of
the Native American population.



By the late 1600s, the Dutch, French, and English entered
the rivalry for new lands and trade.


Slide 63

AFRICAN SLAVE TRADE of Europe,
Asia, and the Americas
• Before the new exploration, the
primary market for enslaved
Africans had been Southwest Asia.
• The demand for plantation laborers
in the Americas greatly increased
slave trade.
• Enslaved Africans were part of the triangular trade
between Europe, Africa and Asia, and the Americas.

• In Africa, the slave trade led to increased warfare,
depopulation, and the deterioration of society.


Slide 64

COLONIAL EMPIRES of Latin America
• The Portuguese and Spanish
profited from their colonial
empires in Latin America.
• Peninsulares were the top
social class, followed by
creoles, mestizos and
mulattoes, and finally enslaved
Africans and Native Americans.
• Catholic missionaries spread across the Americas
to try to Christianize Native Americans.


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Slide 77

conquistador
a Spanish conqueror of the Americas


Slide 78

encomienda
a system of labor the Spanish used in
the Americas; Spanish landowners
had the right, as granted by Queen
Isabella, to use Native Americans as
laborers


Slide 79

Columbian Exchange
the extensive exchange of plants and
animals between the Old and New
Worlds, especially during the
sixteenth and seventeenth centuries


Slide 80

overseas
movement or transport over the sea;
land beyond the sea


Slide 81

percent
a part of a whole divided into
100 parts


Slide 82

colony
a settlement of people living in a new
territory, linked with the parent
country by trade and direct
government control


Slide 83

mercantilism
a set of principles that dominated
economic thought in the seventeenth
century; it held that the prosperity of a
nation depended on a large supply of
gold and silver


Slide 84

balance of trade
the difference in value beween what a
nation imports and what it exports
over time


Slide 85

subsidy
government payment to encourage or
protect a certain economic activity


Slide 86

plantation
a large agricultural estate


Slide 87

triangular trade
a pattern of trade that connected
Europe, Africa and Asia, and the
American continents; typically,
manufactured goods from Europe
were sent to Africa, where they were
exchanged for enslaved persons,
who were sent to the Americas,
where they were exchanged for raw
materials that were then sent to
Europe


Slide 88

Middle Passage
the journey of enslaved persons from
Africa to the Americas, so called
because it was the middle portion of
the triangular trade route


Slide 89

transportation
means of travel from one place to
another


Slide 90

primary
most important


Slide 91

peninsulare
a person born on the Iberian
Peninsula; typically, a Spanish or
Portuguese official who resided
temporarily in Latin America for
political and economic gain and then
returned to Europe


Slide 92

creole
a person of European descent born in
the New World and living there
permanently


Slide 93

mestizo
a person of mixed European and
Native American Indian descent


Slide 94

mulatto
a person of mixed African and
European descent


Slide 95

mita
a labor system that the Spanish
administrators in Peru used to draft
native people to work in the Spanish
landowners’ silver mines


Slide 96

labor
people with all their abilities and
efforts


Slide 97

draft
to select for some purpose; to
conscript


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