exploration colonization--chapter 23 3

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Transcript exploration colonization--chapter 23 3

Exploration & Colonization
*Thanks to Mr. Millhouse—AP World
History website.
Motives for European Exploration
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Desire to gain direct access to Asian luxuries
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Gain lands suitable for growing cash crops
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Collapse of Mongols increased price of goods
Avoid dealing with Muslim merchants
Portugal had poor quality soil
Started by colonizing the Azores, the Madeiras, &
the Canaries
Spread Christianity
Technology of Exploration
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From China
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From Islam
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Stern Rudder
Magnetic Compass
Lateen Sail
the Astrolabe
Caravels
Notable Explorers
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Portugal
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Spain
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Prince Henry the Navigator
Bartolomeu Dias
Vasco da Gama
Christopher Columbus
Ferdinand Magellan
England
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Captain James Cook
Major Expeditions
Spanish Empire
Conquest of New Spain
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Hernan Cortes conquered
Aztecs in 1521
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Francisco Pizarro
conquered the Inca in 1533
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Fewer than 200 Spanish
soldiers
Why?
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600 Spanish soldiers
God, gold, and glory
How?
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Guns, germs, and steel
Impact of Smallpox on the New World
Economy of New Spain
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Agriculture
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Haciendas
Plantations
Mining
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Silver the “Heart of
the Empire”
Gold
Used coercive labor
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Indian slaves,
encomiendas, mita
• Less than 50% of silver remained in Spain
• At no point did American treasure imports make
up more than 25% of Spain’s national revenue
• Spanish government occasionally went bankrupt
Government of New Spain
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New Spain controlled by bureaucracy
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Council of Indies
Two Viceroyalties (Mexico City & Lima)
Ten Audiencias
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Make and enforce Spanish law
Local magistrates applied the law, collected taxes,
and assigned work required of Indian communities
Treaty of Tordesillas
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Divided the world between Spain & Portugal
Treaty of Tordesillas
Spanish Culture
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Catholic Church
dominates
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Widespread conversion of
the Indians by Jesuits, et al
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Bartolomé de Las Casas
Constructed baroque
cathedrals
Religious schools and
universities
Poetry
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Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz
(1651-1695)
Cathedral de Mexico built in stages
between 1573-1813
Sociedad de Castas
Peninsulares
Mestizos
Native Indians
Creoles
Mulattos
Black Slaves
Portuguese Empire
Portuguese Colonization in Asia
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Portuguese use force to enter Asian trade
markets
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Conquered “choke points”
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Forced East Africa and Asia to pay tribute
Ormuz, Goa, Malacca, & other areas
Control did not last long
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Overextended and Indian Ocean was too large
Not enough people
Dutch and English rivals
Portuguese Brazil
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Minor Portuguese nobles given strips of land
to colonize and develop
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Feudalism meets commercial agriculture
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Portugal’s most important colony by 1700
Government established a bureaucratic
structure with a royal governor
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Sugar plantations using Indian, then African slaves
Bureaucrats were born and educated in Portugal
Brazil never had university or printing presses
Jesuits converted most natives to Christianity
Portuguese Brazil
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Brazil dominated world sugar production in
the 17th century
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150 sugar plantations in 1600; 300 by 1630
By 1700, 150,000 slaves worked on plantations
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50% of population were slaves
Brazil’s dominance of sugar trade declined in 18th
century
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Competition from French, English, and Dutch colonies in
the Caribbean
Price of slaves increased; price of sugar declined
Sugar Plantations in the Americas
Brazil’s Age of Gold
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Gold discovered inland in 1695
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Started a massive gold rush
Mine gold using slaves
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150,000 slaves by 1775
Export 3 tons of gold a year from 1735-1760
Impact of gold
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Ranching and farming were expanded
Rio de Janeiro became the capital of the colony
No native industries were developed in Portugal
Colonization of North America
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Backwater Colonies
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North America was of
moderate interest to Europe
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Dutch were more interested
in their East Indies colonies
British and French valued
their West Indies holdings
Population of British &
French North America
was far smaller than New
Spain
France surrendered New France to the
British after their defeat in the Seven
Years’ War (1756-1763)
British North America
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Salutary Neglect
Very few profitable resources
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Follows Western European forms
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Fur and timber
Southern cotton & tobacco plantations
Rise of manufacturing and merchant activity
Interest in the Enlightenment
Slaves brought in to work on southern
plantations
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By 1700, slaves make up 23% of the population
Colonization of North America
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Copy European social structure
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Nuclear families
Marry younger than in Europe
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More child centered
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Property more readily available
Families average 6 children
Low mortality rate
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Average life expectancy was 70 years of age
Dutch Empire
Dutch Colonization
Dutch Colonies in Africa & SE Asia
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Take Portuguese strongholds in 17th century
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Monopolize certain spices
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Cloves, nutmeg, mace, etc.
Shipping proved most profitable
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Cape of Good Hope, Malacca, etc.
Shipped products between China, Japan,
Indonesia, India, etc.
Colonized Java
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Treaty of Gijanti in 1757