Europeans Reach the Americas
... Pope Alexander VI (a Spaniard) issued the Line of Demarcation. Imaginary line- dividing the Atlantic Ocean- west of the line for Spain/ east for Portugal Portugal complained- Treaty of Tordesillas- was signed this moved the line 800 miles kept a war from happening. ...
... Pope Alexander VI (a Spaniard) issued the Line of Demarcation. Imaginary line- dividing the Atlantic Ocean- west of the line for Spain/ east for Portugal Portugal complained- Treaty of Tordesillas- was signed this moved the line 800 miles kept a war from happening. ...
How did the Scientific Revolution lead to European
... Europeans had long traded in Asian countries, but travel and trade to the east was disrupted by Ottoman control of the eastern Mediterranean. By the 1400s, Europeans began to make oceanic voyages of exploration to try to gain access to the highly valued Asian spices. The spices were worth so much mo ...
... Europeans had long traded in Asian countries, but travel and trade to the east was disrupted by Ottoman control of the eastern Mediterranean. By the 1400s, Europeans began to make oceanic voyages of exploration to try to gain access to the highly valued Asian spices. The spices were worth so much mo ...
The Age of Exploration Study Guide
... 2. What tools were popular with navigators to help them know where they were and where they were going? hourglass and sextant 3. In the 1400s, what Portuguese leader provided leadership for exploration? Prince Henry the Navigator 4. Where was the place of El Dorado found, and who found it? souther ...
... 2. What tools were popular with navigators to help them know where they were and where they were going? hourglass and sextant 3. In the 1400s, what Portuguese leader provided leadership for exploration? Prince Henry the Navigator 4. Where was the place of El Dorado found, and who found it? souther ...
The Age of Exploration
... • The journey took more than eight weeks and many wanted to turn back, but finally Columbus landed on islands in what he called the Indies. He thought he had reached islands off China or India and claimed the land for Spain. • The Portuguese claimed the land they found for Portugal. Trouble was brew ...
... • The journey took more than eight weeks and many wanted to turn back, but finally Columbus landed on islands in what he called the Indies. He thought he had reached islands off China or India and claimed the land for Spain. • The Portuguese claimed the land they found for Portugal. Trouble was brew ...
Age of Exploration Notes
... •Pioneering role of Prince Henry the Navigator-created a navigational school on the coast of Portugal •Bartolomeu Dias-first recorded European trip around the southern tip of Africa •Vasco da Gama- opened direct sea route from Portugal to India ...
... •Pioneering role of Prince Henry the Navigator-created a navigational school on the coast of Portugal •Bartolomeu Dias-first recorded European trip around the southern tip of Africa •Vasco da Gama- opened direct sea route from Portugal to India ...
Western Europe
... = Exclusive control over production/distribution of goods • Dutch established clove monopoly •Placed restrictions on trade •Natives had to accept low price for goods •Natives had to buy imported goods ...
... = Exclusive control over production/distribution of goods • Dutch established clove monopoly •Placed restrictions on trade •Natives had to accept low price for goods •Natives had to buy imported goods ...
Europeans Explore the East
... Christopher Columbus got the Spanish Monarchy to finance a trip West across the Atlantic to est. a route to Asia This opened the door for American exploration but also led to problems between Spain and Portugal over the land The Pope stepped in to keep the peace, he proposed the Treaty of Tordesilla ...
... Christopher Columbus got the Spanish Monarchy to finance a trip West across the Atlantic to est. a route to Asia This opened the door for American exploration but also led to problems between Spain and Portugal over the land The Pope stepped in to keep the peace, he proposed the Treaty of Tordesilla ...
Voyages of discovery
... Isabella (see pp.226–27) to support a voyage across the Atlantic in order to find a westerly route to Asia. He set sail in 1492 with three ships, using dead reckoning to calculate his position. Like other navigators of his day, he knew that the world was round—it is a myth that the common belief of ...
... Isabella (see pp.226–27) to support a voyage across the Atlantic in order to find a westerly route to Asia. He set sail in 1492 with three ships, using dead reckoning to calculate his position. Like other navigators of his day, he knew that the world was round—it is a myth that the common belief of ...
Document
... (1427), Cape Verde Islands (1460) & Saõ Tomé (1470) Bartholomew Diaz rounded Cape of Good Hope in 1488 Vasco da Gama led successful expedition to India, 1497-99 Rejected Columbus because they knew his calculations were way off – underestimated circumference ...
... (1427), Cape Verde Islands (1460) & Saõ Tomé (1470) Bartholomew Diaz rounded Cape of Good Hope in 1488 Vasco da Gama led successful expedition to India, 1497-99 Rejected Columbus because they knew his calculations were way off – underestimated circumference ...
Chapter 19 Notes
... B. Bartolomeu Dias, Portuguese, 1488 sails around the Cape of Good Hope C. Prince Henry the Navigator, prince of Portugal that supports overseas exploration ...
... B. Bartolomeu Dias, Portuguese, 1488 sails around the Cape of Good Hope C. Prince Henry the Navigator, prince of Portugal that supports overseas exploration ...
19.1 – Europeans Explore the East
... • 1492: Christopher Columbus sails to find a route to Asia across the Atlantic • Reaches the Caribbean & opens up colonization of the Americas – Believed he had reached the East Indies ...
... • 1492: Christopher Columbus sails to find a route to Asia across the Atlantic • Reaches the Caribbean & opens up colonization of the Americas – Believed he had reached the East Indies ...
19.1 – Europeans Explore the East
... • 1492: Christopher Columbus sails to find a route to Asia across the Atlantic • Reaches the Caribbean & opens up colonization of the Americas – Believed he had reached the East Indies ...
... • 1492: Christopher Columbus sails to find a route to Asia across the Atlantic • Reaches the Caribbean & opens up colonization of the Americas – Believed he had reached the East Indies ...
Section 1 Questions
... Europeans by the 1400s were trying to find new ways to get to Asia for spices like cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg, and pepper, to preserve food, add flavor to dried and salted meat and to make medicines and perfumes, Most of these spices came for the Moluccas, an Island chain in Indonesia! Henry the Navig ...
... Europeans by the 1400s were trying to find new ways to get to Asia for spices like cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg, and pepper, to preserve food, add flavor to dried and salted meat and to make medicines and perfumes, Most of these spices came for the Moluccas, an Island chain in Indonesia! Henry the Navig ...
The European Age of Exploration
... days per week; retained other parcels to work for themselves. ...
... days per week; retained other parcels to work for themselves. ...
The European Age of Exploration
... days per week; retained other parcels to work for themselves. ...
... days per week; retained other parcels to work for themselves. ...
Ch 10 Explorers
... 1494 Pope Alexander VI created an imaginary line dividing the world between Spain and Portugal. This was the Treaty of Tordesillas. A mapmaker read an account of the New World by Amerigo Vespucci and he named the area America on his map. Vasco Nunez de Balboa went overland to the Isthmus of Pana ...
... 1494 Pope Alexander VI created an imaginary line dividing the world between Spain and Portugal. This was the Treaty of Tordesillas. A mapmaker read an account of the New World by Amerigo Vespucci and he named the area America on his map. Vasco Nunez de Balboa went overland to the Isthmus of Pana ...
An Age of Exploration and Isolation 1400-1800
... • Wants a direct route to Asia to compete with Portugal • In 1492, Christopher Columbus convinces Spanish monarchs to pay for a voyage to reach India by sailing west from Spain ...
... • Wants a direct route to Asia to compete with Portugal • In 1492, Christopher Columbus convinces Spanish monarchs to pay for a voyage to reach India by sailing west from Spain ...
Chapter 3
... c. Columbus believed that he had reached Asia, and Portugal thought that he had claimed land for Spain that Portuguese sailors had already been to d. Pope Alexander VI tried to keep peace by proposing a Line of Demarcation i. All Land west of the line was Spain’s, and east of the line was Portugal’s ...
... c. Columbus believed that he had reached Asia, and Portugal thought that he had claimed land for Spain that Portuguese sailors had already been to d. Pope Alexander VI tried to keep peace by proposing a Line of Demarcation i. All Land west of the line was Spain’s, and east of the line was Portugal’s ...
Chapter 1 New World Beginnings 33,000 B.C. – A.D. 1783
... SPAIN V. PORTUGAL • Treaty of Tordesillas Spain and Portugal divided up “their claims” to the known world • Spain claimed land to the West of Europe while Portugal claimed East towards Asia and Africa. • Portugal also had a claim to what would be modern day Brazil. ...
... SPAIN V. PORTUGAL • Treaty of Tordesillas Spain and Portugal divided up “their claims” to the known world • Spain claimed land to the West of Europe while Portugal claimed East towards Asia and Africa. • Portugal also had a claim to what would be modern day Brazil. ...
Age of Exploration & Discovery
... measures latitude which means ships know where they are • Portolan charts were accurate coastal charts. Now they improved maps by being able to marks maps with latitude and longitude ...
... measures latitude which means ships know where they are • Portolan charts were accurate coastal charts. Now they improved maps by being able to marks maps with latitude and longitude ...
Voyages of Discovery
... 3 more voyages. Those left behind were killed. Explored other islands like Cuba. Brought over settlers. Such great cruelty against natives that Columbus was brought back in chains. Died disappointed. Never admitted he had not reached his goal. Amerigo Vespucci proved that Columbus had discovered Ame ...
... 3 more voyages. Those left behind were killed. Explored other islands like Cuba. Brought over settlers. Such great cruelty against natives that Columbus was brought back in chains. Died disappointed. Never admitted he had not reached his goal. Amerigo Vespucci proved that Columbus had discovered Ame ...
PowerPoint bemutató
... men burn their own ships so they wouldn't try to sail away. Cortés gave the Aztecs gifts so they would be friendly. And, Cortés found that conquering the Aztecs was easy. Spain had gunpowder, steel, and horses. The Aztecs thought the Spaniards might be gods and didn't want to harm them. The Aztecs ...
... men burn their own ships so they wouldn't try to sail away. Cortés gave the Aztecs gifts so they would be friendly. And, Cortés found that conquering the Aztecs was easy. Spain had gunpowder, steel, and horses. The Aztecs thought the Spaniards might be gods and didn't want to harm them. The Aztecs ...
Journal (Respond on pg. 18 in binder)
... captain of every voyage. Today historians believe he made two trips and captained only one. “ I was more skillful than all the shipmates of the whole world” Amerigo Vespucci ...
... captain of every voyage. Today historians believe he made two trips and captained only one. “ I was more skillful than all the shipmates of the whole world” Amerigo Vespucci ...
Treaty of Tordesillas
The Treaty of Tordesillas (Portuguese: Tratado de Tordesilhas [tɾɐˈtaðu ðɨ tuɾðɨˈziʎɐʃ], Spanish: Tratado de Tordesillas [tɾaˈtaðo ðe toɾðeˈsiʎas]), signed at Tordesillas on June 7, 1494, and authenticated at Setúbal, Portugal, divided the newly discovered lands outside Europe between Portugal and the Crown of Castile, along a meridian 370 leagues west of the Cape Verde islands, off the west coast of Africa. This line of demarcation was about halfway between the Cape Verde islands (already Portuguese) and the islands entered by Christopher Columbus on his first voyage (claimed for Castile and León), named in the treaty as Cipangu and Antilia (Cuba and Hispaniola).The lands to the east would belong to Portugal and the lands to the west to Castile. The treaty was signed by Spain, 2 July 1494 and by Portugal, 5 September 1494. The other side of the world would be divided a few decades later by the Treaty of Zaragoza or Saragossa, signed on 22 April 1529, which specified the antimeridian to the line of demarcation specified in the Treaty of Tordesillas. Originals of both treaties are kept at the Archivo General de Indias in Spain and at the Arquivo Nacional da Torre do Tombo in Portugal.This treaty worked fairly well as between Spain and Portugal, despite considerable ignorance as to the geography of the New World, but it omitted all of the other European powers. Those countries generally ignored the treaty, particularly those that became Protestant after the Reformation.