Trading Empires in the Indian Ocean
... suggested an imaginary dividing line, drawn north to south, through the Atlantic Ocean. All lands to the west of the line, known as the Line of Demarcation, would be Spain’s. These lands included most of the Americas. All lands to the east of the line would belong to Portugal. Portugal complained th ...
... suggested an imaginary dividing line, drawn north to south, through the Atlantic Ocean. All lands to the west of the line, known as the Line of Demarcation, would be Spain’s. These lands included most of the Americas. All lands to the east of the line would belong to Portugal. Portugal complained th ...
Page C (Section II): Portugal Leads the Way
... decided to attack, but the Portuguese had better ships and beat the Arabs. Only 15 years after da Gama’s trip, the Portuguese controlled all the Indian Ocean. They next started trade and posts all the way to eastern China and Japan. ...
... decided to attack, but the Portuguese had better ships and beat the Arabs. Only 15 years after da Gama’s trip, the Portuguese controlled all the Indian Ocean. They next started trade and posts all the way to eastern China and Japan. ...
File - Azteach.com
... • Started an institute for seafaring and exploring; schools of seamanship! • Combined ship technology learned from Islam with new European innovations • By the time of his death in 1460, Portuguese had sailed as far south as the Gold Coast of West Africa Voyages of Discovery • During the two-year pe ...
... • Started an institute for seafaring and exploring; schools of seamanship! • Combined ship technology learned from Islam with new European innovations • By the time of his death in 1460, Portuguese had sailed as far south as the Gold Coast of West Africa Voyages of Discovery • During the two-year pe ...
Expanded Influence of Western Civilization 1400
... • At the tip of the Iberian Peninsula, farther from the Ottoman Empire, and very close to coast of Africa ...
... • At the tip of the Iberian Peninsula, farther from the Ottoman Empire, and very close to coast of Africa ...
GIL EANES 1 ST person to sail past Cape Bojador in 1433
... Canary Island and brought them back to Portugal ...
... Canary Island and brought them back to Portugal ...
Age of Exploration - Flushing Community Schools
... • Bartolomeu Dias (Portugal): 1st to sail around southern tip of Africa • Vasco da Gama (Portugal): Sailed around southern tip & along East African coast. Found sea route from Portugal to India ...
... • Bartolomeu Dias (Portugal): 1st to sail around southern tip of Africa • Vasco da Gama (Portugal): Sailed around southern tip & along East African coast. Found sea route from Portugal to India ...
Voyages of Discovery
... was brought back in chains. Died disappointed. Never admitted he had not reached his goal. Amerigo Vespucci proved that Columbus had discovered America. The discoveries of Columbus led to a dispute with the Portuguese. The Treaty of Tordesillas gave Brazil to Portugal and Spain got the rest of South ...
... was brought back in chains. Died disappointed. Never admitted he had not reached his goal. Amerigo Vespucci proved that Columbus had discovered America. The discoveries of Columbus led to a dispute with the Portuguese. The Treaty of Tordesillas gave Brazil to Portugal and Spain got the rest of South ...
Chapter 19 Section 1 Europeans Explore the East God, glory and
... merchants could charge high prices and thus make great profits ...
... merchants could charge high prices and thus make great profits ...
An Age of Explorations and Isolation, 1400-1800
... Asian trade during the Age of Exploration? • 4. What did the Treaty of Tordesillas reveal about Europeans’ attitudes toward non-European lands and people? • 5. What were the motives behind European exploration in the 1400’s? Explain. • 6. In what ways did Europeans owe some of their sailing technolo ...
... Asian trade during the Age of Exploration? • 4. What did the Treaty of Tordesillas reveal about Europeans’ attitudes toward non-European lands and people? • 5. What were the motives behind European exploration in the 1400’s? Explain. • 6. In what ways did Europeans owe some of their sailing technolo ...
Chapter Two- Section One
... A. Rounding Africa- In 1488 Portuguese navigator ___________________ led an expedition from Portugal southward along the African coast; storm blew his ships around the ______________ tip of Africa; this point became known as the Cape of _____________. 1. Vasco de Gama- sent on an expedition ________ ...
... A. Rounding Africa- In 1488 Portuguese navigator ___________________ led an expedition from Portugal southward along the African coast; storm blew his ships around the ______________ tip of Africa; this point became known as the Cape of _____________. 1. Vasco de Gama- sent on an expedition ________ ...
european exploration
... King John II was unhappy with the pope's placement of the line. He believed that it favored Spain. So he demanded that the Spanish rulers meet with him to change the pope's decision. In June 1494, the two countries agreed to the Treaty of Tordesillas. This treaty moved the Line of Demarcation more t ...
... King John II was unhappy with the pope's placement of the line. He believed that it favored Spain. So he demanded that the Spanish rulers meet with him to change the pope's decision. In June 1494, the two countries agreed to the Treaty of Tordesillas. This treaty moved the Line of Demarcation more t ...
I European Exploration and Expansion
... o Desire for wealth and foreign goods o Wanted to sell foreign goods for profit III Portugal o Prince Henry the Navigator supported a navigational and sailing school o Started conquering small islands in Atlantic and cities on Africa’s west coast o 1488 Bartolomeu Diaz sails to the southern tip of A ...
... o Desire for wealth and foreign goods o Wanted to sell foreign goods for profit III Portugal o Prince Henry the Navigator supported a navigational and sailing school o Started conquering small islands in Atlantic and cities on Africa’s west coast o 1488 Bartolomeu Diaz sails to the southern tip of A ...
File
... The Portuguese began to explore the western coast of ____________________ under the leadership of Prince Henry “The ______________________”. Prince Henry founded a _____________________ school to teach others about sailing. By 1460 the Portuguese had established ____________________ post along ...
... The Portuguese began to explore the western coast of ____________________ under the leadership of Prince Henry “The ______________________”. Prince Henry founded a _____________________ school to teach others about sailing. By 1460 the Portuguese had established ____________________ post along ...
NOTES Portuguese Exploration - Monmouth Regional High School
... NOTES- ch 18: Portuguese Exploration Prince Henry (aka Prince Henry the Navigator) Portuguese Prince who was not ever going to rule Portugal o Extremely religious (Catholic) o Very interested in exploration and navigation Europeans were looking for a cheaper way to obtain goods from the East, es ...
... NOTES- ch 18: Portuguese Exploration Prince Henry (aka Prince Henry the Navigator) Portuguese Prince who was not ever going to rule Portugal o Extremely religious (Catholic) o Very interested in exploration and navigation Europeans were looking for a cheaper way to obtain goods from the East, es ...
History of Portugal (1415–1578)
The kingdom of Portugal in the 15th century was one of the first European powers to begin building a colonial empire.The Portuguese Renaissance was a period of exploration, during which Portuguese sailorsdiscovered several Atlantic archipelagos like the Azores, Madeira, or Cape Verde, explored and colonized the African coast, discovered an eastern route to India that rounded the Cape of Good Hope, discovered Brazil, explored the Indian Ocean and established trading routes throughout most of southern Asia, and sent the first direct European maritime trade and diplomatic missions to Ming China and to Japan.The Portuguese Renaissance produced a plethora of poets, historians, critics, theologians, and moralists, of whom the Portuguese Renaissance was their golden age. The Cancioneiro Geral by Garcia de Resende (printed 1516) is taken to mark the transition from Old Portuguese to the modern Portuguese language.