Chapter 3
... • The Indians were taxed or enslaved Franciscans tried to lighten the burden on the Indians, but the settlers and government refused to give up the profitable arrangement, and in any case, the friars themselves placed heavy demands on the pueblos to support the missions. Still, some changes brought ...
... • The Indians were taxed or enslaved Franciscans tried to lighten the burden on the Indians, but the settlers and government refused to give up the profitable arrangement, and in any case, the friars themselves placed heavy demands on the pueblos to support the missions. Still, some changes brought ...
Three Worlds Meet
... 1528 – Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca, landed on Tampa Bay FL and traveled to Mexico City (1537) 1540 – Francisco de Coronado – Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas 1598 – capital of New Mexico established 25 miles north of Santa Fe (1610) ...
... 1528 – Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca, landed on Tampa Bay FL and traveled to Mexico City (1537) 1540 – Francisco de Coronado – Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas 1598 – capital of New Mexico established 25 miles north of Santa Fe (1610) ...
File
... 2. Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand Spanish monarchs financed Columbus’s voyage west after Portugal, Spain, England, and France turned him down they saw small potential loss, but big potential gain in financing the trip. 3. San Salvador and the Tainos ships the Niña, Pinta, and Santa Maria landed o ...
... 2. Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand Spanish monarchs financed Columbus’s voyage west after Portugal, Spain, England, and France turned him down they saw small potential loss, but big potential gain in financing the trip. 3. San Salvador and the Tainos ships the Niña, Pinta, and Santa Maria landed o ...
PP pt. 1
... Christopher Columbus 1492 Propelled by Europe’s goal of finding new trade routes to Asia, Christopher Columbus (Cristóbal Colón) sailed to the Americas. However, not until after his death would the value of his discovery truly be known ...
... Christopher Columbus 1492 Propelled by Europe’s goal of finding new trade routes to Asia, Christopher Columbus (Cristóbal Colón) sailed to the Americas. However, not until after his death would the value of his discovery truly be known ...
The Spanish Empire, between 1492 and 1892
... A Mesoamerican civilization, noted for the only known fully developed written language of the pre-Columbian Americas, as well as for their art, architecture, and mathematical and astronomical systems. ...
... A Mesoamerican civilization, noted for the only known fully developed written language of the pre-Columbian Americas, as well as for their art, architecture, and mathematical and astronomical systems. ...
New Worlds: The Americas and Oceania
... Most interactions between Europeans and indigenous people were peaceful at first, but eventually turned violent as disagreements over trade and cultural practices lead to escalating tension and armed conflict. Rapid and unsettling change would begin for islanders during the nineteenth and twenti ...
... Most interactions between Europeans and indigenous people were peaceful at first, but eventually turned violent as disagreements over trade and cultural practices lead to escalating tension and armed conflict. Rapid and unsettling change would begin for islanders during the nineteenth and twenti ...
Chapter 1 new world beginnings
... • similar to feudal system • Allowed forced labor – evolves into Hacienda system • similar to plantations • Bartolomé de Las Casas (1542) • Wrote Destruction of the Indies • Protested impact Spanish policies and treatment had on Native peoples ...
... • similar to feudal system • Allowed forced labor – evolves into Hacienda system • similar to plantations • Bartolomé de Las Casas (1542) • Wrote Destruction of the Indies • Protested impact Spanish policies and treatment had on Native peoples ...
AP 01 Notes Exploration - Miami Killian Senior High School
... in the Caribbean, then most spectacularly in Mexico, the Spanish succeeded in constructing the world’s most powerful empire on the backs of Indian and imported African laborers. The New World colonies of Spain were characterized by a great deal of intermarriage between the mostly male colonists and ...
... in the Caribbean, then most spectacularly in Mexico, the Spanish succeeded in constructing the world’s most powerful empire on the backs of Indian and imported African laborers. The New World colonies of Spain were characterized by a great deal of intermarriage between the mostly male colonists and ...
AP World History
... pattern of colonial urban design, and political institutions such as governors. By the 1520’s, a shift to ranching and sugar plantations had taken place, with devastating results for the native populations. The conquest of the Americas was undertaken by individuals under royal authority. Hernan Cort ...
... pattern of colonial urban design, and political institutions such as governors. By the 1520’s, a shift to ranching and sugar plantations had taken place, with devastating results for the native populations. The conquest of the Americas was undertaken by individuals under royal authority. Hernan Cort ...
PERIOD 1:1491-1607 “a new world”
... Competition for new water routes for rich Asian trade; Turks seize Constantinople blocking land route to Chinese Empires Portuguese slave trade; labor from West Africa for sugar plantations in Azores ...
... Competition for new water routes for rich Asian trade; Turks seize Constantinople blocking land route to Chinese Empires Portuguese slave trade; labor from West Africa for sugar plantations in Azores ...
Nombre y apellido ______ANSWERS______ fecha: el _____ de
... islands in the ________Mediterranean Sea_______________ and the _______Canary______ islands in the _____________Atlantic Ocean______________. 10. Spain is about the size of the state of _________California____________________. 11. The _______Moors____________ occupied the country of Spain from the 7 ...
... islands in the ________Mediterranean Sea_______________ and the _______Canary______ islands in the _____________Atlantic Ocean______________. 10. Spain is about the size of the state of _________California____________________. 11. The _______Moors____________ occupied the country of Spain from the 7 ...
Part 1
... Christopher Columbus 1492 Propelled by Europe’s goal of finding new trade routes to Asia, Christopher Columbus (Cristóbal Colón) sailed to the Americas. However, not until after his death would the value of his discovery truly be known ...
... Christopher Columbus 1492 Propelled by Europe’s goal of finding new trade routes to Asia, Christopher Columbus (Cristóbal Colón) sailed to the Americas. However, not until after his death would the value of his discovery truly be known ...
New Worlds: The Americas and Oceania
... transportation systems -> local areas governed by audiencias or town councils ...
... transportation systems -> local areas governed by audiencias or town councils ...
Colonial Mexico
... monasteries were built, and religious orders began to educate the natives according to Spanish beliefs. The population increased as more Spaniards emigrated to New Spain and Spanish became the official language of the country. The indigenous populations had few rights and were often exploited. Mexi ...
... monasteries were built, and religious orders began to educate the natives according to Spanish beliefs. The population increased as more Spaniards emigrated to New Spain and Spanish became the official language of the country. The indigenous populations had few rights and were often exploited. Mexi ...
Encomiendas
... The conquest of the Aztec empire required an enormous effort and a tremendous sacrifice by Corts's army, and after their victory, the soldiers demanded what they had come for: prestige and wealth. The spoils from the city largely had been lost; Corts had to resort to some other strategy to provide f ...
... The conquest of the Aztec empire required an enormous effort and a tremendous sacrifice by Corts's army, and after their victory, the soldiers demanded what they had come for: prestige and wealth. The spoils from the city largely had been lost; Corts had to resort to some other strategy to provide f ...
Document
... type of encomineda was run by Catholic missionaries who would try to teach the ways of their religion. Sometimes they even taught ...
... type of encomineda was run by Catholic missionaries who would try to teach the ways of their religion. Sometimes they even taught ...
slide show notes
... Juan Ponce de León: Florida, 1513. Vasco Núñez de Balboa: Isthmus of Panama in ...
... Juan Ponce de León: Florida, 1513. Vasco Núñez de Balboa: Isthmus of Panama in ...
Conquest - WordPress.com
... Columbus’s discovery leads to the transformation of the Caribbean Islands into Spanish colonies ◦ Lands that are controlled by another nation ...
... Columbus’s discovery leads to the transformation of the Caribbean Islands into Spanish colonies ◦ Lands that are controlled by another nation ...
I. New World in the Western Atlantic A. Explorations of Columbus 1
... Francisco Vasquez de Coronado explored US Southwest 1542 C. New Spain in the 16th Century ...
... Francisco Vasquez de Coronado explored US Southwest 1542 C. New Spain in the 16th Century ...
Chapter 1 Presntation
... Florida 1565 Santa Fe New Mexico – Indian uprising in 1680 called the Pope’s rebellion with the pueblo Indians – Indians will destroy the Spanish settlement and kill priests and Spanish settlers – they will build their KIVAS on the ruins of the plaza at Santa Fe. The Spanish who were a 100 years bef ...
... Florida 1565 Santa Fe New Mexico – Indian uprising in 1680 called the Pope’s rebellion with the pueblo Indians – Indians will destroy the Spanish settlement and kill priests and Spanish settlers – they will build their KIVAS on the ruins of the plaza at Santa Fe. The Spanish who were a 100 years bef ...
New Spain
New Spain (Spanish: Nueva España) was the colony comprising Spain's possessions in the New World north of the Isthmus of Panama. It was established following the Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire in 1521, and following additional conquests, it was made a viceroyalty (Spanish: virreinato) in 1535. The first of four viceroyalties Spain created in the Americas, it comprised Mexico, Central America, much of the Southwestern and Central United States, the Spanish West Indies, Spanish Florida, and eventually, the Philippines and other Pacific islands.After 1535. the colony was governed by the Viceroy of New Spain, an appointed minister of the King of Spain, who ruled as monarch over the colony. The capital was Mexico City.New Spain lost parts of its territory to other European powers and independence, but the core area remained under Spanish control until 1821, when it achieved independence as Mexico. It developed highly regional divisions, which reflect the impact of climate, topography, the presence or absence of dense indigenous populations, and the presence or absence of mineral resources. The areas of central and southern Mexico had dense indigenous populations with complex social, political and economic organization. The northern area of Mexico, a region of nomadic and semi-nomadic indigenous populations, was not generally conducive to dense settlements, but the discovery of silver in Zacatecas in the 1540s drew settlement there to exploit the mines. Silver mining became the motor of not only the economy of New Spain, but vastly enriched Spain, and transformed the global economy. New Spain was the New World terminus of the Philippine trade, making the viceroyalty a vital link between Spain's New World empire and its Asian empire.