the age of exploration
... People naturally become curious about “what’s out there” New attitude inspires people to explore ...
... People naturally become curious about “what’s out there” New attitude inspires people to explore ...
From the 1400s to the 1700s, Europe experienced an “Age of
... 5.) He made 4 trips to “India” never knowing he was in “America” 6.) Despite the fact that Columbus never found Asia, Ferdinand Magellan still thought he could reach Asia by sailing West 7.) Magellan became the first explorer to circumnavigate the Earth (go all the way around) 8.) During the Age of ...
... 5.) He made 4 trips to “India” never knowing he was in “America” 6.) Despite the fact that Columbus never found Asia, Ferdinand Magellan still thought he could reach Asia by sailing West 7.) Magellan became the first explorer to circumnavigate the Earth (go all the way around) 8.) During the Age of ...
Asia Exploration and Trade
... storm, high rolled the waves, and so chanting a solemn litany as they short were the days that darkness walked. The beach was crowded prevailed. The crews grew sick with with people. Under the blazing fear and hardship, and all ...
... storm, high rolled the waves, and so chanting a solemn litany as they short were the days that darkness walked. The beach was crowded prevailed. The crews grew sick with with people. Under the blazing fear and hardship, and all ...
exploring the americas
... • Encouraged trade with Europe and Asia • Introduced to his country a legal system, a system of government, and schools • Empire fell in the late 1500s when Moroccans attacked its trade centers ...
... • Encouraged trade with Europe and Asia • Introduced to his country a legal system, a system of government, and schools • Empire fell in the late 1500s when Moroccans attacked its trade centers ...
File - Azteach.com
... • 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 period from 1444 to 1446, Prince Henry intensified the exploration of Africa, ...
... • 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 period from 1444 to 1446, Prince Henry intensified the exploration of Africa, ...
Unit 1-Global Trade
... When Columbus founded America, there was a dispute. The world was divided into two halves. Spain got one half and Portugal got the other. This was known as the Treaty of Tordesillas. ...
... When Columbus founded America, there was a dispute. The world was divided into two halves. Spain got one half and Portugal got the other. This was known as the Treaty of Tordesillas. ...
Lesson 2 New Ideas in Europe
... designed and built faster ships that were good for exploring. Portuguese traders exploring the coast of West Africa captured Africans and forced them into slavery. Enslaved people were sold in Europe. In 1487, Bartolomeu Dias was blown off course by a storm. His ship reached the eastern side of Afri ...
... designed and built faster ships that were good for exploring. Portuguese traders exploring the coast of West Africa captured Africans and forced them into slavery. Enslaved people were sold in Europe. In 1487, Bartolomeu Dias was blown off course by a storm. His ship reached the eastern side of Afri ...
Summary: New Ideas in Europe
... Portuguese traders exploring the coast of West Africa captured Africans and forced them into slavery. Enslaved people were sold in Europe. In 1487, Bartolomeu Dias was blown off course by a storm. His ship reached the eastern side of Africa. The Portuguese named the tip of Africa the Cape of Good Ho ...
... Portuguese traders exploring the coast of West Africa captured Africans and forced them into slavery. Enslaved people were sold in Europe. In 1487, Bartolomeu Dias was blown off course by a storm. His ship reached the eastern side of Africa. The Portuguese named the tip of Africa the Cape of Good Ho ...
New World
... • The Crusades =more contact and interest in nonEuropean civilizations; specifically India, the Spice Islands (Mouluccas) , and China. • The Portuguese =1st to attempt a more direct route to India without using Ottoman middlemen. • Spanish (led by Columbus) look for a different route as well discov ...
... • The Crusades =more contact and interest in nonEuropean civilizations; specifically India, the Spice Islands (Mouluccas) , and China. • The Portuguese =1st to attempt a more direct route to India without using Ottoman middlemen. • Spanish (led by Columbus) look for a different route as well discov ...
European Exploration and Land Claims, 1488–1610 European
... Many Europeans, however, believed that Columbus had actually found a land mass that lay between Europe and Asia. One of these people was Ferdinand Magellan, a Portuguese explorer. Magellan believed he could sail west to the Indies if he found a strait, or channel, through South America. The strait w ...
... Many Europeans, however, believed that Columbus had actually found a land mass that lay between Europe and Asia. One of these people was Ferdinand Magellan, a Portuguese explorer. Magellan believed he could sail west to the Indies if he found a strait, or channel, through South America. The strait w ...
Texto - AP European History
... • John Cabot- (1425-1500)Explored the northeast coast of North America – Henry VII not interested in ...
... • John Cabot- (1425-1500)Explored the northeast coast of North America – Henry VII not interested in ...
Unit 2 PowerPoint
... What was the Northwest Passage? How did the search for the Northwest Passage and Magellan's circumnavigation of the globe change Europeans’ understanding of the world? water ________ route The Northwest Passage is a ________ North America through __________ ___________ that would Pacific Asia lead ...
... What was the Northwest Passage? How did the search for the Northwest Passage and Magellan's circumnavigation of the globe change Europeans’ understanding of the world? water ________ route The Northwest Passage is a ________ North America through __________ ___________ that would Pacific Asia lead ...
- Google Sites
... wanted to see merchants who had economic control of traded Asian products. They wanted to find a sea route to Asia for direct trade. Also, the Europeans hoped to convert people to Christianity. Not only that, they were interested in Asian cultures because of Marco Polo’s book about his adventures. E ...
... wanted to see merchants who had economic control of traded Asian products. They wanted to find a sea route to Asia for direct trade. Also, the Europeans hoped to convert people to Christianity. Not only that, they were interested in Asian cultures because of Marco Polo’s book about his adventures. E ...
AP World History
... C) D) E) 9. By the 15th century, the West began to forge a military advantage over all other civilizations of the world, an advantage it would retain into the _________________________________. 10. What three motivations drew Portugal’s rulers to global exploration? A) B) C) 11. Portugal’s prince, _ ...
... C) D) E) 9. By the 15th century, the West began to forge a military advantage over all other civilizations of the world, an advantage it would retain into the _________________________________. 10. What three motivations drew Portugal’s rulers to global exploration? A) B) C) 11. Portugal’s prince, _ ...
European Exploration
... Africa in search of gold By 1500 had control of gold in Europe “Gold Coast” Began slave trade Portugal- 1st European nation that had black slavery • Every trip, further and further ...
... Africa in search of gold By 1500 had control of gold in Europe “Gold Coast” Began slave trade Portugal- 1st European nation that had black slavery • Every trip, further and further ...
THE AGE OF EXPLORATION
... • In 1502 Amerigo Vespucci sailed along the coast of South America and he finally realized that this wasn’t Asia, but a new land – It is later named America in his honor and the Spanish set out to explore it • Vasco Nunez de Balboa led an expedition across the Isthmus of Panama and became the first ...
... • In 1502 Amerigo Vespucci sailed along the coast of South America and he finally realized that this wasn’t Asia, but a new land – It is later named America in his honor and the Spanish set out to explore it • Vasco Nunez de Balboa led an expedition across the Isthmus of Panama and became the first ...
Early European Explorers
... in 7 villages in today’s Arizona and N. Mexico • he thought the villages were full of treasures, creating a legend that motivated other Spanish to explore the area. • de Coronado led an expedition from northwestern Mexico with 300 troops and Native American slaves to search for the treasures. • alth ...
... in 7 villages in today’s Arizona and N. Mexico • he thought the villages were full of treasures, creating a legend that motivated other Spanish to explore the area. • de Coronado led an expedition from northwestern Mexico with 300 troops and Native American slaves to search for the treasures. • alth ...
The Age of Exploration
... Sailed west from Spain, cut through S. America at the Straight of Magellan to Pacific, sailed and starved for one month to Asia. Magellan dies in Philippians. Crew finishes without him. ...
... Sailed west from Spain, cut through S. America at the Straight of Magellan to Pacific, sailed and starved for one month to Asia. Magellan dies in Philippians. Crew finishes without him. ...
Chapter 1, Section 4
... by bringing western Europeans into contact with the Muslim and Byzantine civilizations of Eastern Europe. This lead to the demand of luxury goods such as spices, sugar, melons, silk, & more. The more they expanded the more luxuries they wanted from different areas. (Mongols, Chinese, Africa) ...
... by bringing western Europeans into contact with the Muslim and Byzantine civilizations of Eastern Europe. This lead to the demand of luxury goods such as spices, sugar, melons, silk, & more. The more they expanded the more luxuries they wanted from different areas. (Mongols, Chinese, Africa) ...
Countries of Exploration
... to open a sea-based trade route from Europe to India in his 1497-98 voyage around the tip of South Africa. *Portugal took control of the valuable spice trade *Merchants became rich! ...
... to open a sea-based trade route from Europe to India in his 1497-98 voyage around the tip of South Africa. *Portugal took control of the valuable spice trade *Merchants became rich! ...
document
... of oarsmen, Three-Masted Ships using square sails were both insufficient for the Atlantic Ocean Caravel – new ship smaller than the older model European ships, Chinese Junks or Indian Dhows – their size allowed them to enter shallower water and triangular sails allowed them to take wind from either ...
... of oarsmen, Three-Masted Ships using square sails were both insufficient for the Atlantic Ocean Caravel – new ship smaller than the older model European ships, Chinese Junks or Indian Dhows – their size allowed them to enter shallower water and triangular sails allowed them to take wind from either ...
Homework Questions - modernworldhistory2010
... addition, many spices were used as medicine. Pepper was so prized it was counted out by the peppercorn. In England in the 11th century, many towns kept their accounts and paid taxes with pepper. Toward the end of the Middle Ages, a growing European middle class wanted spices. This caused prices to r ...
... addition, many spices were used as medicine. Pepper was so prized it was counted out by the peppercorn. In England in the 11th century, many towns kept their accounts and paid taxes with pepper. Toward the end of the Middle Ages, a growing European middle class wanted spices. This caused prices to r ...
Spice trade
The spice trade refers to the trade between historical civilizations in Asia, Northeast Africa and Europe. Spices such as cinnamon, cassia, cardamom, ginger, pepper, and turmeric were known, and used for commerce, in the Eastern World well into antiquity. Opium was also imported. These spices found their way into the Middle East before the beginning of the Christian Era, where the true sources of these spices was withheld by the traders, and associated with fantastic tales. Prehistoric writings and stone age carvings of neolithic age obtained indicates that India's South West Coast path, especially Kerala had established itself as a major spice trade centre from as early as 3000 B.C, which marks the beginning of Spice Trade (History of Kerala) and is still referred to as the land of spices or as the Spice Garden of India.The Greco-Roman world followed by trading along the Incense route and the Roman-India routes. During the first millennium, the sea routes to India and Sri Lanka (the Roman - Taprobane) were controlled by the Indians and Ethiopians that became the maritime trading power of the Red Sea. The Kingdom of Axum (ca 5th-century BC–AD 11th century) had pioneered the Red Sea route before the 1st century AD. By mid-7th century AD the rise of Islam closed off the overland caravan routes through Egypt and the Suez, and sundered the European trade community from Axum and India.Arab traders eventually took over conveying goods via the Levant and Venetian merchants to Europe until the rise of the Ottoman Turks cut the route again by 1453. Overland routes helped the spice trade initially, but maritime trade routes led to tremendous growth in commercial activities. During the high and late medieval periods Muslim traders dominated maritime spice trading routes throughout the Indian Ocean, tapping source regions in the Far East and shipping spices from trading emporiums in India westward to the Persian Gulf and the Red Sea, from which overland routes led to Europe.The trade was changed by the European Age of Discovery, during which the spice trade, particularly in black pepper, became an influential activity for European traders. The route from Europe to the Indian Ocean via the Cape of Good Hope was pioneered by the Portuguese explorer navigator Vasco da Gama in 1498, resulting in new maritime routes for trade.This trade — driving the world economy from the end of the Middle Ages well into the modern times — ushered in an age of European domination in the East. Channels, such as the Bay of Bengal, served as bridges for cultural and commercial exchanges between diverse cultures as nations struggled to gain control of the trade along the many spice routes. European dominance was slow to develop. The Portuguese trade routes were mainly restricted and limited by the use of ancient routes, ports, and nations that were difficult to dominate. The Dutch were later able to bypass many of these problems by pioneering a direct ocean route from the Cape of Good Hope to the Sunda Strait in Indonesia.