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Explorers
Explorers

... • Spain and Portugal want to protect their claims and turn to the Pope for help • 1493 Pope draws the Line of Demarcation—an imaginary line running down the middle of the Atlantic from the North Pole to the South Pole • Spain controls all lands West • Portugal -- East ...
European Explorers - Effingham County Schools
European Explorers - Effingham County Schools

... Age of Discovery • Europeans were interested in trading with the Far East, which included India, China, and Japan. • This area was also known as the Indies, and it contained highly prized goods such as silk, spices, teas, and gems. • Muslim traders controlled the land and sea routes by which these ...
Explorers - St. Matthew School
Explorers - St. Matthew School

... Da Gama succeeded in establishing a trade route with who and for which country? Columbus was considered a failure at his death because? ...
The Search for Spices
The Search for Spices

... China and Japan. Since he thought he had reached the Indies, he called the people of the region Indians. In 1493, he returned to Spain to a hero’s welcome. In three later voyages, Columbus remained convinced he had reached islands off the coast of East Asia. Before long, though, other Europeans real ...
For God, Glory and Gold
For God, Glory and Gold

... European Exploration - Portugal Leads the Way __________________________________ – (1394 – 1460) For ______________________ and _____________________ he encourages sailors to push farther and chart new areas. The Portuguese sail down the ______________ west coast as they do so they set up trading st ...
Exploration and Explorers PPT
Exploration and Explorers PPT

... • Gold- By controlling trade routes to the east, Europeans could cut out the middle men. Also, they could try to find Gold in the new land. (Europeans believed dark skin and the sun were a sure sign of Gold.) • Technology- New technology such as the caravel, astrolabe, and compass. ...
European Exploration - Bibb County Schools
European Exploration - Bibb County Schools

... • Gold- By controlling trade routes to the east, Europeans could cut out the middle men. Also, they could try to find Gold in the new land. (Europeans believed dark skin and the sun were a sure sign of Gold.) • Technology- New technology such as the caravel, astrolabe, and compass. ...
The Age of Exploration Notes
The Age of Exploration Notes

... 3. 1498 - Vasco da Gama went all the way to India. C. The all-water route proved to be easier, safer and more profitable. Where did they go? ...
A brief history of the first voyage rief history of the first voyage rief
A brief history of the first voyage rief history of the first voyage rief

... to Hispaniola. On Christians Day the Santa Maria hit a rock and had to be abandoned. Columbus decided to return home on the Nina. He survived terrible storms and reached Portugal in March 1493, soon after he returned to Spain. News of Columbus’ discovery spread throughout Europe. He received a hero ...
AZTECS INCAS
AZTECS INCAS

... DISCOVERY EMPIRES IMPACT ...
CHAPTER SUMMARY
CHAPTER SUMMARY

... Within a few years Pizarro had conquered the entire Inca empire. The Spanish then began to create a vast empire which they called New Spain. They established settlements to serve as trading posts, missions to convert local Native Americans to Catholicism, and military bases. EXPLORING THE BORDERLAND ...
World History Lecture Chapter 15 The First Global Age
World History Lecture Chapter 15 The First Global Age

... Portugal used firepower to win control of the rich Indian Ocean spice trade. In less than 50 years, the Portuguese had built a trading empire with military and merchant outposts rimming the southern seas. Despite their sea power, the Portuguese were not strong enough to conquer much territory on lan ...
age of exploration - Rowan County Schools
age of exploration - Rowan County Schools

... Prince Henry – founded a school for navigators in 1419. ...
Europe Begins to Explore PowerPoint Review - fchs
Europe Begins to Explore PowerPoint Review - fchs

... The Italian explorer Amerigo Vespucci actually mapped out the coastline of South America in 1499, confirming that what Columbus had discovered was not the Indies at all. Rather, it was a heretofore unknown continent to Europeans. ...
Europe Begins to Explore the Earth - fchs
Europe Begins to Explore the Earth - fchs

... The Italian explorer Amerigo Vespucci actually mapped out the coastline of South America in 1499, confirming that what Columbus had discovered was not the Indies at all. Rather, it was a heretofore unknown continent to Europeans. ...
Study Guide: European Exploration/ The Age of Exploration
Study Guide: European Exploration/ The Age of Exploration

... 2. Navigators used an hourglass and a sextant to know where they were and where they were going. 3. Prince Henry the Navigator provided the leadership for Portuguese exploration in the 1400s. 4. Bartolomeu Dias found the Cape of Good Hope at the southern tip of Africa. 5. Dias’s discovery led to the ...
Quest for Asia
Quest for Asia

... Columbus also requested he be made "Great Admiral of the Ocean", appointed governor of any and all lands he discovered, and given one-tenth of all revenue from those lands. The king submitted Columbus's proposal to his experts, who rejected it. It was their considered opinion that Columbus's estimat ...
Essential Question for TP #4
Essential Question for TP #4

... cases, too, ships could carry goods more cheaply than could overland caravans. Nor could Portuguese merchants be blocked or charged high tolls by competing powers that controlled overland routes. Overseas trade promised wealth for merchants and sailors and goods for Europe's markets. Christopher Col ...
Aim: How did the Age of Exploration begin?
Aim: How did the Age of Exploration begin?

... Spain would seek new trade routes for “God, Glory, and Gold.” The world would never be the same again. ...
Bartholomeu Dias
Bartholomeu Dias

... da Gama's crew suffered from scurvy; 2/3 did not survive the journey to India; da Gama fought against Arab traders already established in the Indian Ocean ...
Chapter 5 Age of Exploration - St. Charles Borromeo Catholic School
Chapter 5 Age of Exploration - St. Charles Borromeo Catholic School

... • Columbus didn’t find a shorter route to Asia by sailing west but he did find a ‘new’ continent and new routes to Asia ...
Ch.19.1 and 20.1 - Hackettstown School District
Ch.19.1 and 20.1 - Hackettstown School District

... Hormuz and the Straits of Malacca (where pirates are still common!), which are strategic trade routes even today  However, by 1600, other countries like the Dutch Republic (aka, the Netherlands) challenged Portugal’s dominance in the Indies  The Dutch East India Company was formed to established a ...
Three Worlds Meet - Duplin County Schools
Three Worlds Meet - Duplin County Schools

... SOURCE:Painting by Michael Hampshire.Community Life at Cahokia .Cahokia Mounds State Historic Site. ...
The Age of Exploration - Egnot
The Age of Exploration - Egnot

... • Spanish Region • Portuguese Region ...
Voyages of discovery
Voyages of discovery

... Magellan was a Portuguese soldier and adventurer who had taken part in four expeditions to India and Malaya. He quarreled with the Portuguese king, Manuel I and left the country in 1514 to enter the service of Spain. In 1519 he proposed a voyage west to the Spice Islands, which promised great we ...
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Voyages of Christopher Columbus



In his 1492 transatlantic maritime expedition, Christopher Columbus became the first Christian European to make landfall in the Americas. Columbus, an Italian navigator sailing for the Spanish Crown, sought a westward route to Asia, which led him to coin the misnomer ""West Indies"" for the Antilles, where he made landfall. The newly discovered landmass came to be known in Europe as the New World. Ultimately, the two continents and collection of islands of the Western Hemisphere became known as the Americas, after Amerigo Vespucci. Vespucci, an Italian navigator, is credited with recognizing the Americas as newly discovered, previously unknown territory, as opposed to islands associated with Asia, as Columbus originally surmised. Over four voyages to the Americas between 1492 and 1502, Columbus set the stage for the European exploration and colonization of the Americas, ultimately leading to the Columbian Exchange. Considered an indicator of the start of Modern history, the great significance of his voyages to the History of the world is uncontested.At the time of the voyages, the Americas were inhabited by natives considered to be the descendants of Asians who crossed the Bering Strait to North America in prehistoric times. Vikings were the first Europeans to reach the Americas, establishing a short-lived settlement in Newfoundland circa 1000. Columbus' voyages led to the widespread knowledge that a new continent existed west of Europe and east of Asia. This breakthrough in geographical science led to the exploration and colonization of the New World by major European sea powers, and is sometimes cited as the start of the modern era.Spain, Portugal and other European kingdoms sent expeditions and established colonies throughout the New World, converted the native inhabitants to Christianity, and built large trade networks across the Atlantic, which introduced new plants, animals, and food crops in both continents. The search for a westward route to Asia continued in 1513 when Nuñez de Balboa crossed Central America, he became the first European to sight the Pacific Ocean. The search was completed in 1521, when the Spanish Magellan-Elcano expedition sailed across the Pacific and reached Southeast Asia. Christopher Columbus had 2 children. One was Diego Columbus and the other was Ferdinand Columbus.
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