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Profile Documents Logout
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Presentation
Presentation

...  He was hoping to find a route to India (in order to trade for spices).  He made a total of four trips to the Caribbean and South America during the years 14921504. ...
File - Mr. Raymond`s Social Studies
File - Mr. Raymond`s Social Studies

... Protestant Reformation ...
PowerPoint bemutató
PowerPoint bemutató

Early Exploration Notes
Early Exploration Notes

... ► Spain had recently become unified, and was no longer fighting against a local enemy, the Moors ► Columbus approached Queen Isabella of Spain to request funding for his explorations – to seek a westward all-water route to Asia ...
Age of Exploration
Age of Exploration

... several different cultures ...
So, How Did “White” Guys Get Here?
So, How Did “White” Guys Get Here?

... exploration craze to find a quick H2O route to Asia. Discovers islands in the Caribbean & claims to be in Asia- way off! Claims all lands he “discovers” for Spain to build colonies upon. ...
An Age of Explorations 1400–1800
An Age of Explorations 1400–1800

... • Main reason for exploration is to gain wealth • Crusades had created demand for Asian goods • Muslims and Italians control trade from East to West • Other European nations want to bypass these powers ...
explorers
explorers

... Portugal takes an early lead when Bartholomew Dias made it around the tip of Africa in which many then followed. One of the first trade goods that the Portuguese took from Africa was Slaves ...
The Emergence of the First Global Age
The Emergence of the First Global Age

... get some credit. Europe is out of the “dark ages” and people are ...
exploration test study guide answers
exploration test study guide answers

... o Manor- Large estate owned by a noble on which peasants lived and were protected in exchange for their services o Navigation- The science of piloting ships or aircraft o Northwest Passage- a non-existent path through North America that early explorers searched for that would allow ships to sail fro ...
20130829084653
20130829084653

... o Believed he could reach Asia faster by sailing west across the Atlantic Ocean  King of Portugal refused to support Columbus’ theory of exploration (expected travel to be around the southern tip of Africa) o Columbus moves to Spain and worked to gain support of the King/Queen ...
Events to Exploration
Events to Exploration

... Portugal establishes very profitable trade (slaves & gold) with East & West African states. ...
The Age of Exploration
The Age of Exploration

... Brazil ►Portugal’s major colony in the New World ►Large #s of slaves were taken from Africa & used in Brazil to produce  Coffee  Cotton  Sugar ...
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 EC 1 EC 2 EC 3
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 EC 1 EC 2 EC 3

... Believed he could reach Indies by sailing west ...
Eve of Exploration Notes
Eve of Exploration Notes

... I. Ottoman Empire forced European traders to look for all water routes to India and China. 1. Portugal and Spain take the lead ...
Pre-Columbian Societies, European Exploration and Transatlantic
Pre-Columbian Societies, European Exploration and Transatlantic

... 2. What motivated European exploration and what new technology made it possible? 3. What are some effects of colonization in the Americas? ...
II. Portugal……………………………………………..
II. Portugal……………………………………………..

... •USS Nimitz (blue): 333 meters •AIDAblu (orange): 245 meters •Santa Maria (green): 18 meters ...
EUROPEAN EXPLORATION
EUROPEAN EXPLORATION

... regain the Holy Land of Jerusalem from the Turkish Muslims. • They did not regain the Holy Land but many Europeans who had never traveled before were introduced to the Middle East. • They tasted new foods: rice, oranges, dates, spices. Europe began to trade with the Middle East. ...
File
File

... Christopher Columbus's first voyage with the Nina, Pinta and the Santa Maria began on August 3, 1492. ...
1-3 Early European Explorers
1-3 Early European Explorers

...  As the crew lost confidence in the voyage land was sighted on October 22nd, 1492  Thinking he reached the Indies in Southeast Asia, Columbus called the Taino people Indians ...
Unit II Review The Age of Exploration Terms The Three G`s
Unit II Review The Age of Exploration Terms The Three G`s

... Treaty of Tordesillas Columbian Exchange Plantation Farming Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade Epidemics Portuguese Explorers 1. Prince Henry the Navigator 2. Bartolomeu Dias 3. Vasco de Gama 4. Pedro Cabral Spanish Explorers 1. Christopher Columbus 2. Amerigo Vespucci 3. Ferdinand Magellan Conquistadors 1. ...
Following the light of the sun, we left the Old World.
Following the light of the sun, we left the Old World.

... To keep order, the Pope divided the New World between the 2 most powerful Catholic countries: Spain & Portugal TREATY OF TORDESILLAS Spain = most of the “heathen lands” Portugal = Africa, Asia, (with line of demarcation, Brazil) ...
Ch. 20: The Atlantic World
Ch. 20: The Atlantic World

... Spain and the New World  Ferdinand Magellan—left Spain with five ships and 230 men; first crew to sail around the world ...
May01 - SpanishExploration01
May01 - SpanishExploration01

... Preview to Unit 8: Spanish Exploration The competition for wealth in Asia among European nations prompted Christopher Columbus to make a daring voyage from Spain in 1492. Instead of sailing south around Africa and then east, Columbus sailed west across the Atlantic in search of an alternate trade r ...
2. First Americans
2. First Americans

... To keep order, the Pope divided the New World between the 2 most powerful Catholic countries: Spain & Portugal TREATY OF TORDESILLAS Spain = most of the “heathen lands” Portugal = Africa, Asia, (with line of demarcation, Brazil) ...
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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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