Concerto Around the World in Not Quite Eighty Days
... agricultural people isolated for thousands of years, they numbered about 100,000 around 1415, when they became the first victims of Spanish and Portuguese slave raiders. The Guanche became the first people to be driven to extinction by European imperialism. Arduous slave labor on sugar plantations a ...
... agricultural people isolated for thousands of years, they numbered about 100,000 around 1415, when they became the first victims of Spanish and Portuguese slave raiders. The Guanche became the first people to be driven to extinction by European imperialism. Arduous slave labor on sugar plantations a ...
The Age of Exploration - Egnot
... – Split the newly discovered world into 2 regions • Spanish Region • Portuguese Region ...
... – Split the newly discovered world into 2 regions • Spanish Region • Portuguese Region ...
Ch - edl.io
... to sign the Treaty of Tordesillas, in which they divided the world between them along a line drawn down the center of the North Atlantic. ...
... to sign the Treaty of Tordesillas, in which they divided the world between them along a line drawn down the center of the North Atlantic. ...
Inferior position in Eurasian Commerce
... Rotting of gums, loss of teeth, abscesses, hemorrhaging, death 29 died from it ...
... Rotting of gums, loss of teeth, abscesses, hemorrhaging, death 29 died from it ...
CHAPTER-26 OUTLINE
... home. The United States declared war on Japan, and three days later Germany and Italy declared war on the United States. The war came because of a fundamental clash of systems. The United States sought a liberal capitalist world order with all nations enjoying freedom of trade and investment. The di ...
... home. The United States declared war on Japan, and three days later Germany and Italy declared war on the United States. The war came because of a fundamental clash of systems. The United States sought a liberal capitalist world order with all nations enjoying freedom of trade and investment. The di ...
Chap. 6 Exploration & Expansion
... * Columbus & his three ships sailed from Spain in August 1492, & after a long trip across the Atlantic landed on what is today San Salvador Island in the Bahamas. •In three more voyages, Columbus discovered the Caribbean islands of Cuba, Haiti and the Dominican Republic. Columbus did not realize tha ...
... * Columbus & his three ships sailed from Spain in August 1492, & after a long trip across the Atlantic landed on what is today San Salvador Island in the Bahamas. •In three more voyages, Columbus discovered the Caribbean islands of Cuba, Haiti and the Dominican Republic. Columbus did not realize tha ...
Slide 1
... • Controlled China from 1368-1644 • Zheng He (1405-1433) controlled SE Asian trade. • Early trading with the Dutch and British, until the overthrow of the Ming puts the Qing in control – Europeans utilize established trade routes – What do the Chinese have that the west wants? ...
... • Controlled China from 1368-1644 • Zheng He (1405-1433) controlled SE Asian trade. • Early trading with the Dutch and British, until the overthrow of the Ming puts the Qing in control – Europeans utilize established trade routes – What do the Chinese have that the west wants? ...
Age of Exploration Notes
... E. Trading Empires in the Indian Ocean a. Portugal’s Trading Empire i. _______________________________________ _______________________________________ ii. In 1510, Portugal captures Goa, port city in western India iii. In 1511, Portugal seizes Malacca, on Malay Peninsula iv. ________________________ ...
... E. Trading Empires in the Indian Ocean a. Portugal’s Trading Empire i. _______________________________________ _______________________________________ ii. In 1510, Portugal captures Goa, port city in western India iii. In 1511, Portugal seizes Malacca, on Malay Peninsula iv. ________________________ ...
The Beginnings of Our Global Age
... because there was no central government just a loosely attached group of Islands Spanish Seize control and name it for King Phillip II By 1575 Spain controlled the coastal regions and soon extended inward controlling most of the archipelago by the 1600’s ...
... because there was no central government just a loosely attached group of Islands Spanish Seize control and name it for King Phillip II By 1575 Spain controlled the coastal regions and soon extended inward controlling most of the archipelago by the 1600’s ...
Chapter 2 Age of Exploration
... mapmaking. Sailors, scholars, mapmakers, and shipbuilders worked together to improve sea travel. He wanted to learn about the world, trade, spread his religion, and gain wealth for Portugal. trading posts : stores or small settlements where goods could be bought and sold slave trade: buying and sel ...
... mapmaking. Sailors, scholars, mapmakers, and shipbuilders worked together to improve sea travel. He wanted to learn about the world, trade, spread his religion, and gain wealth for Portugal. trading posts : stores or small settlements where goods could be bought and sold slave trade: buying and sel ...
New Trade Routes - White Plains Public Schools
... The first circumnavigation of the globe was led by Ferdinand Magellan. He was born in the spring of 1480 to a family of lower nobility. Educated in the Portuguese court, Magellan proved himself in many battles in the name of his country. Like Columbus before him, Magellan believed he could get to t ...
... The first circumnavigation of the globe was led by Ferdinand Magellan. He was born in the spring of 1480 to a family of lower nobility. Educated in the Portuguese court, Magellan proved himself in many battles in the name of his country. Like Columbus before him, Magellan believed he could get to t ...
Independence High School Global History Regents Mr. Wisell Unit 1
... The dynamic energy of Western civilization between 1500 and 1800 was most apparent when Europeans began to expand into the rest of the world. First Portugal and Spain, then later the Dutch Republic, England, and France, all rose to new economic heights through their worldwide trading activity. For a ...
... The dynamic energy of Western civilization between 1500 and 1800 was most apparent when Europeans began to expand into the rest of the world. First Portugal and Spain, then later the Dutch Republic, England, and France, all rose to new economic heights through their worldwide trading activity. For a ...
Hiroshi KitamuraScreening Enlightenment: Hollywood and the
... films in occupied Japan. For example, SCAP and Hollywood acted together to create the Central Motion Pictures Exchange (CMPE) to facilitate American entry into the Japanese film market. The CMPE and other similar institutions thus reflected, in Kitamura’s words, a “corporatist matrix” that linked th ...
... films in occupied Japan. For example, SCAP and Hollywood acted together to create the Central Motion Pictures Exchange (CMPE) to facilitate American entry into the Japanese film market. The CMPE and other similar institutions thus reflected, in Kitamura’s words, a “corporatist matrix” that linked th ...
Modernization of Japan
... The Japanese have a reputation for adopting other cultures and turning them to an advantage. If so, this may explain why contact with the West strengthened that country in some important ways. ...
... The Japanese have a reputation for adopting other cultures and turning them to an advantage. If so, this may explain why contact with the West strengthened that country in some important ways. ...
Europeans Explore the East
... money, sign treaties, and raise their own armies. The Dutch managed to drive out the English and grab the ...
... money, sign treaties, and raise their own armies. The Dutch managed to drive out the English and grab the ...
Texto - AP European History
... • Christopher Columbus– Financed by Ferdinand and Isabella – 1492- reaches the Bahamas- believes he reaches the “Indies” somewhere west of India – Four expeditions chart most of the Caribbean and Honduras – Ushers in a new era of domination and exploration of the New World ...
... • Christopher Columbus– Financed by Ferdinand and Isabella – 1492- reaches the Bahamas- believes he reaches the “Indies” somewhere west of India – Four expeditions chart most of the Caribbean and Honduras – Ushers in a new era of domination and exploration of the New World ...
COMPLETE ERA 4 QUESTIONS For Period 1
... C. Japan feared that the Jesuits would corrupt their social order D. The School of National Learning taught the Japanese to be isolated. 3. What contributed to the start of the Ming Empire? A. The Mongols were overthrown and the scholar-gentry test was reinitiated B. The Jesuits converted the top of ...
... C. Japan feared that the Jesuits would corrupt their social order D. The School of National Learning taught the Japanese to be isolated. 3. What contributed to the start of the Ming Empire? A. The Mongols were overthrown and the scholar-gentry test was reinitiated B. The Jesuits converted the top of ...
The Maritime Revolution, to 1550
... trade it over long distances and had no iron. Spanish wars killed tens of thousands of Arakaws and undermined their economy; by 1502, the remaining Arawak of Hispaniola were forced to serve as laborers for the Spanish. 3. What the Spanish did in the Antilles was an extension of Spanish actions again ...
... trade it over long distances and had no iron. Spanish wars killed tens of thousands of Arakaws and undermined their economy; by 1502, the remaining Arawak of Hispaniola were forced to serve as laborers for the Spanish. 3. What the Spanish did in the Antilles was an extension of Spanish actions again ...
Text Ch.15
... trade it over long distances and had no iron. Spanish wars killed tens of thousands of Arakaws and undermined their economy; by 1502, the remaining Arawak of Hispaniola were forced to serve as laborers for the Spanish. 3. What the Spanish did in the Antilles was an extension of Spanish actions again ...
... trade it over long distances and had no iron. Spanish wars killed tens of thousands of Arakaws and undermined their economy; by 1502, the remaining Arawak of Hispaniola were forced to serve as laborers for the Spanish. 3. What the Spanish did in the Antilles was an extension of Spanish actions again ...
The Maritime Revolution, to 1550 CHAPTER 16
... III. Encounters With Europe, 1450–1550 A. Western Africa ...
... III. Encounters With Europe, 1450–1550 A. Western Africa ...
European Exploration - Scott County Schools
... • Spain needed a non-Portuguese-dominated route • Spain’s monarchs purposefully sponsored voyages by ...
... • Spain needed a non-Portuguese-dominated route • Spain’s monarchs purposefully sponsored voyages by ...
Nanban trade
The Nanban trade (南蛮貿易, Nanban bōeki, ""Southern barbarian trade"") or the Nanban trade period (南蛮貿易時代, Nanban bōeki jidai, ""Southern barbarian trade period"") in the history of Japan extends from the arrival of the first Europeans - Portuguese explorers, missionaries and merchants - to Japan in 1543, to their near-total exclusion from the archipelago in 1614, under the promulgation of the ""Sakoku"" Seclusion Edicts.Nanban (南蛮, ""southern barbarian"") is a Sino-Japanese word, Chinese Nánmán, originally referring to the peoples of South Asia and Southeast Asia. In Japan, the word took on a new meaning when it came to designate the Portuguese, who first arrived in 1543, and later other Europeans.