Chapter 11 The Americas 400-1500 I. Section 1 The Peoples of
... 5. Captured nobles and war leaders were used for human sacrifice. 6. The belief that all life is in the hands of divine powers was crucial to Mayan civilization. 7. Like other ancient peoples in Central America, one way the Maya appeased the gods was through human sacrifice. World History Chapter 11 ...
... 5. Captured nobles and war leaders were used for human sacrifice. 6. The belief that all life is in the hands of divine powers was crucial to Mayan civilization. 7. Like other ancient peoples in Central America, one way the Maya appeased the gods was through human sacrifice. World History Chapter 11 ...
Columbian Exchange and Commercial Revolution
... Smallpox, measles, diphtheria, whooping cough, chicken pox, bubonic plague, scarlet fever and influenza were the most common microbial diseases exchanged Nearly all of the European diseases were communicable by air and touch. The pathway of these diseases was invisible to both Indians and Europeans ...
... Smallpox, measles, diphtheria, whooping cough, chicken pox, bubonic plague, scarlet fever and influenza were the most common microbial diseases exchanged Nearly all of the European diseases were communicable by air and touch. The pathway of these diseases was invisible to both Indians and Europeans ...
Teacher`s Guide
... colonies of the English, Dutch and French. In the ensuing clash of national, religious and commercial rivalries, the Europeans created an immense circuit of trade across the Atlantic that bound together four continents and three races, changing them all forever. The story of early America is much mo ...
... colonies of the English, Dutch and French. In the ensuing clash of national, religious and commercial rivalries, the Europeans created an immense circuit of trade across the Atlantic that bound together four continents and three races, changing them all forever. The story of early America is much mo ...
File
... *Aztec economy rested on a firm agrarian base; chinampas, or floating gardens 2. Aztec Society in Transition *became more hierarchical as the empire grew; social classes with different functions developed *tribute was drawn from subject people but Aztec empire never integrated; tribute city-states l ...
... *Aztec economy rested on a firm agrarian base; chinampas, or floating gardens 2. Aztec Society in Transition *became more hierarchical as the empire grew; social classes with different functions developed *tribute was drawn from subject people but Aztec empire never integrated; tribute city-states l ...
historical overview thru1900
... Euro-Nat Am children often show up as leaders in resistance to European settlers. Populations declined as a result of warfare, shifting subsistence patterns. 3) diseases. 90% + death rates in some areas. Colonists took over abandoned villages, dug up graves for tools. 4) extermination by Europeans. ...
... Euro-Nat Am children often show up as leaders in resistance to European settlers. Populations declined as a result of warfare, shifting subsistence patterns. 3) diseases. 90% + death rates in some areas. Colonists took over abandoned villages, dug up graves for tools. 4) extermination by Europeans. ...
Globalization of Disease
... diseases that would be most closely associated with 3rd World countries. 6. Suggest one or more things that can be done to reduce the likelihood of a person suffering from these diseases. 7. What differences do you see in your answers to #4 and #6? Why do these differences exist? ...
... diseases that would be most closely associated with 3rd World countries. 6. Suggest one or more things that can be done to reduce the likelihood of a person suffering from these diseases. 7. What differences do you see in your answers to #4 and #6? Why do these differences exist? ...
Unit 1
... With Portugal and Spain taking the lead, in the 15 th century Europeans began launching voyages of exploration and conquest motivated both by the search for a direct route to the luxury goods of Asia and the desire to spread the Christian faith. With a few centuries Europeans would take control of m ...
... With Portugal and Spain taking the lead, in the 15 th century Europeans began launching voyages of exploration and conquest motivated both by the search for a direct route to the luxury goods of Asia and the desire to spread the Christian faith. With a few centuries Europeans would take control of m ...
3.1 Exploration and Colonization
... Reading and Note-Taking Outline and Take Notes As you read about European exploration and colonization in Section 3.1, use an outline to help you take notes. ...
... Reading and Note-Taking Outline and Take Notes As you read about European exploration and colonization in Section 3.1, use an outline to help you take notes. ...
Presentation
... caused the greatest loss of life for indigenous populations. • After the colonies revolted against Great Britain and established the United States of America, President George Washington conceived the idea of "civilizing" Native Americans in preparation for assimilation as U.S. citizens. Assimilatio ...
... caused the greatest loss of life for indigenous populations. • After the colonies revolted against Great Britain and established the United States of America, President George Washington conceived the idea of "civilizing" Native Americans in preparation for assimilation as U.S. citizens. Assimilatio ...
AP US History – Chapter 23 Objectives
... Before European explores arrived in the Americas, Native Americans had developed their own forms of social organizations, which differed from one another in their levels of achievement. Europeans, concerned first with exploiting the New World and its peoples, regarded the natives as savages and set ...
... Before European explores arrived in the Americas, Native Americans had developed their own forms of social organizations, which differed from one another in their levels of achievement. Europeans, concerned first with exploiting the New World and its peoples, regarded the natives as savages and set ...
Study Guide for History of Latin America Unit Test
... 8. How did the Columbian Exchange contribute to the decline of the indigenous population? 9. How did the Columbian Exchange lead to agricultural change in BOTH Europe and the New World? 10. Overall, understand how the Columbian exchange affected BOTH Europe and the New World. ...
... 8. How did the Columbian Exchange contribute to the decline of the indigenous population? 9. How did the Columbian Exchange lead to agricultural change in BOTH Europe and the New World? 10. Overall, understand how the Columbian exchange affected BOTH Europe and the New World. ...
American History Unit 1:
... placed in a jeweled coffin that she kept with her during meals and even when she slept. ...
... placed in a jeweled coffin that she kept with her during meals and even when she slept. ...
The Age of Exploration
... the 1st slaves from Africa ► Triangular Trade ► Middle Passage: the journey of slaves from Africa to Americas ...
... the 1st slaves from Africa ► Triangular Trade ► Middle Passage: the journey of slaves from Africa to Americas ...
World History
... Spanish out of the Americas _____________________Capital of the Aztec Empire ____________________Africa was weakened by war and unable to defend itself from European colonialism as a result of ____________________African leader went on a pilgrimage to Mecca taking with him 60,000 people and 75 camel ...
... Spanish out of the Americas _____________________Capital of the Aztec Empire ____________________Africa was weakened by war and unable to defend itself from European colonialism as a result of ____________________African leader went on a pilgrimage to Mecca taking with him 60,000 people and 75 camel ...
Age of Exploration e of Exploration
... Religion Christian rulers wanted to spread Religion Christian rulers wanted to spread religion ...
... Religion Christian rulers wanted to spread Religion Christian rulers wanted to spread religion ...
File
... 1680, Spanish captured area known today as New Mexico 1609, natives launched rebellion: Popes Rebellion. Natives burned down churches and killed priests They rebuilt a kiva: ceremonial religious chamber, on the ruins of the Spanish plaza at Santa Fe The misdeeds of the Spanish in the New W ...
... 1680, Spanish captured area known today as New Mexico 1609, natives launched rebellion: Popes Rebellion. Natives burned down churches and killed priests They rebuilt a kiva: ceremonial religious chamber, on the ruins of the Spanish plaza at Santa Fe The misdeeds of the Spanish in the New W ...
Study Guide with Answers - Effingham County Schools
... 20.What item brought from the Old World to the New World was the biggest factor in causing huge losses of indigenous peoples? diseases 21.Why did the colonial Europeans need to bring slaves from Africa? To work as laborers in mines and on plantations because they were more immune to the European dis ...
... 20.What item brought from the Old World to the New World was the biggest factor in causing huge losses of indigenous peoples? diseases 21.Why did the colonial Europeans need to bring slaves from Africa? To work as laborers in mines and on plantations because they were more immune to the European dis ...
The First Global Age: Europe, the Americas, and Africa (1492
... in the Americas. New patterns of conquest and global exchange had an enormous impact on the civilization of Africa as well. ...
... in the Americas. New patterns of conquest and global exchange had an enormous impact on the civilization of Africa as well. ...
uslesson2 - The Lesson Builder
... explorers realized that they had discovered a vast new world. ...
... explorers realized that they had discovered a vast new world. ...
Population history of indigenous peoples of the Americas
The population figure for Indigenous peoples in the Americas before the 1492 voyage of Christopher Columbus has proven difficult to establish. Scholars rely on archaeological data and written records from settlers from the Old World. Most scholars writing at the end of the 19th century estimated the pre-Columbian population at about 10 million; by the end of the 20th century the scholarly consensus had shifted to about 50 million, with some arguing for 100 million or more. Contact with the New World led to the European colonization of the Americas, in which millions of immigrants from the Old World eventually settled in the New World.The population of African and Eurasian peoples in the Americas grew steadily, while the number of the indigenous people plummeted. Eurasian diseases such as influenza, bubonic plague and pneumonic plagues devastated the Native Americans who did not have immunity. Conflict and outright warfare with Western European newcomers and other American tribes further reduced populations and disrupted traditional society. The extent and causes of the decline have long been a subject of academic debate, along with its characterization as a genocide.