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Christófo Colón 1506] [1451- Columbus’ Four Voyages Columbus’ Voyages Spanish Conquests Generally Religious Political Reasons Economic Personal Positive and Negative Effects of Columbus’ Voyages • Columbian Exchange • Eastern and Western Hemisphere • Increased colonization • Changes in gov’t, science, religion • Enslavement of people • Disregard for culture • Destruction of Native American civilizations • Diseases like small pox, typhus, measles The First Spanish Conquests: The Aztecs vs. Fernando Cortes Montezuma II The Story • 1519 – Cortes intrigued by stories of GOLD • Malintzin (aka Dona Marina) – advisor to Cortes • Montezuma and the ancient prophecy ‘light skinned god” • Cortes used other tribes to help fight • The Death of Montezuma • The Siege of Tenochtitlan The Death of Montezuma II Mexico Surrenders to Cortés The First Spanish Conquests: The Incas vs. Francisco Pizarro Atahualpa The Story • Spanish priest told Atahualpa he must convert to Christianity but refused and imprisoned • Promised to reward Pizarro with gold and silver if released, which he agreed to but then killed Atahualpa anyway • Pizarro easily defeated Incas (modern day Peru) Spanish Conquest & Colonization Conquistadores Presidios • Fortified bases created by the Spanish to protect against pirates and other invaders Missions • Catholic church played central role in Spanish exploration and settlements • Missionaries labored to convert American Indians to Christianity The Encomienda System • System in Spanish America • Indian slaves were forced to work on huge plantation estates • Treatment was extremely harsh What are England and France doing at the time? • Northwest Passage – Western route above the North American continent in the Artic Sea area to get to Asia • Only setting up temporary colonies at this time for trade • Only setting up temporary colonies at this time because own country is in political turmoil Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade Slave Ship “Coffin” Position Below Deck African Captives Thrown Overboard European Empires in the Americas A Growing Divide • During Reformation, Spain remains Catholic while England switches to Protestant back to Catholic, back to Protestant • Vying for Religious and Political Dominance King Henry VIII – 1509-1547 Henry’s wives Henry’s Surviving Children The Elizabethian Era • Encourages & Sponsors numerous Explorations • Openly Protestant – growing conflict/competition with Spain • Holds out war with France/Spain for 25 years by holding out for marriage – Virgin Queen • 1570 – Cold war with Spain after Pope issues decree absolving English Catholics from obedience to Elizabeth War with Spain • Sir Francis Drake – Queen’s Sea Dogs – Circumnavigated globe – Explored as far as CA – Pillaged Spanish treasure ship, Cacafuego – Emeralds of Queen’s crown • Burned Spanish towns, looted Catholic churches • Queen Elizabeth knighted him in 1581 – open act of defiance against Spain • 1588, Spain (financed by Pope) assembled 130 ships, 30,000 men England Takes Over • Spanish Armada --- poor leadership, too big, less maneuverable • English ships – smaller, faster • Massive storms wrecked Armada • Victory by England broke Spain’s sea power • English dominance over the seas = more freedom, more colonization England’s Reasons • Military: set up military bases, establish political dominance • Economic: need for trading posts if found the Northwest Passage, new trading markets with N.A. • Population: Overcrowding, Chance at Profit, Religious freedom Roanoke – The Lost Colony • 1584 – Sir Walter Raleigh – New Foundland to Florida - Virginia • 1585-87 – Raleigh’s 2 attempts – 2nd attempt: John White established colony, returns to England to get more supplies – Return delayed – War with Spain • 1590, White returns to Roanoke – Vanished w/o trace - Croatoan England tries Again • 25 years passed before England attempted colonization again • The Charter of 1606, issued by King James I – Jamestown settlement – Joint stock company – 100 men recruited by London company – Many difficulties – Survival is uncertain Early Difficulties • • • • • • • Disease Starvation Exposure to elements Conflict with Native Americans Lazy, Rich men Internal Strife http://www.history.com/topics/p ocahontas/videos#pocahontas Puritanism • Wanted to reform [purify] the Church of England • Grew impatient with the slow progress of Protestant Reformation in England Separatists • Puritans who believe that only visible saints should be admitted for church membership • Because the Church of England enrolled all the king’s subjects, separatists felt they had to share their church with the “damned” • Therefore, they believed in a “total break” from the Church of England Sources of Separatist Migration Pilgrims • Ultimately left the Netherlands because they didn’t think it was “pure” enough for them • Did not want to mix with the other religions • 1620, a group of 100 people negotiated with the Virginia Company to settle in their jurisdiction The Mayflower • Arrived far off course from destination – Plymouth Bay outside the domain of the VA co. • Squatters without legal right to land and authority to start government The May Flower Compact November 11, 1620 The May Flower Compact November 11, 1620 • Written and signed before the passengers disembarked from ship • Not a constitution, but an agreement to form to a crude government and submit to majority rule • Signed by 41 adult males – Led to meeting in assemblies to make laws – John Carver elected governor That First year… • Winter of 1620-1621 extremely harsh (only 44 of the original 100 survived) * weather * starvation * disease • None chose to leave in 1621 when the Mayflower sailed back The First Thanksgiving • Survival owed to Squanto and the Wampanaog Indians – Native Americans were weak in the New England area, epidemics had wiped out over ¾ pop – Chief Massasoit signed treaty with settlers in 1621 • Colony survived with fur (especially beaver), fish and lumber • Fall 1621 --- celebrated First Thanksgiving