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Early American Explorers and the Age of Discovery How did it all begin? Lesson Objectives To explain the Age of Discovery/Age of Exploration. To understand the causes and effects of European colonization in the United States. To understand location and patterns of settlements and the geographic factors that influence where people live. To understand the economic patterns of early societies. Explorer Vocabulary Explorer – someone who travels to gain geographic or scientific knowledge. New World – Western Hemisphere including North and South America. Age of Discovery – A period of time between the 15th and 17th century, when Europeans explored and mapped the world. Colony – A group of people that settle far from home and maintain ties to their home country. Colonize – To establish a colony. Cartographer - Mapmaker Conquer – To defeat in combat (war). Aztecs – South American people conquered by Cortes. St. Augustine – The oldest, permanently settled city in the United States. Reasons for Exploration Curiosity – what’s out there? Money and Power Fame National Pride Religion –spreading Christianity Trade – buying and selling foreign goods New, shorter trade routes Obstacles Faced by Explorers Fear of the unknown The Sea of Darkness/terrifying monsters Poor maps and navigational tools Lack of good supplies – water and fruit Disease, starvation and lots of hard work Bad weather. What Countries Sent Explorers? Portugal Spain England France Explorer Timeline 1st century AD Chinese invent the first compass. 982 Eric the Red discovers Greenland. 1002 Leif Ericson discovers North America. 1450 Prince Henry the Navigator builds school for sailors. 1453 Turkish Empire cuts off the land route for spices from Asia to Europe. Search for sea route begins. 1492 Columbus sails to the New World. 1497 John Cabot discovers Newfoundland while he searches for the Northwest Passage. 1502 Amerigo Vespucci returns from his explorations of the New World. American continents named after him by German mapmaker. 1513 Vasco Nunez de Balboa discovers the eastern shore of the Pacific Ocean. Juan Ponce de Leon searches for the Fountain of Youth in Florida. 1519 - 1522 Ferdinand Magellan and his crew sail around the world. 1521 Hernando Cortez Spanish explorer who defeats the Aztec Empire. 1533 Francisco Pizarro defeats the Inca Empire. 1534 Jacques Cartier discovers the St. Lawrence River and the Great Lakes. 1539 - 1542 Hernando De Soto explores the southeastern United States. 1540 Francisco asquez de Coronado explores the southwestern United States and discovers the Grand Canyon. Trying to find Cibola – the Seven Cities of Gold. 1577 Sir Francis Drake becomes the first Englishman to sail around the world. 1673 Father Jacques Marquette and Louis Jolliet explore the Mississippi River. 1682 Rene-Robert de La Salle explores the Mississippi River from the Great Lakes to the Gulf of Mexico. So, what’s going on in 1492? Christopher Columbus’ first exploration in 1492 marked the beginning of the Age of Discovery, also known as the Age of Exploration. King Ferdinand II and Queen Isabella I did not have the funds available to finance Columbus’ expedition, but felt they needed to keep Columbus from offering his services to other countries. They borrowed money from several other royal accounts to finance the adventure. There’s more… Europeans had three goals in exploration: gold (money), glory (land and power) and God (introduction of Christianity to the New World). The great powers (countries) worked frantically to explorers to the New World as quickly as possible. Explorers were given permission to claim land in anyway possible, even if that meant taking slaves or prisoners, or engaging in battles. Some explorers continued to search for a northwest passage as a shortcut to Asia. Though none were successful in finding such a path. Spain, France and England all established themselves firmly in the New World by the 17th Century