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EUROPEAN EXPLORERS ● What is imperialism and how did it impact North America ● What role did the First Nations play in European exploration of North America ● why is the history of European exploration critical today THE AGE OF EXPLORATION ● in the 1300s overland routes between Europe and Asia became disrupted ● the Mongol empire lost power to the Ottoman empire in the Middle East and the Ming Dynasty in China ● as a result the overland routes became dangerous to travel and more vulnerable to attack ● https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vn3e37VWc0k THE AGE OF EXPLORATION THE AGE OF EXPLORATION ● the need for new technology to access these markets utilized ships ● during the 1400s, Europeans began to develop ships that were faster and easier to manoeuvre ● they used new navigation techniques like the compass and the astrolabe ● https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7COCkxpEvzs THE AGE OF EXPLORATION ● the Portuguese were the first to put the new ships and technology to use ● in 1488 Bartolomeu Dias was the first person to round the Cape of Good Hope, Africa’s southern tip to travel to India ● https://www.youtube.com/watch? v=8xzcVlOrM4s LET’S GO WEST ● in the late 1400s Christopher Columbus of Italy managed to persuade King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain to sponsor an expedition to Asia ● he did not find Asia he landed in the Caribbean, and eventually encountered the Aztec and Incan empires ● https://www.youtube.com/watch? v=0QigcivaDYg AFTER COLUMBUS ● Columbus encounters with the Aztecs and Incans yielded gold and other valueables which kick started Britain, France and the Netherlands interest in exploring North America ● with Spain in control of the Caribbean, the others concentrated on northern routes ● Italian navigators were favoured to head up the exploration of the unknown waters of the Atlantic ocean 1497: GIOVANNI CABOTO ● in 1497 an English expedition led by Italian sailor Giovanni Caboto lands in Newfoundland ● Caboto claimed that the fish were so plentiful you could scoop up fish by the basket ● soon ships of many nations began to fish the shores of what would become Canada ● https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rvf4yB6_QGM TEMPORARY SETTLEMENTS AND FIRST CONTACT ● during the early days people arrived in the summer and returned to Europe in the winters ● they only came ashore to dry their catch and replenish their supplies of fresh water ● on the shores they met the Mi’kmaq and the Beothuk, with both positive and negative impacts IMPERIALISM ● a policy on the part of a ruler or government on one territory to dominate other territories ● in our history both France and Britain attempted to gain control over the area which eventually became Canada PERSPECTIVES ON FIRST CONTACT The European outlook ● there is a high demand for fish, catching cod to sell back home will make good, reliable profits. What about furs? Would furs sell too? Some of these strangers seemed willing to trade for them. There is already an established fur trade in Russia. Could furs from this area compete? Is it worth trying? PERSPECTIVES ON FIRST CONTACT The Mi’kmaq outlook ● trading is a way of establishing relations. The giving and receiving of gifts showed respect and goodwill. These strangers have metal goods, and the pelts we used as trade can be easily replaced. They actually prefer the old furs, ones we had already worn. We get to trade old clothes for knives, axes, pots, kettles and needles. Pots allowed them us to cook faster and use less firewood. We can meet our needs with fewer resources and less trouble. THE TRAGEDY OF THE BEOTHUK ● The Beothuk people lived in Newfoundland and first encountered the Europeans ● key understandings ● Europeans did not questions whether or not they had the right to establish permanent settlements ● Some of the camps and settlements interfered with traditional fishing areas ● the Beothuk took equipment from French and British fishing camps, hoping this would encourage them to leave ● in 1713 Newfoundland became a British colony and more British settlers arrived ● a colony is a region claimed and governed by a country from another part of the world SHAWNADITHIT ● in 1832, British trappers captured a young woman named Shawnadithit, along with her sister and mother ● the trappers brought them to St. John’s where they received gifts before being returned to their place of capture ● when her mother and sister died Shawnadithit walked back to St. John’ s ● the British settler named her Nancy SHAWNADITHIT ● in 1828 William Cormack realizing the possible elimination of all Beothuks ● tried to create a record of Beothuk culture and history ● Cormack did not speak her language ● Shawnadithit died of tuberculosis, a contagious disease that mostly attacks the lungs, in 1829 the last of her people ● https://www.youtube.com/watch? v=ssPTwMPpbAU&list=PLI8Cx_rhGoTKtH4xF-WzMQl_U2KYUisXP THE FRENCH EXPLORERS ● in 1534, Francis I, King of France sponsored an expedition to the coast of North America led by French explorer Jacques Cartier ● his goal was to find a passage to Asia through North America ● Cartier was given the power to claim these lands for France ● https://www.youtube.com/watch? v=AYi3O0ywY6k THE FRENCH EXPLORERS: CARTIER ● On June 24, 1534 Cartier had his first encounter with a Mi’kmaq person ● on July 6 Cartier encountered some Stadacona people near the Gaspe Penninsula ● legend has it that a misinterpretation during this meeting lead to the name our country has today ● https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AYi3O0ywY6k THE FRENCH EXPLORERS ● in 1534, Henry II King of France sponsored his an expedition to the coast of North America led by French explorer Jacques Cartier ● his goal was to find a passage to Asia through North America ● Cartier was given the power to claim these lands for France ● https://www.youtube.com/watch? v=AYi3O0ywY6k THE FRENCH EXPLORERS: CARTIER ● During Cartier’s second voyage ice forced Cartier to spend the winter at Stadacona (now Quebec City) ● he had insulted these people by travelling to Hochelaga (now Montreal) ● Cartier crew grew sick with scurvy, a disease that results from a lack of vitamin C that causes internal bleeding ● https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2HYUaLiNPxE THE FRENCH EXPLORERS: CARTIER ● The Stadacona provided a tea rich in vitamin C made from the needles of the white cedar ● eventually Cartier seized five people from Stadacona and took them to France ● they all died due to lack of immunity to European diseases ● immunity is the ability to fight off infection ● https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xeEsNH3w604 THE FRENCH EXPLORERS: de CHAMPLAIN ● The French did not return to France until 1603 when Samuel de Champlain retraced Cartier’s voyages along the St.Lawrence River ● in 1604 he returned as part of an expedition to establish the first French colony in North America, Port Royal in Acadia ● in 1608 he travelled further and established a settlement at Quebec once home to the Stadacona THE FRENCH EXPLORERS: de CHAMPLAIN ● The earlier settlements journalled about by Cartier of Stadacona and Hochelaga were deserted ● Champlain is known as the father of New France ● he was the first European to see the Ottawa River and the Great Lakes ● https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Ei6ZcP4WQ8