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New Maritime Technologies
Better Maps
[Portulan]
Hartman Astrolabe
(1532)
Mariner’s Compass
Sextant
New Weapons Technology
Christofo Colon [1451-1506]
Other Voyages of Exploration
Atlantic Explorations
Looking for “El Dorado”
Spanish Conquistadors
• Soldier-explorers who settled in the Americas
in hopes of finding treasure
• Inspired by Columbus to seek fortune in the
New World
• Many came from the part of Spain called
Extremadura.
– poor soil, icy winters, & blistering hot summers
held little chance for wealth
– Hernan Cortes was born in this province
T he First Spanish Conquests:
T he Aztecs
vs.
Fernando Cortez
Montezuma II
Hernan Cortes
• Spanish conquistador
who reached Mexico in
1519 in search of
treasure
• arrived in Mexico with
550 soldiers, 16
horses, 14 canons, & a
few dogs
• group was met by
Aztec emperor,
Montezuma II
Cortes Defeats the Aztec
• Cortes traveled 400 miles to
reach Tenochitlan.
• Montezuma did not attack
right away because he first
thought Cortes was
Quetzalcoatl.
• The Spanish were able to
take control of the city &
took Montezuma hostage.
• Cortes ordered the Aztec to
stop sacrificing people.
Cortes Defeats Aztec
• Cortes’ orders angered
Aztec and he planned a
rebellion.
• Fighting broke out &
Montezuma was killed.
• The Spanish were
outnumbered, so they fled
the city.
• Before they could prepare a
2nd attack, smallpox broke
out in Tenochitlan & greatly
weakened the large Aztec
empire.
• 1521--Spanish destroyed the
Aztec capital.
T he Death of Montezuma II
Mexico Surrenders to Cortez
T he First Spanish Conquests:
T he Incas
vs.
Francisco Pizarro
Atahualpa
Francisco Pizarro
• Pizarro was also from the Extremadura.
– He was not of noble birth; could not even
write his name.
– At age 16, Pizarro fled a job herding pigs in
Italy.
• 1502--He arrived in the Americas and
became very wealthy by exploring
Panama.
– heard a rumor that there was a great empire
filled with gold in the mountains of South
America
The Inca
• 1530s--Inca thought they
ruled most of the world;
two threats from the north
proved they did not.
1.They couldn’t stop the
spread of smallpox.
2. They couldn’t scare away
Pizarro.
Pizarro Defeats the Inca
• Spanish messengers invited Atahualpa to a meeting.
• He agreed & left most of his army behind--brought only
5,000 bodyguards.
• Pizarro’s 160 soldiers attacked the Inca & kidnapped
Atahualpa.
• Pizarro offered to free Atahualpa if he filled one room
with gold & one with silver.
• Atahualpa kept his end of the bargain, but Pizarro killed
him in 1533.
Cycle of Conquest &
Colonization
Explorers
Official
European
Colony!
T he “Columbian Exchange”

Squash

Avocado

Peppers

Sweet Potatoes

Turkey

Pumpkin

Tobacco

Quinine

Cocoa

Pineapple

Cassava

POTATO

Peanut

TOMATO

Vanilla

MAIZE

Syphilis

Trinkets

Liquor

GUNS

Olive

COFFEE BEAN

Banana

Rice

Onion

Turnip

Honeybee

Barley

Grape

Peach

SUGAR CANE

Oats

Citrus Fruits

Pear

Wheat

HORSE

Cattle

Sheep

Pigs

Smallpox

Flu

Typhus

Measles

Malaria

Diptheria

Whooping Cough
Treasures
from the Americas!
T he Slave Trade
1. Existed in Africa before the coming
of the Europeans.
2. Portuguese replaced European slaves
with Africans.
Sugar cane & sugar plantations.
First boatload of African slaves
brought by the Spanish in 1518.
275,000 enslaved Africans exported
to other countries.
3. Between 16c & 19c, about 10 million
Africans shipped to the Americas.
Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade
Slaves Working in a
Brazilian Sugar Mill
Slave Ship
“Middle Passage”
“Coffin” Position Below Deck
A frican Captives
T hrown Overboard
Sharks followed the slave ships!
European Empires in the Americas
T he Colonial Class System
Peninsulares
Mestizos
Native Indians
Creoles
Mulattos
Black Slaves
T he Influence of the Colonial
Catholic Church
Guadalajara
Cathedral
Spanish Mission
Our Lady of
Guadalupe
T he Treaty of Tordesillas, 1494 &
T he Pope’s Line of Demarcation
New Colonial Rivals
Impact of European Expansion
1. Native populations ravaged by
disease.
2. Influx of gold, and especially
silver, into Europe created an
inflationary economic climate.
[“Price Revolution”]
3. New products introduced across
the continents [“Columbian
Exchange”].
4. Deepened colonial rivalries.
5. New Patterns of World Trade