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Exploration Vocabulary Click title to go back to first slide. New France Colonization Vocabulary The Slave Trade Causes of Exploration Columbus’s Voyage Effects of Exploration Columbian Exchange Famous Explorers New Spain The English Colonies New Netherlands Click title to go back to main menu 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. Feudalism Manor Crusades Astrolabe Renaissance Colony Circumnavigate Columbian Exchange Conquistador Pueblo Presidio Mission 13. Peninsulare 14. Creole 15. Mestizo 16. Encomienda 17. Plantation 18. Northwest passage 19. Missionary 20. Alliance 21. Charter 22. House of Burgesses 23. Representative government 24. parliament Click title to go back to main menu. 1. Burgess 2. racism 3. Parliament 4. Persecution 5. Proprietary colony 6. Quakers 7. Pennsylvania Dutch 8. Cash crop 9. Mason Dixon Line 10. Debtor 11. Mayflower Compact 12. Thanksgiving 13. Puritans 14. Religious toleration 15. Patroon 16. slave code 17. mercantilism 18. Pilgrims 19. Navigation Acts 20. Yankee 21. triangular trade 22. legislature 24. gentry 25. indentured servant 26. apprentice 27. enlightenment 28. Middle Passage Feudalism was a system of rule by lords who ruled their land but owed loyalty and military service to a monarch (king). A manor was land ruled by a lord, including the lord’s castle and the lands around it. The Crusades were wars fought between Christians and Muslims over the holy land (Jerusalem) between the years 1095-1300. An astrolabe is a navigational instrument used to determine latitude while at sea. Renaissance is a French word meaning rebirth in learning. It is the name given to the time period in Europe between the years 1300 and 1600 in which there was a rebirth in learning. A colony is a group of people who settle in a distant land but are still ruled by the government of their native land. Circumnavigate is to travel all the way around the Earth. The Columbian Exchange was the trading of goods and ideas resulting from the encounter between the peoples of the Eastern and Western hemisphere. Conquistador was the name for the Spanish explorers who claimed lands in the Americas for Spain. A Pueblo were towns in the Spanish Americas that were centers for trade and farming. Presidios were forts where soldiers lived in the Spanish colonies. A mission was a religious settlement run by Catholic priests and friar in the Spanish colonies. A peninsulare was a person from Spain who held a position of power in the Spanish colonies. A Creole was a person born in Spain’s American colonies to Spanish parents. A mestizo was a person of mixed Spanish and Indian background in the Spanish colonies. An encomienda was a land grant given by the Spanish government to Spanish settlers that included the right to demand labor or taxes from Native Americans. A plantation is a large farm farmed by many workers. The Northwest Passage is a natural waterway through or around North America. A missionary is a person who tries to spread certain religious beliefs among a group of people. An alliance is an agreement between nations to aid and protect one another. A charter is a legal document giving certain rights to a person or company. The House of Burgesses was the first representative government in the English colonies and was located in colonial Virginia. A representative government is a political system in which voters elect representatives to make laws for them. A parliament is the representative assembly in England. A burgess was a representative to the colonial Virginia government. Racism is the belief that one race is superior to another. Parliament is the representative assembly in England. Parliament makes the laws of Great Britain. Congress, our legislative body, is modeled after parliament. Persecution is the mistreatment or punishment of a group of people because of their beliefs. A proprietary colony was a English colony in which the king gave land to proprietors in exchange for a yearly payment. A Quaker was a protestant reformer who believed in the equality of all people. Quaker and founder of Pennsylvania The Pennsylvania Dutch were German speaking Protestants who settled in Pennsylvania. A cash crop is a crop sold on the World market for money. The Mason-Dixon line was a boundary between Pennsylvania and Maryland that divided the Middle Colonies from the Southern Colonies. Mason Dixon Line A debtor is a person who cannot pay money he or she owes. The Mayflower Compact was a 1620 agreement for ruling the Plymouth Colony, signed by Pilgrims before they landed at Plymouth. Thanksgiving is the day at the end of the harvest season set aside by the Pilgrims to give thanks to god. The Puritans were a group of English Protestants who settled the Massachusetts Bay colony. Religious toleration is the willingness to let others practice their own beliefs. A patroon was a owner of a huge estate in the Dutch colonies. New Netherlands (the Dutch) settled along the Hudson River and Long Island.) Slave codes were laws that controlled the lives of enslaved African Americans and denied them basic rights. Mercantilism is a the theory that a nation’s economic strength came from protecting and increasing its home economy by keeping strict control over its colonial trade. In the 1600s, the Pilgrims were English settlers who sought religious freedom in the Americas. Navigation Acts were series of laws passed by the English parliament in the 1650s that regulated trade between England and its colonies. Yankee was the nickname for New England merchants who dominated colonial trade. Triangular Trade was the colonial trade route between New England, the West Indies, and Africa. A legislature is a group of people who have the power to make laws. Gentry was the highest social class in the 13 English colonies. An indentured servant was a person who agreed to work without wages for a period of time in exchange for passage to the colonies. An apprentice is a person who learns a trade or craft from a master. The Enlightenment was a movement in Europe in the 1600s and 1700s that stressed the use of reason. Click to go back to main menu Causes of Exploration Crusades Renaissance Columbus’s Voyage Click title to go back • The crusades led to exploration because Europeans brought back many devices that could be used for navigation like the magnetic compass and the astrolabe. • They also brought back items like silk and spice. Trade then start between Europe and the Middle East. • At first, trade took place by overland routes, but eventually European countries sought water routes to get to places like India. • In the 1500s, Johannes Gutenberg invented movable type and the printing press. This invention led to more books being created. People were learning more about the world. • The Renaissance helped start exploration because for the first time Europeans learned about different places and cultures from books. Click to go back to main menu After Columbus discovered the New World other countries sent out explorers to seek routes to the east and to explorer the New World. • Christopher Columbus was and Italian sailor who was hired by the King and Queen of Spain to find a route to the East Indies. • Columbus planned to sail west to reach the East Indies. • In 1492, Columbus set sail with three ships: the Nina, the Pinta and the Santa Maria. • A Month later Columbus landed in what now is the West Indies. • Columbus explored the West Indies and then sailed back to Spain with things he found to include: tobacco, pineapples and pearls. • The King was impressed with Columbus’s discovery and financed three other Voyages by Columbus. • On his second exploration in 1493, Columbus founded the first Spanish colony in the Americas on the island he called Hispaniola (modern day countries of Haiti and Dominican Republic). Click to go back to main menu Exploration of the World changed the World forever. Many of the effects of exploration in the 1400s and 1500s can be still seen today. Exploration led to the colonization of the New World, introduction of new foods and cultures to different parts of the World and led to the destruction of Native American empires in the Americas. Effects of Exploration are: 1. Columbian Exchange 2. Colonization 3. Changed Native American culture in the Americas 4. Slave trade begins Click to go back to main menu • The Columbian Exchange was named after Christopher Columbus. • It was the trade network that resulted from his discovery of the New World. • For the first time, goods and ideas were traded between the eastern hemisphere and the western hemisphere. • New foods were introduced as well as cultures. • Unfortunately, diseases were introduced to the Native Americans, which would lead to the death of millions of Native Americans. Below is a map of foods and other items introduced from the Columbian Exchange. • After explorers claimed regions of the New World while searching for a Northwest passage, European began sending settlers to these areas to start colonies. • European rulers saw the opportunity to make much money by starting colonies in the New World based on the economic theory of mercantilism. • Not all the effects of exploration were positive. • Exploration had a negative impact on Native Americans. • In the 1500s, both the Aztec and Inca Empires were conquered by the Spanish Conquistadors. • Millions of Native Americans died from diseases brought over by Europeans. • As more counties colonized the Americas, Native Americans were pushed off their land by force and through treaties. Click to go back to main menu After Columbus’s discovery of the New World, many nations sent out explorers to search for the Northwest Passage. While exploring for the Northwest passage, explorers claimed areas in the New World for the country they were exploring for. By Country: • Viking Explorers • Portuguese Explorers • English Explorers • French Explorers • Spanish Explorers • Before Columbus explored the New World, Vikings visited North America. • Vikings were people from Scandinavia in Northern Europe. • In 1001, the Viking Leif Ericson reached the Northern part of North America in what is presently known as New Foundland. He called the Area Vinland. • Portugal led the way in Exploration. Famous Portugal sailors: • Prince Henry the Navigator • Bartholomew Dias • Vasco da Gama • Prince Henry of Portugal, known as Prince Henry the Navigator, started a navigation school in Portugal in the early 1400s. • Portuguese sailors invented a new kind of ship called the caravel. • • • • Samuel de Champlain Jacques Marquette Robert de LaSalle Jacques Cartier France Explored the St. Lawrence River. Explored what is know the St. Lawrence River and Lake Champlain. • Jacques Marquette was a French missionary who set out to reach the Mississippi River in 1673. • They followed the river for 700 miles before turning back. • Explored the entire Mississippi River all the way down to the Gulf of Mexico. • He named the region Louisiana after King Louis XIV. • John Cabot • Henry Hudson England • John Cabot was an Italian explorer who explored North America in 1497. • He explored what is present day New Foundland. • Henry Hudson sailed for the Netherlands and for England. • In 1609, he explored what is know New York harbor and explored up the Hudson River which is named after him. • While exploring the Hudson bay for the Northwest passage, his crew rebelled and sent him adrift in a boat with his son and seven loyal sailors • He was never seen again. – Cortes like other conquistadors, heard of wealthy Native American empires in the New World and soon set to conquer them. – In 1519, Cortes, along with 600 soldiers, set out to Mexico to seek out theses empires. – Cortes soon found the Aztec Empire and captured it’s emperor, Montezuma and the capital city, Tenochtitlan. Spain sent Conquistadors to the Americas in the 1500s. These conquistadors were interested in gold and glory. In their quest for both, they made Spain very wealthy. Famous Spanish Explorers: Hernando Cortes Juan Ponce de Leon Francisco Coronado Hernando de Soto Christopher Columbus Ferdinand Magellan Francisco Pizarro Spain • He explored the present day country of Florida searching for the Fountain of Youth in 1513. • He explored the what is now the southwest United States looking for the “Seven Cities of Gold” in 1540. • He found no such cities. • He explored what is now the southeast part of the United States looking for gold. • He died along the Mississippi River in 1539 not finding any gold. • He is the first person given credit from circumnavigating the Earth. • He actually did not sail around the World. • In 1519, he began his voyage with five ships and 250 crew members. • He was killed in a battle in the Philippines in 1522. • Only one ship and 18 survivors made it back to Spain He conquered the Inca Empire in 1532. • Samuel Champlain founded Port Royal, the first permanent French settlement in North America in 1605. • He also built a trading post and called it Quebec. • Unlike the Spanish, the French profited from fishing, trapping, and fur trading in the New World. • French missionaries also came to the New World to spread Christianity to Native Americans. Click to go back to main menu Location Spanish Conquistadors Types of Spanish Settlements Treatment of Native Americans Spain Social Class System • Conquistadors were given authority by the king of Spain to start settlements in New World as along as they gave him one fifth of the gold they found. • Hernando Cortes defeated the Aztecs in 1519. • Francisco Pizarro defeated the Incas in 1532. • At first, the king of Spain let the conquistadors govern the lands they conquered. Conquistadors proved to be poor rulers and were only interested searching for gold. In 1535, the king divided the Spanish empire into two regions and appointed a viceroy to rule each region. • The Law of Indies stated how the colonies should be organized and ruled. • The code provided for three kinds of settlements in New Spain. They were Presidios, pueblos, and missions. In the Spanish colonies Native Americans were forced to work on mines, ranches and farms. In the Spanish colonies there was four social classes. Peninsulares Creoles Mestizos Native Americans France Click to go back to main menu Location Economy Missionaries New France Government Early Settlements • New France was located along the St. Lawrence River and the Great Lakes. • The economy of New France was based upon the fur trade. • They also profited from fishing as well. • Missionaries usually traveled with fur traders. • They wanted to teach Native Americans to Christianity. • Two Famous missionaries were Jacques Marquette and Louis Joliet. • New France was governed very much like New Spain. • The king of France ruled New France directly and appointed a council to make all decisions in New France. Click to go back to main menu Netherlands How New Netherland Became New York Location Early Settlements Economy • Peter Minuit started New Amsterdam in 1626 on Manhattan Island. • He bought the Island from Native Americans. • Other Dutch settlers settled farther up the Hudson River. • Both settlements were referred to as New Netherlands. • Located along the Hudson River and Manhattan Island. • The Dutch who came from the Netherlands to the New World set up trading posts and profited from the fur trade. • The Dutch in New Netherlands and the French in New France became rivals in the fur trade. • Both the French and the Dutch made alliances with Native American groups and fighting followed for many years. • By 1664, the English and Dutch were competing for colonies and trade in the New World. • England sent its navy to New Netherlands and seized New Amsterdam. • Peter Stuyvesant, the governor of New Netherlands at the time, turned over the colony to England. • King Charles II then gave the colony to his brother, Duke of York, to rule. England Click to go back to main menu Location Social Classes Reasons for Settlement Religious Groups England’s 13 Colonies The Southern Colonies Early Settlements The New England Colonies The Middle Colonies • The English thirteen colonies were located along the east coast of North America. Gentry Middle Class Indentured Servants Slaves • The Middle class was below the gentry. • The Middle class included farmers, skilled craftsmen, trades people. • Nearly three quarters of all white colonists belonged to the middle class. The first slaves arrived in Virginia in 1619. There were many reasons why people came to the English colonies. Some reasons were: 1. Religious freedom 2. Political freedom 3. Economic opportunities • • There were many different religious groups in the Thirteen colonies. These groups came to the New World to escape persecution from their home countries. Below are a few religious groups who came to the New World for religious freedom. 1. Puritans 2. Pilgrims 3. Quakers • The first English colony was tried by Sir Walter Raleigh on Roanoke Island off the coast of present day North Carolina. • In 1587, 117 colonists landed on Roanoke Island. Within one year, the colonists began to run low on food and other supplies. Their leader, John White left the colonists and sailed back to England to get more supplies. When he returned, the colonists had disappeared, never to be seen or heard from again. • Jamestown was the first permanent English settlement. • It was established in 1607 with 107 colonists. • The colony started off disastrous. Many of the colonists quarreled with one another. Many also died from diseases. It wasn’t until John Smith took control and establish strict rules that forced colonists to work towards the colonies survival. Under his strict command, the colony rebounded and survived its early years. • The success of Jamestown was due largely in part to Tobacco. • The colonists of Jamestown learned how to grow tobacco from Native Americans. • Colonists began exporting tobacco to England by 1620. • The Pilgrims established a colony at Plymouth Massachusetts in 1620. • They established the colony so they could practice their religion freely. • They created the Mayflower Compact in order to effectively govern the new colony. • The Pilgrims wanted their own colony because they were being persecuted against in England. • The Pilgrims experienced many of the same hardships as the colonists in Jamestown. • Nearly half of the 100 settlers died after the first winter. • The pilgrims then received help from Native Americans including a Native American called Squanto . • In the fall the Pilgrims celebrated their good harvest by giving thanks. This celebration became known as Thanksgiving, which is celebrated each year as a national holiday. John Winthrop • The Puritans were another religious group who settled in Massachusetts. • Unlike the Pilgrims, the Puritans did not separate entirely from the Church of England. They wanted to reform the church with simpler forms of worship, like no organ music and no special clothes worn by the priests. • In 1629, John Winthrop led 1,000 settlers to the Massachusetts colony and he became the first governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. • Under his leadership, the colony grew and by 1640, 15,000 Puritans traveled from England to the colony. This was called the Great Migration. William Penn • The Quakers were a religious group who believed all people were equal in God’s eyes. They were against war and would not serve in the military. • William Penn, a Quaker, established a colony where all religions could come and not be persecuted. This colony was called Pennsylvania. • Pennsylvania, in Latin, means Penn’s woods in honor to William Penn. The New England Colonies Religious Groups: Puritans and Pilgrims Life in The New England Colonies Economy Education The New England Colonies consisted of : 1. Massachusetts 2. Connecticut 3. Rhode Island • The Pilgrims started Plymouth colony in 1620. • The Puritans started the Massachusetts Bay colony in 1630. • Connecticut was founded by Thomas Hooker in 1662. • He founded the colony because he thought the Massachusetts colony was too strict religiously. Roger Williams • Rhode Island was founded 1636 by Roger Williams. • Rhode Island became the most religious tolerant colony of the New England colonies. The Puritans and Pilgrims were the main religious groups in the New England colonies. • The puritans believed people should take part in government and social matters. Because of this belief, New England towns were very tightly knit communities. • At the center of every village was a common. Located nearby was a meeting house where the men met to make decisions concerning the town. • The Puritans worked every day except on Sundays, the Sabbath. It was against the law to work or play on the Sabbath. Puritans believed that to get to heaven one must work hard. • Because the soil in the New England colonies is very rocky, colonists learned other ways to make a living. • Major industries in the New England colonies were: Lumber Fishing Whaling Ship building • New Englanders were the most concerned with education. • Puritans believed that its was important to know how to read, so one can read the bible. • Massachusetts set up the first public schools. • Each town hired a school teacher who lived with the townspeople and received payment in the form of peas and corn, etc.. • School houses were one room buildings with students of different ages all in one room. The Middle Colonies Religious groups Life in the Middle Colonies Economy Education The Middle colonies consisted of: New York Pennsylvania New Jersey Delaware • By 1664, the English and Dutch were competing for colonies and trade in the New World. • England sent its navy to New Netherlands and seized New Amsterdam. • Peter Stuyvesant, the governor of New Netherlands at the time, turned over the colony to England. • King Charles II then gave the colony to his brother, Duke of York, to rule. • The Quakers were a religious group who believed all people were equal in God’s eyes. They were against war and would not serve in the military. • William Penn, a Quaker, established a colony where all religions could come and not be persecuted. This colony was called Pennsylvania. • Pennsylvania, in Latin, means Penn’s woods, named after William Penn. • New Jersey was actually part of New York up until 1664. In that year, the Duke of York decided the colony of New York was to big to be governed and gave land to his friends Lord Berkeley and Sir George Carteret to start a new colony. • They called it New Jersey after Jersey island in the English Channel. • Delaware actually was part of Pennsylvania prior to 1701. In that year, William Penn allowed the settlers their to break away and form their own colony. • The Middle colonies had many religious groups. • The middle colonies were the most tolerant of different religions. • The Quakers settled in Pennsylvania. • The middle colonies had many different religious and cultural groups. • They were considered the mixing pot of the Thirteen colonies. • Most people made their living by farming. • Most people were farmers because the land was more fertile than the New England. • The major cash crop of the Middle colonies was grain. • So much grain was exported from the Middle colonies it became known as the “Breadbasket Colony”. • The Middle colonies also had made skilled artisans,who lived in many of the large port cities like Philadelphia and New York. • In the middle colonies, private schools were started by churches and individual families. • Only wealthy families could afford to send their children off to school. The Southern Colonies Religious groups Life in the Southern Colonies Economy Education The Southern Colonies consisted of: Virginia North Carolina and South Carolina Georgia Maryland • The Virginia colony started in 1606 when King James the I gave land to the Virginia Company of London. • The first permanent settlement in Virginia was Jamestown, which was named after King James I. • North Carolina was Established in 1712 and settled by poor tobacco farmers from Virginia. • South Carolina was started in 1719. • Both are named after King George II, the King England who gave individuals land to start both colonies. James Oglethorpe • Georgia was the last of the English thirteen colonies. • James Oglethorpe was the founder of the colony. • He founded the colony in 1732. • He started the colony so debtors could start a new life. In 1634, Lord Baltimore started the colony of Maryland for Catholics. • Many Catholics settled in the Southern colonies • Farming was how people made a living in the south because of the good climate and soil. • The plantation system was used in the south. • Slave codes were used to control slaves. • Farming was the major industry in the Southern Colonies. • Farmers grew many different cash crops in the South like tobacco, indigo, rice and cotton. • Vasco Da Gama found a sea route to Asia by sailing around the tip of Africa to India in 1497. • This gave Portugal a route to the far east that other countries could not use. • This led to Columbus’s idea to sail west to India to find an alternate route to the far east. • In the Southern colonies, there were no public schools because families were so far apart. • Wealthy families sent their children to private schools or hired tutors to teach their children. • Portuguese sailor who sailed along the Western side of Africa in 1488. • He was searching for a sea route to Asia. • He stopped at the tip of southern Africa and went back to Portugal. After Columbus discovered the New World, other countries sent out explorers to seek routes to the east and to explorer the New World. Click title to go back • The Columbian Exchange was named after Christopher Columbus. • It was the trade network that resulted from his discovery of the New World. • For the first time, goods and ideas were traded between the eastern hemisphere and the western hemisphere. • New foods were introduced as well as cultures. • Unfortunately, diseases were introduced to the Native Americans. Below is a map of foods and other items introduced from the Columbian Exchange. In the Spanish colonies, Native Americans were forced to work on mines, ranches and farms. A mestizo was a person of mixed Spanish and Indian background in the Spanish colonies. A Creole was a person born in Spain’s American colonies to Spanish parents. A peninsulare was a person from Spain who held a position of power in the Spanish colony. Gentry was the highest social class in the 13 English colonies. An indentured servant was a person who agreed to work without wages for a period of time in exchange for passage to the colonies. Click title to go back • Christopher Columbus was and Italian sailor who was hired by the King and Queen of Spain to find a route to the East Indies. • Columbus planned to sail west to reach the East Indies. • In 1492, Columbus set sail with three ships: the Nina, the Pinta and the Santa Maria. • A Month later, Columbus landed in what is now the West Indies. • Columbus explored the West Indies and then sailed back to Spain with things he found to include: tobacco, pineapples and pearls. • The King was impressed with Columbus’s discovery and financed three other Voyages by Columbus. • On his second exploration, in 1493, Columbus founded the first Spanish colony in the Americas on the island he called Hispaniola (modern day countries of Haiti and Dominican Republic). The Crusades were wars fought between Christians and Muslims over the holy land between the years 1095-1300. Renaissance is a French word meaning rebirth in learning. It is the name given to the time period in Europe between the years 1300 and 1600, in which there was a rebirth in learning. The Northwest Passage was natural waterway through or around North America. This waterway was searched for by many European explorers and was never found. Mercantilism is the theory that a nation’s economic strength came from protecting and increasing its home economy by keeping strict control over its colonial trade. A Pueblo were towns in the Spanish Americas that were centers for trade and farming. Presidios were forts where soldiers lived in the Spanish colonies. A mission was a religious settlement run by Catholic priests and friars in the Spanish colonies. The Mayflower Compact was a 1620 agreement for ruling the Plymouth Colony, signed by Pilgrims before they landed at Plymouth. Click title to go back to first slide. To navigate this presentation, click on the title of the page you are on to return to the previous page or an action button( ), if one is present. Click to go back to main menu • The first Africans arrived in the New World in 1619 at • • Jamestown, Virginia. Many of the early Africans were free men and women. Approximately 15 black men and 17 black women lived in Virginia by 1619. • By the late 1600s, the slavery expanded in the New World. • In the beginning, plantation owners in the New World used Native Americans as slaves, but many died from diseases brought by the Europeans. • Africans were then used because they were not as likely to be affected by European diseases. • By the late 1700, the slave trade started. • Slave ships began transporting slaves from the West coast of • • Africa to the New World. The slaves were then sold at auctions. This route across the Atlantic Ocean to the New World was called the Middle Passage. The Middle Passage was part of the Triangular trade route that started between the New World, Europe and Africa. Roughly 2 to 3 million slaves were brought to the New World from 1500 to the 1800s. Approximately 10% of the slaves aboard each slave ship died from diseases, mistreatment, or suicide. Click to go back • The first Africans arrived in the New World in 1619 at Jamestown, Virginia. • Many of the early Africans were free men and women. • Approximately 15 black men and 17 black women lived in Virginia by 1619. • By the late 1600s, the slavery expanded in the New World. • In the beginning, plantation owners in the New World used Native • Americans as slaves, but many died from diseases brought by the Europeans. Africans were then used because they were not as likely to be affected by European diseases. • By the late 1700, the slave trade started. • Slave ships began transporting slaves from the West coast of Africa to the New • • World. The slaves were then sold at auctions. This route across the Atlantic Ocean to the New World was called the Middle Passage. The Middle Passage was part of the Triangular trade route that started between the New World, Europe and Africa. Roughly 2 to 3 million slaves were brought to the New World from 1500 to the 1800s. Approximately 10% of the slaves aboard each slave ship died from diseases, mistreatment or suicide. Trading Route that brought slaves from Africa to the New World.