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Transcript
Lecture 15:
Africa and South Asia in the European Age of Discovery
An Age of
Exploration and Expansion
Islam and the Spice Trade
Spread of Islam in West Africa
A New Player: Europe
European medieval travelers
Nicolò, Maffeo, and Marco Polo, 1271
The Motives
“God, glory, and gold”
The Means
European monarchies
Portugal
Spain:
Knowledge and technology
Portuguese Maritime Empire
The Portuguese and exploration
Prince Henry the Navigator (1394-1460)
The Portuguese in India
Bartolomeu Dias, 1487
Vasco da Gama, 1498
The Search for Spices
Alfonso de Albuquerque 1510
Attacked Malacca to destroy the Arab spice trade network and provide way
station
Expeditions to China and Moluccas (Spice Islands)
Spanish Conquest in the “New World”
The Voyages
Christopher Columbus (1451-1506)
John Cabot, 1497
Pedro Cabral, 1500
Amerigo Vespucci
The Conquests
Treaty of Tordesillas, 1494
Page 1 of 4
Spanish Conquistadors
Superior weapons, organizational skills, determination
Hernán Cortés defeated Moctezuma and conquered Mexico in 1522
Francisco Pizarro controlled Inka Empire (Peru) 1531-1536
Governing the Empire
Encomienda
Forced labor
Disease
Council of the Indies
Viceroy
New Spain and Peru
The Impact of European Expansion
Disease
Psychological impact
Conquerors sought gold and silver
New products sent to Europe
Deepened rivalries
Portugal lacked numbers, wealth to dominate trade
Europeans in Asia
Ferdinand Magellan claimed the Philippines for Spain
First English expedition to the Indies in 1591
East India Company sent fleet to Surat, India in 1608
Dutch arrived in India in 1595
Dutch East India Company formed in 1602
Europeans in the Americas
Dutch, French, English made inroads on Spanish and Portuguese possessions in
Americas
Portuguese
Trade eroded in both West and the East
Colonial empire in Brazil was profitable
Dutch

New Netherland
French
English
Page 2 of 4
Africa in Transition
Portuguese in East Africa
Gold trade
Mwene Matapa
Southern Africa
Settled by the Dutch, Boers, in 1652
West Africa
Mali
Songhai
•King Askia Mohammed, 1493-1528
•Broke up after his death
Increased European contact with West Africa
The Slave Trade
Origins
Growth
The Middle Passage
Sources of Slaves
Effects of Slave Trade
Individuals, families
Depopulation
20% sold were children
European justification:
•Slave trading historical
•African intermediaries were the sellers
•Slaves could be converted to Christianity and would replace weak
American Indian workers
Political and Social Structures in a Changing Continent
Importation of manufactured goods from Europe
Limited European penetration of Africa
Altering of trading empires
European impact on inland areas
European impact on West Africa
East Africa
Page 3 of 4
Southeast Asia in the Era of the Spice Trade
Dutch East India Company
Batavia, 1619
Java and Sumatra have pepper plantations
Cohesive monarchies in Burma, Thailand, and Vietnam resisted foreign encroachment
Spices did not flourish on the mainland
Europeans became involved in factional struggles
By end of the 18th century Europeans began to abandon their trading stations
State and Society in Pre-colonial Southeast Asia
Page 4 of 4