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The Age of Exploration By Mr. Stankus How did changes in science lead to an age of exploration? An Analysis of the Scientific Revolution Vocabulary • • • • • • Roger Bacon Nicolaus Copernicus Johannes Kepler Galileo Galilei Isaac Newton Andreas Vesalius • • • • • • Rene Descartes Francis Bacon Robert Boyle Scientific Method Geocentric Theory Heliocentric Theory Causes of Scientific Revolution Advances of Scientific Revolution Summary Assignment: • Using your knowledge of the scientific revolution and the pictures on the next slide, write a one page summary predicting how scientific discoveries and inventions led to an age of exploration. • Assess which invention had the greatest impact and which invention had the least impact. 1400 AD Factors encouraging exploration • Gold – The Wealth and growth of what area of Europe was envied by other areas of Europe? – Italian City-States • God – Reformation and Increase of Muslim expansion weakened Christianity so the Churches sought to strengthen it by… – Sending missionaries to converting new areas • Glory – adventurous explorers sought to make a name for themselves and their countries. Name three. How were early explorations accomplished? Vocabulary • Prince Henry • Dias • DeGama • Columbus • Magellan • Marco Polo • John Cabot • Circumnavigation • Caravel: • Astrolabe: • Compass: I. Age of Exploration (Review) • 1453 Constantinople captured by the Turks – prices for Asian goods through the Mediterranean skyrocketed • Europeans considered the sea as a possible route to Asia. – Direct route = more wealth • Overseas voyages became the world's first global • age. Innovations in the construction of ships Caravel – multiple masts – rudder to stern II. Portugal Leads the Way • Prince Henry (the Navigator) started a school of navigation in Portugal • Portugal -first European country down the west coast of Africa in search of a sea route to Asia. • In 1488 Bartholomeu Dias discovered the southern tip of Africa, Cape of Good Hope • In 1497 four ships led by Vasco da Gama sailed from Portugal for India. III. Spain’s Quest for Riches • King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain backed the expeditions of an Italian navigator named Christopher Columbus. • Columbus made four voyages to the Caribbean islands and South America, certain that he had discovered a new route to Asia. • Amerigo Vespucci suggest that Columbus had discovered a "New World." • The pope drew an imaginary line of demarcation, giving Portugal control of lands to the east and Spain control of lands to the west. Christopher Columbus Wanted to Prove that the World was Round because everyone thought it was flat. Here is the Real Story! • Europeans had known that the earth was round since the time of Aristotle, so the plan was theoretically possible. But drawing on ancient Greek measurements of the earth's size, the commission determined (quite correctly, as it turned out) that the distance from Spain westward to China was so great that no ship of that era could hope to make the voyage. IV. Voyage of Magellan • In 1519 a five-ship expedition set sail under the Spanish flag to find a western route to Africa. • passed around the southern tip of South America into the South Sea, which Magellan renamed the Pacific Ocean. • Philippines, Magellan was caught in a local skirmish and killed. • The surviving crew escaped to sail for Spain, completing the first circumnavigation of the globe, and proving that the world is round. Vocabulary • • • • • • • • • • • Joint-Stock company: Mercantilism: Tariff: Subsides: Colonialism: Columbian Exchange: Middle Class: Commercial Revolution: Capitalism: Domestic System: Triangular Trade I. The Commercial Revolution • Economic changes as a result of exploration • By the 1600s: – the rise of the capitalist economic system – national trade replaced the city trade – Governments and rich merchants alone had enough money to finance trading voyages – Banking families were replaced by government-chartered banks. – Individual merchants often raised money by combining their resources in joint-stock companies/dividends. – a system based on the belief that the goal of business was to make profits took shape, Capitalism. II. Expansion of World Trade • New Products introduced into Europe – Corn, potatoes, tobacco, tea • Living standards improved in Europe • Growth of banking and insurance • Growth of domestic system and factory system III. Shift in Economic Power – Trade routes shifted from the Mediterranean Sea to the Atlantic Ocean – Italian city-states and German city-states decline – England, France, Spain, Portugal, and the Netherlands increase in trade – Rise of the Middle Class as bankers, merchants, business owners, etc. (they lack social status and political power) IV. Mercantilism • Mercantilism (Business Competition) a state's power • • • depended on its wealth, the goal of every nation was to become as wealthy as possible. Europeans believed measure of a nation's wealth was amount of bullion, or gold and silver, it owned. Nations could gain wealth by mining gold and silver at home or overseas and through trade. To increase national wealth governments – aided, subsidized, businesses producing goods for export. – Encouraged private ownership of property and businesses (capitalism) – Created Colonies, • ruled by a parent country, • sources of raw materials • markets for finished goods – This process was called Colonialism. – Created Tariffs or a tax on imported goods kept the colonies from developing and the mother country strong. V. European Daily Life • Merchants prospered most from the • • expansion of trade and empire Merchants began to surpass the nobility in both wealth and power thereby creating a new Middle Class. They had the wealth of the nobles and the status of the peasants In the countryside, however, peasants lived as meagerly as they ever had. VI. A Global Exchange • During the Commercial Revolution, Europe's • • population grew rapidly and became more mobile. As Europe's trade expanded, it contributed to a worldwide exchange of people, goods, technology, ideas and diseases. This exchange between the old world and the new came to be known as the Columbian exchange. European influences profoundly affected local cultures, sometimes negatively; in turn, local cultures, particularly those in Asia, influenced European arts, styles, and foods. ECONOMY Wealth Based on Land Manorialism Peasant/Lord SOCIAL Farming/Estates POLITICAL Lords/Clergy Feudalism/Catholicism Wealth Based on Trade Feudalism Mercantilism Colonialism Peasant/Lord/Craftsmen/Merchants (Middle Class) Towns Cities Nations Colonies Kings/Nations/Absolute Monarchies Nationalism/Divine Right/Colonial Empires 1400 AD 1500 AD 1600 AD 1700 AD How did early exploration lead to the growth of empires? Vocabulary • Philip II • Treaty of Tordesillas • Cortes • Northwest Passage • Conquistador • Fur trade • Aztecs • Henry Hudson • William of Orange • John Cabot • Middle Passage • Cartier I. Portugal and Spain • Portugal: – – – Africa and Asia trade rather than colonization. colonized the area of present-day Brazil but went no further into South America in honor of the Treaty of Tordesillas. • Spain: – conquistador, Hernan Cortes, allied with local enemies of the Aztecs. – within three years, Aztec resistance to the Spanish force ended and Cortes ruled Mexico. – conquistador, Francisco Pizarro, invaded the Inca Empire in present-day Peru. – By the 1600s Spain's empire under Philip II included much of North and South America as well as islands in the West Indies. – two main goals for its American empire: to acquire its wealth and to convert Native Americans to Christianity. – Sought a European empire and gain lands from the Protestants by creating an Armada • The Native American population declined because of mistreatment and disease, the Spaniards then brought over enslaved workers from Africa, further adding to a new culture. II. Colonies of the Netherlands • In 1602 the Dutch under William of Orange • • • chartered the Dutch East India Company to expand trade and ensure close relations with Asia. pushed the Portuguese and English out of Asian outposts. In 1621 the Dutch chartered the Dutch West India Company in the Americas the company founded New Amsterdam on Manhattan Island III. French and English Colonies • England (John Cabot) and France turned toward North America to seek a Northwest Passage to Asia • Northwest Passage failed to materialize they set up trading colonies – the French companies sought trade – the English used colonies to provide the raw materials. • The French navigator Jacques Cartier, seeking a Northwest • • • • Passage through America to Asia, claimed much of eastern Canada for France. 1600s after defeating the Spanish Armada, the English founded settlements in the Americas, Jamestown Virginia Plymouth Massachusetts. English pushed out the Native Americans the English emerged as the leading European power in much of North America, “the Sun Never Sets on the English Empire”. IV. Slave Trade • In the 1600s European economies in the Americas • • • • based on the labor of enslaved Africans. triangular trade, European ships carried manufactured goods to West Africa and sold the goods for enslaved people then carried the slaves across the Atlantic and sold them in the Americas; the ships returned to Europe to sell the American goods. An enslaved person's journey from Africa to the Americas was a ghastly ordeal called the Middle Passage, An anti-slavery movement, gained power in the early 1800s. The most successful uprising occurred in the Frenchruled West Indian island of Saint Domingue, leading to the creation of the republic of Haiti in 1804.