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The Age of Exploration
Forces Behind European Exploration
• God (Religious Motivations)
• Missionaries: spread word of Christ
• Many other religions seen as “savage”
• Increase power of Catholic Church
• Glory (Personal Motivations)
• Spirit of adventure, natural curiosity
• Individual claim to fame (fortune?)
• Power of Kings and Queens, empire
• Gold (Economic Motivations)
• European interests in Asia
• Spices, silk, tea, porcelain = $$$
• Rise of Ottomans restricted Silk Road
• Could eliminate “middle man” by sea
• Hope of discovering precious metals
• Economic theory of Mercantilism
• Emerging notion of Euro. supremacy
• Effects of Renaissance on Exploration?
The Age of Exploration
The First Exploring Nations: Spain
• Christopher Columbus
• Italian, convinced Queen Isabella of Spain to finance experimental journey
• Many at the time knew world was round, but not sure how large
• thought he’d found short-cut to India by sailing west from Europe
• 1492: Columbus discovers what he thought were islands off China coast
• Called islands “West Indies”
• Actually in Caribbean Sea (America)
Treaty of Tordesillas (1494)
• Agreement between Portugal & Spain
• Claimed unknown lands for Church
• Line of Demarcation splits globe
• Portugal: rights to “Old World”
• Spain: rights to most of “New World”
A Spanish Empire in the New World
• Conquistadors (conquerors) were sent to explore Spain’s vast new territory
• Hernan Cortes (1519)
• Overthrew powerful Aztec Empire in modern-day Mexico, in only 3 yrs
• Francisco Pizarro (1531-1532)
• Took control of Incan civilization in South America over 30 years
• Why? God, Glory, mostly GOLD.
• The Spanish encomienda system
• Queen declared “Indians” her subjects
• Could legally be used as laborers
• Spanish were supposed to protect Native Americans; widely abused
• Forced labor in mines, on plantations
• Little resistance to European diseases
• Smallpox, measles, typhus
• Massive losses in populations
• Missionary efforts to destroy culture
The Age of Exploration
The Columbian Exchange
• Term given to the extensive exchange of plants & animals between the Old World and the New World.
• Previously isolated for more than a thousand years.
• Huge impact on both sides of Atlantic
The Economic Theory of Mercantilism
• Mercantilism
• Economic principle focused around the wealth of the nation-state
• Gov’t control of foreign trade is top priority to ensure prosperity & security
• Measured by supply of gold & silver
• Gained thru favorable balance of trade (Export more than you import)
• Policies of European Rulers
• Discourage import of foreign goods
• high taxes on imports (tariffs)
• Encourage export of manufactures
• Protect favorable trading monopolies
• Accept pay in gold, never pay in gold
• Establish & Protect Colonies
• Source of raw materials, gold, & silver
• Protected market to sell manufactures
• Effects of Mercantilism
• European abuses in Americas, Africa
• National rivalries based on trade, war
Ancient African Civilizations
• Role of Geography
• Climate dictates where, how people live
• Variety of resources throughout Africa
• Empires Through Trade
• North African Nile civilizations grew powerful through trade alliances
• Kush (Nubia) (1000BC - 150AD)
• Axum (150BC – 1550BC)
• West African Empires Rise and Fall
• Located on Niger River valley
• All centered on trading, taxes
• Iron, gold, ivory, SALT?
• Stateless societies in Southern Africa
• Local rulers, mixed economies
• Rise of Zimbabwe through gold trade
• Ancient custom of slavery in Africa
The African Slave Trade
• “Discovery” of Americas, sugarcane created huge demand for African slave
• Early domination by Portuguese explorers
• Sugar plantations in Caribbean, Brazil are incredibly deadly
• Native workforce destroyed by disease
• Tradition of trade and slavery in Africa different from slavery in New World
• Triangular Trade Routes
• AFRICA: import rum, manufactured goods, export slaves, gold, ivory
• AMERICA: import slaves, export raw materials, rum, gunpowder
• EUROPE: Import raw materials, export manufactured goods
• Effects of Slave Trade on Africa
• Tore families, communities apart
• Constant internal warfare in Africa
• Practice of “self-enslavement” (why?)
• Dramatic costs on African population
European Influence in the East
• India
• Expanding foreign presence (British)
• Spice Islands (Moluccas)
• Dutch traders and military eventually corner spice trade, local government
• Ex.: monopolize regional clove trade
• Est. military outpost to protect trade
• Mainland States of SE Asia
• Resisted Euro. influence for most part
• Stronger political identity, unity
• China
• Portuguese traders bring missionaries
• Noted for their new technologies
• Successful in spreading Christianity
• Highly restricted trade under Qing
• Refusal of expansion of British trade
• Japan
• Unified Japan initially pro Dutch trade
• Move toward isolationism after Jesuit missionaries destroy ancient shrines
• Many Japanese converts persecuted