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Maritime Revolution Before 1450 - 1550 Expansion before 1450 Pacific Ocean • Polynesians – New Guinea to Hawaii to New Zealand – Expansion or accidental? • Malayo-Indonesians – Madagascar Expansion before 1450 Indian Ocean • Muslim Traders – Very important by 1400 – Trade ports not empire • Ming Empire – Mongol defeat leads to early expansionism – Voyages of Zheng He – Ways to show off wealth rather than trade – Africa – By 1433 voyages ended – POWER VACUUM Expansion before 1450 Atlantic Ocean • Vikings – First major power – Exploration and settlement – Impact of changing climate in 1200 • Europeans – Applied Mediterranean knowledge – Mostly Genoese and Portuguese – Expeditionary - Azores, Madeira, Canary Islands • Africans – Mansa Musa • Americas – Limited – Arawaks into Lesser Antilles European Expansion 1400-1550 • Who? – Iberian Kingdoms (Spain & Portugal) – Economic, political & religious inspiration – Improvements in their technology allowed them to “master” maritime push • Four Trends in Latin West since 1000 – – – – Revival of urban life and trade European idea of alliance b/w rulers & merchants Struggle with Islamic Empires over Med. Growing intellectual curiosity • Why not Italians? – Venice & Genoa had pre-existing trade alliances with Muslims (access to SR through the Med.) – Ships too small for Atlantic Ocean – Merchant Princes supported trade in N Europe, Black Sea, Indian Ocean Why Portugal? • c. 1415 – attack on Morocco (Muslim) – Part crusade, tournament, plundering • Importance of Gold – Unable to push inland – Sought direct contact with Gold producers – Need to sail • Henry the Navigator – Multiple agendas – religion, ottoman, exploration – Cartography • Caravel – Smaller, lighter, more maneuverable, small cannons • Order of Christ Money – Red crosses on ships • Slavery and gold • Cruzado – Link between religion and exploration • Real Success comes after private investors become involved – Sao Tome • Seek a passage to India Why Spain? • History of conflict with Muslims – Aragon & Castile unite to capture Granada • Later entrance into Revolution • Columbus - 1492 – Expedition sponsored by Queen Isabella – Never believed he reached “New” World • Vespucci – Explores “new” world • Treaty of Tordesillas – 1494 – – – – Negotiated by pope Splits Atlantic Ocean with imaginary line Americas = Spain Africa & S Asia = Portugal African Encounters with Europe • Portugal – Offered new markets for African goods • Gold Coast & Benin – Trade gold, pepper, some slavery – African nations held power • Kongo – Only had slaves to offer • Ethiopia – Only Christian Empire on east coast – Alliances against the Turks – Conflict over version of Christianity Indian Ocean Encounters with Europeans • Portugal – Sought access to trade – Crown decided that IO would belong to them alone – use of force • Why did Portugal gain power so easily? (1505 – 1535) – Superior weaponry and ships – Small port cities, not empire – Large empires not interested in maritime intrusion – internal focus – Seized Malacca • Methods of control – Taxation – Portuguese “passports” – Execution • Response – Larger empires ignored or considered unimportant – Smaller trade ports attempted resistance - failed America Encounters with Europe • Spain – Territorial Empire rather than trade – No contact between Amerindians and others – had to rely on conquest & plunder • Arawak – Hispaniola (Haiti) – 1493 – Columbus 2nd voyage with settlers – 1495 rebellion: quashed, ended with death and bondage – Famine and smallpox spread – 1502 – all remaining Arawaks made slaves to colonists • Conquistadors – Defeat non-believers, bring them to god and get rich in the process American Empires • Cortes and Aztecs – – – – – Aztec empire only 100 yrs old Loyalty divided – “new” could offer more Tlaxcalans Moctezuma 1521 defeat – impact of smallpox • Pizarro and the Incans – Taxes, exile and forced labor used to control – Civil war – 1531 Pizarro sets out – Pizarro betrays Atahualpa – Internal conflict leads to splintering