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CHAPTER 20 - The Atlantic World (1492-1800) - World History: Patterns of Interaction (Atlas by Rand McNally 2009)

CHAPTER 20 - The Atlantic World (1492-1800) - World History: Patterns of Interaction (Atlas by Rand McNally 2009)

CHAPTER 20.1: Spain Builds an American Empire

  • Columbus didn’t reach the East Indies
  • Scholars believe he landed instead on an island in the Bahamas in the Caribbean Sea
  • The natives there were not Indians, but a group who called themselves the Taino
  • Columbus claimed the island for Spain and named it San Salvador (“Holy Savior”)
  • Columbus was also interested in gold and explored other islands for it since San Salvador didn’t have any
  • Early 1493: Columbus returned to Spain
  • Spain’s rulers, who had funded his first voyage, agreed to finance three more trips
  • 1493: Columbus went on his 2nd voyage to the Americas with the intent of empire-building
  • The Spanish intended to transform the islands of the Caribbean into colonies, or lands that are controlled by another nation
  • 1500: Pedro Álvares Cabral reached the shores of modern-day Brazil/claimed the land for his country
  • A year later, Amerigo Vespucci, an Italian in the service of Portugal, also traveled along the eastern coast of South America
  • He claimed that the land was not part of Asia, but a new world entirely
  • 1507: a German mapmaker named the new continent “America” in honor of Vespucci
  • 1519: Ferdinand Magellan sailed around the southern end of South America/into the Pacific
  • He eventually reached the Philippines
  • Unfortunately, Magellan became involved in a local war there/was killed
  • Out of Magellan’s original crew, only 18 men and one ship arrived back in Spain in 1522, nearly three years after they had left
  • They were the first persons to circumnavigate, or sail around, the world
  • Several years earlier, Spanish explorer Vasco Núñez de Balboa marched through modern-day Panama/had become the first European to gaze upon the Pacific Ocean
  • 1519: Hernando Cortés landed in Mexico
  • After colonizing several Caribbean islands, the Spanish had turned their attention to the American mainland
  • Cortés and the many other Spanish explorers who followed him were known as conquistadors (conquerors)
  • Conquistadors created colonies in regions that would become Mexico, South America, and the United States, lured by rumors of vast lands of gold/silver
  • The Spanish were the 1st European settlers in the Americas
  • Soon after landing in Mexico, Cortés learned of the vast and wealthy Aztec Empire in the region’s interior
  • The Aztec emperor, Montezuma II, was convinced at first that Cortés was a god wearing armor
  • He agreed to give the Spanish explorer a share of the empire’s existing gold supply, but the Conquistadors weren’t satisfied, claiming that they had a disease only gold can cure
  • In the late spring of 1520, some of Cortés’s men killed many Aztec warriors and chiefs while they were celebrating a religious festival
  • June 1520: the Aztecs rebelled against the Spanish intruders and drove out Cortés’s forces
  • Despite being greatly outnumbered, Cortés and his men conquered the Aztecs in 1521
  • The Spanish had the advantage of superior weaponry
  • Aztec arrows were no match for the Spaniards’ muskets and cannons
  • Cortés was able to enlist the help of various native groups
  • With the aid of a native woman translator named Malinche, Cortés learned that some natives resented the Aztecs because of their harsh practices (human sacrifice, etc.)
  • The natives could do little against disease
  • Measles, mumps, smallpox, and typhus were just some of the diseases Europeans were to bring with them to the Americas
  • Native Americans had never been exposed to these diseases/had no natural immunity
  • They died by the hundreds-thousands
  • By the time Cortés launched his counterattack, the Aztec population had been greatly reduced by smallpox and measles
  • 1532: Francis Pizarro marched a small force into South America/conquered the Incan Empire
  • Pizzaro/his army met the Incan ruler, Atahualpa near the city of Cajamarca/his force of 30,000 (mostly unarmed)
  • The Spaniards waited in ambush, crushed the Incan force, and kidnapped Atahualpa
  • Atahualpa offered to fill a room once with gold and twice with silver in exchange for his release
  • However, after receiving the ransom, the Spanish strangled the Incan king
  • Demoralized by their leader’s death, the remaining Incan force retreated from Cajamarca
  • Pizarro then marched on the Incan capital, Cuzco/captured it easily in 1533
  • Spanish explorers also conquered the Maya in Yucatan and Guatemala
  • By the middle of the 16th century, Spain had created an American empire
  • It included New Spain (Mexico and parts of Guatemala), as well as other lands in Central and South America and the Caribbean
  • When conquering the Muslims, the Spanish lived among them and imposed their Spanish culture upon them
  • (Similar to the techniques from the reconquista)
  • The Spanish settlers to the Americas, known as peninsulares, were mostly men
  • As a result, relationships between Spanish settlers and native women were common
  • These relationships created a large mestizo, or mixed Spanish and Native American population
  •  In their effort to exploit the land for its precious resources, the Spanish forced Native Americans to work within a system known as encomienda
  • Under this system, natives farmed, ranched, or mined for Spanish landlords
  • These landlords had received the rights to the natives’ labor from Spanish authorities
  • The holders of encomiendas promised the Spanish rulers that they would act fairly/ respect the workers
  • However, many abused the natives/worked many laborers to death, especially inside mines
  • One area of South America that remained outside of Spanish control was Brazil
  • 1500: Cabral claimed the land for Portugal
  • During the 1530s, colonists began settling Brazil’s coastal region
  • Finding little gold or silver, the settlers began growing sugar
  • The Portuguese built giant sugar plantations
  • The demand for sugar in Europe was great, and the colony soon enriched Portugal
  • In time, the colonists pushed farther west into Brazil for sugar production
  • Newfound wealth → a golden age of art/culture in Spain
  • Throughout the 16th century, Spain also increased its military strength
  • Spain built a powerful navy to protect their treasure-filled ships
  • The Spanish also strengthened their other military forces, creating a skillful and determined army
  • 1513: Spanish explorer Juan Ponce de León landed on the coast of modern-day Florida and claimed it for Spain
  • 1540–1541: Francisco Vásquez de Coronado led an expedition throughout much of present-day Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma, and Kansas
  • He was searching for a wealthy empire to conquer/found little gold in the Southwest
  • As a result, the Spanish monarchy assigned mostly priests to explore and colonize the future United States
  • Catholic priests had accompanied conquistadors from the very beginning of American colonization
  • The priests who accompanied them had come in search of converts
  • 1609–1610: Pedro de Peralta, governor of Spain’s northern holdings, called New Mexico, led settlers to a tributary on the upper Rio Grande
  • They built a capital called Santa Fe (“Holy Faith”)
  • In the next two decades, a string of Christian missions arose among the Pueblo, the native inhabitants of the region
  • Spanish priests worked to spread Christianity in the Americas/pushed for better treatment of Native Americans
  • Priests spoke out against the cruel treatment of natives, especially the encomienda system
  • Dominican monk Bartolomé de Las Casas is a prominent figure that criticized the abusive treatment against Native Americans
  • 1542: The Spanish government abolished the encomienda system
  • To meet the colonies need for labor, Las Casas suggested Africans, later changing his view/denouncing African slavery
  • Others promoted it
  • Opposition to the Spanish method of colonization came not only from Spanish priests, but also from the natives themselves
  • Resistance to Spain’s attempt at domination began shortly after the Spanish arrived in the Caribbean
  • November 1493: Columbus encountered resistance in his attempt to conquer the present-day island of St. Croix
  • As late as the end of the 17th century, natives in New Mexico fought Spanish rule
  • In converting the natives, Spanish priests/soldiers burned their sacred objects/prohibited native rituals
  • The Spanish also forced natives to work for them and sometimes abused them physically
  • 1680: Popé, a Pueblo ruler, led a well-organized rebellion against the Spanish
  • The rebellion involved more than 8,000 warriors from villages all over New Mexico
  • The native fighters drove the Spanish back into New Spain
  • For the next 12 years, until the Spanish regained control, the southwest region of the future United States once again belonged to the Natives

CHAPTER 20.2: European Nations Settle North America

  • 1524: Giovanni da Verrazzano, an Italian in service of France, sailed to North America in search of a sea route to the Pacific
  • He was hoping to find the East Indies, like other early French explorers
  • While he did not find the route, Verrazzano did discover what is today New York harbor
  • Ten years later, the Frenchman Jacques Cartier reached a gulf off the eastern coast of Canada that led to a broad river (he named it St. Lawrence)
  • He followed it inward until he reached a large island dominated by a mountain (which he named Mount Real)
  • 1608: Samuel de Champlain, sailed up the St. Lawrence with about 32 colonists/found Quebec
  • Quebec became the base of France’s colonial empire in North America, known as New France
  • 1673: French Jesuit priest Jacques Marquette/trader Louis Joliet explored the Great Lakes/the upper Mississippi River
  • Nearly 10 years later, Sieur de La Salle explored the lower Mississippi/claimed the entire river valley for France
  • By the early 1700s, New France covered much of what is now the midwestern United States and eastern Canada
  • France’s North American empire was immense but sparsely populated
  •  By 1760, the European population of New France had grown to only about 65,000
  • A large number of French colonists had no desire to build towns or raise families
  • These settlers included Catholic priests who sought to convert Native Americans
  • They also included young, single men engaged in what had become New France’s main economic activity, the fur trade
  • The French were less interested in occupying territories than they were making money off the land
  • The explorations of the Spanish and French inspired the English
  • 1606: a company of London investors received from King James a charter to found a colony in North America
  • In late 1606, the company’s three ships, and more than 100 settlers, pushed out of an English harbor
  • About four months later, in 1607, they reached the coast of Virginia/claimed it
  • They named the settlement Jamestown in honor of their king
  • The colony had a disastrous start:
  • The settlers were more interested in finding gold than in planting crops
  • During the 1st few years, 7/10 people died of hunger, disease, or battles w/ Native Americans
  • Eventually, the colonists gained a foothold/Jamestown became England’s 1st permanent settlement in North America
  • The colony’s outlook greatly improved after farmers discovered tobacco
  • High demand in England for tobacco turned it into a profitable cash crop
  • 1620: a group known as Pilgrims founded a second English colony, Plymouth, in Massachusetts
  • They were persecuted for their religious beliefs in England/sought religious freedom
  • Ten years later, Puritans also sought religious freedom from England’s Anglican Church/established a larger colony at nearby Massachusetts Bay
  • The Puritans wanted to build a model community that would set an example for other Christians to follow
  • Although the colony experienced early trouble, it eventually took hold partly due to numerous families unlike in Jamestown (mostly single/male)
  • The Dutch followed after
  • 1609: Henry Hudson, an Englishman in the service of the Netherlands was searching for a northwest sea route to Asia
  • He didn’t find a route but explored 3 waterways that were later named for him:
  • Hudson River
  • Hudson Bay
  • Hudson Strait
  • The Dutch claimed the region along these waterways/established fur trade w/ the Iroquois Indians
  • They built trading posts along the Hudson River at Fort Orange (now Albany) and on Manhattan Island
  • Dutch merchants formed the Dutch West India Company
  • 1621: The Dutch government granted the company permission to colonize the region/expand the fur trade
  • The Dutch holdings in North America became known as New Netherland
  • Although the Dutch company profited from its fur trade, it was slow to attract Dutch colonists
  • To encourage settlers, the colony opened its doors to a variety of peoples
  • Gradually more Dutch, Germans, French, Scandinavians, and other Europeans, settled the area
  • During the 1600s, the nations of Europe also colonized the Caribbean
  • The French seized control of present-day Haiti, Guadeloupe, and Martinique
  • The English had Barbados/Jamaica
  • 1634: The Dutch captured what are now the Netherlands Antilles and Aruba from Spain
  • Europeans built huge cotton/sugar plantations on the islands
  • These products, although profitable, demanded a large and steady supply of labor → eventual demand for African slave labor
  • 1664: English King Charles II granted his brother, the Duke of York, permission to drive out the Dutch
  • The Dutch surrendered as soon as he came and the Duke of York claimed the colony for England (renamed it New York)
  • The English colonized the Atlantic coast of North America
  • They pushed farther west into the continent, wanting more land
  • They collided with France’s North American holdings
  • As their colonies expanded, France/England began to interfere with each other
  • 1754: a dispute over land claims in the Ohio Valley led to a war between the British and French (the French and Indian War)
  • The war became part of a larger conflict known as the Seven Years’ War
  • Britain and France, along with their European allies, also battled for supremacy in Europe, the West Indies, and India
  • 1763: The British colonists, with the help of the British Army, defeated the French
  • The French surrendered their North American holdings
  • As a result of the war, the British seized control of the eastern half of North America
  • French/Dutch settlers developed a mostly cooperative relationship with the Native Americans
  • This was due mainly to the mutual benefits of the fur trade
  • Native Americans did most of the trapping and then traded the furs to the French for such items as guns, hatchets, mirrors, and beads
  • The Dutch also cooperated with Native Americans in order to establish a fur-trading enterprise
  • Dutch settlers fought with various Native American groups over land claims and trading rights
  • Mostly, the French and Dutch colonists lived together peacefully with their North American hosts
  • Early relations between English settlers/Native Americans were cooperative but quickly worsened over land/religion
  • Unlike the French and Dutch, the English sought to populate their colonies in North America, which meant pushing natives off their land
  • The English took more land for population/tobacco
  • The English settlers considered Native Americans heathens, people without a faith
  • Over time, many Puritans viewed Native Americans as agents of the devil/a threat to their godly society
  • Native Americans developed a similarly harsh view of the European invaders
  • Hostility b/t the English/natives led to warfare
  • As early as 1622, the Powhatan tribe attacked colonial villages around Jamestown and killed about 350 settlers
  • During the next few years, the colonists struck back and massacred hundreds of Powhatan
  • King Philip’s War (Metacom’s War):
  • Began in 1675 when the Native American ruler Metacom (also known as King Philip) led an attack on colonial villages throughout Massachusetts
  •  In the months that followed, both sides massacred hundreds of victims
  • After a year of fierce fighting, the colonists defeated the natives
  • Diseases were more destructive than European weapons
  • Disease devastated native population in North America
  • 1616: Epidemic of smallpox ravaged Native Americans living along the New England coast
  • One of the effects of this loss was a severe shortage of labor in the colonies
  • European colonists soon turned to Africans for their labor needs

CHAPTER 20.3: The Atlantic Slave Trade

  • The spread of Islam in the 7th century → an increase of slavery/the slave trade
  • Muslim rulers in Africa justified enslavement with the Muslim belief that nonMuslim prisoners of war could be bought/sold as slaves
  • Between 650-1600, Muslims transported about 17 million Africans to North Africa/Southwest Asia
  • In most African/Muslim societies, slaves had some legal rights/an opportunity for social mobility
  •  In the Muslim world, a few slaves even occupied positions of influence/power
  • Some served as generals in the army
  • In African societies, slaves can escape their bondage in many ways (ex. Marrying into the family they served)
  • Europeans saw advantages in using Africans in the Americas:
  • Many Africans had been exposed to European diseases/built up some immunity
  • Many Africans had experience in farming/could be taught plantation work
  • Africans were less likely to escape b/c they didn’t know their away around new land
  • Their skin color made them easier to identify/catch if they escaped → they were less likely to escape
  • Atlantic slave trade: the buying and selling of Africans for work in the Americas
  • Became a massive enterprise
  • B/t 1500-1600, nearly 300k Africans were transported to the Americas
  • The Spanish took an early lead in importing Africans to the Americas
  • Spain moved on from the Caribbean/began to colonize the American mainland
  • By around 1650, the Portuguese had surpassed the Spanish in the importation of Africans to the Americas
  • During the 1600s, Brazil dominated the European sugar market
  • As the colony’s sugar industry grew, so too did European colonists’ demand for cheap labor
  • During the 17th century, more than 40% of all Africans brought to the Americas went to Brazil
  • As England’s presence in the Americas grew, it came to dominate the Atlantic slave trade
  • From 1690 until England abolished the slave trade in 1807, it was the leading carrier of enslaved Africans
  • African slaves were also brought to what is now the United States
  • In all, nearly 400,000 Africans were sold to Britain’s North American colonies
  • Many African rulers/merchants played a willing role in the Atlantic slave trade
  • African merchants, with the help of local rulers, captured Africans to be enslaved
  • They then delivered them to the Europeans in exchange for gold, guns, and other goods
  • As the slave trade grew, some African rulers voiced their opposition to the practice, but the slave trade steadily grew regardless
  • African merchants developed new trade routes to avoid rulers who refused to cooperate
  • Africans transported to the Americas were part of a transatlantic trading network known as the triangular trade
  • Over one trade route, Europeans transported manufactured goods to the west coast of Africa
  • Traders exchanged these goods for captured Africans
  • The Africans were then transported across the Atlantic and sold in the West Indies
  • Merchants bought sugar, coffee, and tobacco in the West Indies and sailed to Europe with these products
  • On another triangular route, merchants carried rum and other goods from the New England colonies to Africa
  • They exchanged their goods for Africans
  • The traders transported the Africans to the West Indies and sold them for sugar and molasses
  • They then sold these goods to rum producers in New England
  • The “triangular” trade encompassed a network of trade routes crisscrossing the northern and southern colonies, the West Indies, England, Europe, and Africa
  • The voyage that brought captured Africans to the West Indies and later to North and South America was known as the middle passage
  • In African ports, European traders packed Africans into the dark holds of large ships
  • Africans endured whippings and beatings from merchants, as well as diseases
  • Numerous Africans died from disease or physical abuse aboard the slave ships
  • Many others committed suicide by drowning
  • Scholars estimate that roughly 20% of the Africans aboard each slave ship died during the trip
  • Upon arriving in the Americas, captured Africans usually were auctioned off to the highest bidder
  • After being sold, slaves worked in mines/fields or as domestic servants
  • Many lived on little food in small, dreary huts/worked long days/suffered beatings
  • In much of the Americas, slavery was a lifelong condition, as well as a hereditary one
  • To cope with the horrors of slavery, Africans developed a way of life based on their cultural heritage
  • They kept alive such things as their musical traditions as well as the stories of their ancestors
  • Slaves also found ways to resist:
  • They made themselves less productive by breaking tools, uprooting plants, and working slowly
  • Thousands also ran away
  • Some slaves pushed their resistance to open revolt
  • Larger revolts occurred throughout Spanish settlements during the 16th century
  • In Africa, numerous culture lost generations of their fittest to European traders/plantation owners
  • Countless African families were torn apart/never reunited
  • The slave trade devastated African societies by introducing guns into the continent
  • African slaves contributed greatly to the economic and cultural development of the Americas
  • Their greatest contribution was labor
  • Colonies such as Haiti/Barbados may not have survived w/o slave labor
  • Enslaved Africans brought their expertise (especially in agriculture) and their culture
  • Their art, music, religion, and food continue to influence American societies
  • From the United States to Brazil, many of the nations of the Western Hemisphere today have substantial African-American populations
  • Many Latin American countries have sizable mixed-race populations

CHAPTER 20.4: The Columbian Exchange and Global Trade

  • The global transfer of foods, plants, and animals during the colonization of the Americas is known as the Columbian Exchange
  • The Americas brought tomatoes, squash, pineapples, tobacco, and cacao beans/animals such as the turkey
  • The most important items from the Americas: corn/potatoes
  • Supplied many essential vitamins/minerals
  • Both crops became an important/steady part of diets worldwide/were inexpensive to grow/nutritious
  • These foods helped people live longer → helped boost world population
  • Europeans introduced various livestock animals into the Americas:
  • Horses, cattle, sheep, and pigs
  • Foods from Africa (including some that originated in Asia) migrated west in European ships:
  • Bananas, black-eyed peas, and yams
  • Grains introduced to the Americas included wheat, rice, barley, and oats
  • Disease was just as much a part of the Columbian Exchange as goods/food
  • The diseases Europeans brought with them, which included smallpox and measles, led to the deaths of millions of Native Americans
  • New wealth from the Americas was coupled with a dramatic growth in overseas trade → a wave of new business/trade practices in Europe during the 16th-17th centuries
  • Capitalism: an economic system based on private ownership and the investment of resources, such as money, for profit
  • Governments were no longer the sole owners of great wealth, merchants were able to attain it through overseas colonization/trade
  • These merchants continued to invest their money in trade and overseas exploration
  • Profits from these investments enabled merchants/traders to reinvest even more money in other enterprises, causing businesses across Europe to grow/flourish
  • The increase in economic activity in Europe →  an overall increase in many nations’ money supply
  • This in turn brought on inflation, or the steady rise in the price of goods
  •  Inflation occurs when people have more money to spend/thus demand more goods and services
  • Because the supply of goods is less than the demand for them, the goods become both scarce and more valuable → prices rise
  • At this time in Europe, the costs of many goods rose
  • The joint-stock company worked much like the modern-day corporation, with investors buying shares of stock in a company/involved a number of people combining their wealth for a common purpose
  • For Europe during the 1500-1600s that common purpose was American colonization
  •  It took large amounts of money to establish overseas colonies
  • Because joint-stock companies involved numerous investors, the individual members paid only a fraction of the total colonization cost
  • If the colony failed, investors lost only their small share
  • If the colony thrived, the investors shared in the profits
  • During this time, the nations of Europe adopted a new economic policy known as mercantilism
  • Mercantilism: held that a country’s power depended mainly on its wealth
  • As a result, the goal of every nation became the attainment of as much wealth as possible
  • According to the theory of mercantilism, a nation could increase its wealth and power in two ways:
  • It could obtain as much gold and silver as possible
  • It could establish a favorable balance of trade, in which it sold more goods than it bought
  • A nation’s ultimate goal under mercantilism was to become self-sufficient, not dependent on other countries for goods
  • Mercantilism went hand in hand with colonization, for colonies played a vital role in this new economic practice
  • Aside from providing silver and gold, colonies provided raw materials that could not be found in the home country (wood/furs)
  • Colonies also provided a market
  • The economic revolution spurred the growth of towns and the rise of a class of merchants who controlled great wealth
  • While towns and cities grew in size, much of Europe’s population continued to live in rural areas
  • The majority of Europeans remained poor
D

CHAPTER 20 - The Atlantic World (1492-1800) - World History: Patterns of Interaction (Atlas by Rand McNally 2009)

CHAPTER 20 - The Atlantic World (1492-1800) - World History: Patterns of Interaction (Atlas by Rand McNally 2009)

CHAPTER 20.1: Spain Builds an American Empire

  • Columbus didn’t reach the East Indies
  • Scholars believe he landed instead on an island in the Bahamas in the Caribbean Sea
  • The natives there were not Indians, but a group who called themselves the Taino
  • Columbus claimed the island for Spain and named it San Salvador (“Holy Savior”)
  • Columbus was also interested in gold and explored other islands for it since San Salvador didn’t have any
  • Early 1493: Columbus returned to Spain
  • Spain’s rulers, who had funded his first voyage, agreed to finance three more trips
  • 1493: Columbus went on his 2nd voyage to the Americas with the intent of empire-building
  • The Spanish intended to transform the islands of the Caribbean into colonies, or lands that are controlled by another nation
  • 1500: Pedro Álvares Cabral reached the shores of modern-day Brazil/claimed the land for his country
  • A year later, Amerigo Vespucci, an Italian in the service of Portugal, also traveled along the eastern coast of South America
  • He claimed that the land was not part of Asia, but a new world entirely
  • 1507: a German mapmaker named the new continent “America” in honor of Vespucci
  • 1519: Ferdinand Magellan sailed around the southern end of South America/into the Pacific
  • He eventually reached the Philippines
  • Unfortunately, Magellan became involved in a local war there/was killed
  • Out of Magellan’s original crew, only 18 men and one ship arrived back in Spain in 1522, nearly three years after they had left
  • They were the first persons to circumnavigate, or sail around, the world
  • Several years earlier, Spanish explorer Vasco Núñez de Balboa marched through modern-day Panama/had become the first European to gaze upon the Pacific Ocean
  • 1519: Hernando Cortés landed in Mexico
  • After colonizing several Caribbean islands, the Spanish had turned their attention to the American mainland
  • Cortés and the many other Spanish explorers who followed him were known as conquistadors (conquerors)
  • Conquistadors created colonies in regions that would become Mexico, South America, and the United States, lured by rumors of vast lands of gold/silver
  • The Spanish were the 1st European settlers in the Americas
  • Soon after landing in Mexico, Cortés learned of the vast and wealthy Aztec Empire in the region’s interior
  • The Aztec emperor, Montezuma II, was convinced at first that Cortés was a god wearing armor
  • He agreed to give the Spanish explorer a share of the empire’s existing gold supply, but the Conquistadors weren’t satisfied, claiming that they had a disease only gold can cure
  • In the late spring of 1520, some of Cortés’s men killed many Aztec warriors and chiefs while they were celebrating a religious festival
  • June 1520: the Aztecs rebelled against the Spanish intruders and drove out Cortés’s forces
  • Despite being greatly outnumbered, Cortés and his men conquered the Aztecs in 1521
  • The Spanish had the advantage of superior weaponry
  • Aztec arrows were no match for the Spaniards’ muskets and cannons
  • Cortés was able to enlist the help of various native groups
  • With the aid of a native woman translator named Malinche, Cortés learned that some natives resented the Aztecs because of their harsh practices (human sacrifice, etc.)
  • The natives could do little against disease
  • Measles, mumps, smallpox, and typhus were just some of the diseases Europeans were to bring with them to the Americas
  • Native Americans had never been exposed to these diseases/had no natural immunity
  • They died by the hundreds-thousands
  • By the time Cortés launched his counterattack, the Aztec population had been greatly reduced by smallpox and measles
  • 1532: Francis Pizarro marched a small force into South America/conquered the Incan Empire
  • Pizzaro/his army met the Incan ruler, Atahualpa near the city of Cajamarca/his force of 30,000 (mostly unarmed)
  • The Spaniards waited in ambush, crushed the Incan force, and kidnapped Atahualpa
  • Atahualpa offered to fill a room once with gold and twice with silver in exchange for his release
  • However, after receiving the ransom, the Spanish strangled the Incan king
  • Demoralized by their leader’s death, the remaining Incan force retreated from Cajamarca
  • Pizarro then marched on the Incan capital, Cuzco/captured it easily in 1533
  • Spanish explorers also conquered the Maya in Yucatan and Guatemala
  • By the middle of the 16th century, Spain had created an American empire
  • It included New Spain (Mexico and parts of Guatemala), as well as other lands in Central and South America and the Caribbean
  • When conquering the Muslims, the Spanish lived among them and imposed their Spanish culture upon them
  • (Similar to the techniques from the reconquista)
  • The Spanish settlers to the Americas, known as peninsulares, were mostly men
  • As a result, relationships between Spanish settlers and native women were common
  • These relationships created a large mestizo, or mixed Spanish and Native American population
  •  In their effort to exploit the land for its precious resources, the Spanish forced Native Americans to work within a system known as encomienda
  • Under this system, natives farmed, ranched, or mined for Spanish landlords
  • These landlords had received the rights to the natives’ labor from Spanish authorities
  • The holders of encomiendas promised the Spanish rulers that they would act fairly/ respect the workers
  • However, many abused the natives/worked many laborers to death, especially inside mines
  • One area of South America that remained outside of Spanish control was Brazil
  • 1500: Cabral claimed the land for Portugal
  • During the 1530s, colonists began settling Brazil’s coastal region
  • Finding little gold or silver, the settlers began growing sugar
  • The Portuguese built giant sugar plantations
  • The demand for sugar in Europe was great, and the colony soon enriched Portugal
  • In time, the colonists pushed farther west into Brazil for sugar production
  • Newfound wealth → a golden age of art/culture in Spain
  • Throughout the 16th century, Spain also increased its military strength
  • Spain built a powerful navy to protect their treasure-filled ships
  • The Spanish also strengthened their other military forces, creating a skillful and determined army
  • 1513: Spanish explorer Juan Ponce de León landed on the coast of modern-day Florida and claimed it for Spain
  • 1540–1541: Francisco Vásquez de Coronado led an expedition throughout much of present-day Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma, and Kansas
  • He was searching for a wealthy empire to conquer/found little gold in the Southwest
  • As a result, the Spanish monarchy assigned mostly priests to explore and colonize the future United States
  • Catholic priests had accompanied conquistadors from the very beginning of American colonization
  • The priests who accompanied them had come in search of converts
  • 1609–1610: Pedro de Peralta, governor of Spain’s northern holdings, called New Mexico, led settlers to a tributary on the upper Rio Grande
  • They built a capital called Santa Fe (“Holy Faith”)
  • In the next two decades, a string of Christian missions arose among the Pueblo, the native inhabitants of the region
  • Spanish priests worked to spread Christianity in the Americas/pushed for better treatment of Native Americans
  • Priests spoke out against the cruel treatment of natives, especially the encomienda system
  • Dominican monk Bartolomé de Las Casas is a prominent figure that criticized the abusive treatment against Native Americans
  • 1542: The Spanish government abolished the encomienda system
  • To meet the colonies need for labor, Las Casas suggested Africans, later changing his view/denouncing African slavery
  • Others promoted it
  • Opposition to the Spanish method of colonization came not only from Spanish priests, but also from the natives themselves
  • Resistance to Spain’s attempt at domination began shortly after the Spanish arrived in the Caribbean
  • November 1493: Columbus encountered resistance in his attempt to conquer the present-day island of St. Croix
  • As late as the end of the 17th century, natives in New Mexico fought Spanish rule
  • In converting the natives, Spanish priests/soldiers burned their sacred objects/prohibited native rituals
  • The Spanish also forced natives to work for them and sometimes abused them physically
  • 1680: Popé, a Pueblo ruler, led a well-organized rebellion against the Spanish
  • The rebellion involved more than 8,000 warriors from villages all over New Mexico
  • The native fighters drove the Spanish back into New Spain
  • For the next 12 years, until the Spanish regained control, the southwest region of the future United States once again belonged to the Natives

CHAPTER 20.2: European Nations Settle North America

  • 1524: Giovanni da Verrazzano, an Italian in service of France, sailed to North America in search of a sea route to the Pacific
  • He was hoping to find the East Indies, like other early French explorers
  • While he did not find the route, Verrazzano did discover what is today New York harbor
  • Ten years later, the Frenchman Jacques Cartier reached a gulf off the eastern coast of Canada that led to a broad river (he named it St. Lawrence)
  • He followed it inward until he reached a large island dominated by a mountain (which he named Mount Real)
  • 1608: Samuel de Champlain, sailed up the St. Lawrence with about 32 colonists/found Quebec
  • Quebec became the base of France’s colonial empire in North America, known as New France
  • 1673: French Jesuit priest Jacques Marquette/trader Louis Joliet explored the Great Lakes/the upper Mississippi River
  • Nearly 10 years later, Sieur de La Salle explored the lower Mississippi/claimed the entire river valley for France
  • By the early 1700s, New France covered much of what is now the midwestern United States and eastern Canada
  • France’s North American empire was immense but sparsely populated
  •  By 1760, the European population of New France had grown to only about 65,000
  • A large number of French colonists had no desire to build towns or raise families
  • These settlers included Catholic priests who sought to convert Native Americans
  • They also included young, single men engaged in what had become New France’s main economic activity, the fur trade
  • The French were less interested in occupying territories than they were making money off the land
  • The explorations of the Spanish and French inspired the English
  • 1606: a company of London investors received from King James a charter to found a colony in North America
  • In late 1606, the company’s three ships, and more than 100 settlers, pushed out of an English harbor
  • About four months later, in 1607, they reached the coast of Virginia/claimed it
  • They named the settlement Jamestown in honor of their king
  • The colony had a disastrous start:
  • The settlers were more interested in finding gold than in planting crops
  • During the 1st few years, 7/10 people died of hunger, disease, or battles w/ Native Americans
  • Eventually, the colonists gained a foothold/Jamestown became England’s 1st permanent settlement in North America
  • The colony’s outlook greatly improved after farmers discovered tobacco
  • High demand in England for tobacco turned it into a profitable cash crop
  • 1620: a group known as Pilgrims founded a second English colony, Plymouth, in Massachusetts
  • They were persecuted for their religious beliefs in England/sought religious freedom
  • Ten years later, Puritans also sought religious freedom from England’s Anglican Church/established a larger colony at nearby Massachusetts Bay
  • The Puritans wanted to build a model community that would set an example for other Christians to follow
  • Although the colony experienced early trouble, it eventually took hold partly due to numerous families unlike in Jamestown (mostly single/male)
  • The Dutch followed after
  • 1609: Henry Hudson, an Englishman in the service of the Netherlands was searching for a northwest sea route to Asia
  • He didn’t find a route but explored 3 waterways that were later named for him:
  • Hudson River
  • Hudson Bay
  • Hudson Strait
  • The Dutch claimed the region along these waterways/established fur trade w/ the Iroquois Indians
  • They built trading posts along the Hudson River at Fort Orange (now Albany) and on Manhattan Island
  • Dutch merchants formed the Dutch West India Company
  • 1621: The Dutch government granted the company permission to colonize the region/expand the fur trade
  • The Dutch holdings in North America became known as New Netherland
  • Although the Dutch company profited from its fur trade, it was slow to attract Dutch colonists
  • To encourage settlers, the colony opened its doors to a variety of peoples
  • Gradually more Dutch, Germans, French, Scandinavians, and other Europeans, settled the area
  • During the 1600s, the nations of Europe also colonized the Caribbean
  • The French seized control of present-day Haiti, Guadeloupe, and Martinique
  • The English had Barbados/Jamaica
  • 1634: The Dutch captured what are now the Netherlands Antilles and Aruba from Spain
  • Europeans built huge cotton/sugar plantations on the islands
  • These products, although profitable, demanded a large and steady supply of labor → eventual demand for African slave labor
  • 1664: English King Charles II granted his brother, the Duke of York, permission to drive out the Dutch
  • The Dutch surrendered as soon as he came and the Duke of York claimed the colony for England (renamed it New York)
  • The English colonized the Atlantic coast of North America
  • They pushed farther west into the continent, wanting more land
  • They collided with France’s North American holdings
  • As their colonies expanded, France/England began to interfere with each other
  • 1754: a dispute over land claims in the Ohio Valley led to a war between the British and French (the French and Indian War)
  • The war became part of a larger conflict known as the Seven Years’ War
  • Britain and France, along with their European allies, also battled for supremacy in Europe, the West Indies, and India
  • 1763: The British colonists, with the help of the British Army, defeated the French
  • The French surrendered their North American holdings
  • As a result of the war, the British seized control of the eastern half of North America
  • French/Dutch settlers developed a mostly cooperative relationship with the Native Americans
  • This was due mainly to the mutual benefits of the fur trade
  • Native Americans did most of the trapping and then traded the furs to the French for such items as guns, hatchets, mirrors, and beads
  • The Dutch also cooperated with Native Americans in order to establish a fur-trading enterprise
  • Dutch settlers fought with various Native American groups over land claims and trading rights
  • Mostly, the French and Dutch colonists lived together peacefully with their North American hosts
  • Early relations between English settlers/Native Americans were cooperative but quickly worsened over land/religion
  • Unlike the French and Dutch, the English sought to populate their colonies in North America, which meant pushing natives off their land
  • The English took more land for population/tobacco
  • The English settlers considered Native Americans heathens, people without a faith
  • Over time, many Puritans viewed Native Americans as agents of the devil/a threat to their godly society
  • Native Americans developed a similarly harsh view of the European invaders
  • Hostility b/t the English/natives led to warfare
  • As early as 1622, the Powhatan tribe attacked colonial villages around Jamestown and killed about 350 settlers
  • During the next few years, the colonists struck back and massacred hundreds of Powhatan
  • King Philip’s War (Metacom’s War):
  • Began in 1675 when the Native American ruler Metacom (also known as King Philip) led an attack on colonial villages throughout Massachusetts
  •  In the months that followed, both sides massacred hundreds of victims
  • After a year of fierce fighting, the colonists defeated the natives
  • Diseases were more destructive than European weapons
  • Disease devastated native population in North America
  • 1616: Epidemic of smallpox ravaged Native Americans living along the New England coast
  • One of the effects of this loss was a severe shortage of labor in the colonies
  • European colonists soon turned to Africans for their labor needs

CHAPTER 20.3: The Atlantic Slave Trade

  • The spread of Islam in the 7th century → an increase of slavery/the slave trade
  • Muslim rulers in Africa justified enslavement with the Muslim belief that nonMuslim prisoners of war could be bought/sold as slaves
  • Between 650-1600, Muslims transported about 17 million Africans to North Africa/Southwest Asia
  • In most African/Muslim societies, slaves had some legal rights/an opportunity for social mobility
  •  In the Muslim world, a few slaves even occupied positions of influence/power
  • Some served as generals in the army
  • In African societies, slaves can escape their bondage in many ways (ex. Marrying into the family they served)
  • Europeans saw advantages in using Africans in the Americas:
  • Many Africans had been exposed to European diseases/built up some immunity
  • Many Africans had experience in farming/could be taught plantation work
  • Africans were less likely to escape b/c they didn’t know their away around new land
  • Their skin color made them easier to identify/catch if they escaped → they were less likely to escape
  • Atlantic slave trade: the buying and selling of Africans for work in the Americas
  • Became a massive enterprise
  • B/t 1500-1600, nearly 300k Africans were transported to the Americas
  • The Spanish took an early lead in importing Africans to the Americas
  • Spain moved on from the Caribbean/began to colonize the American mainland
  • By around 1650, the Portuguese had surpassed the Spanish in the importation of Africans to the Americas
  • During the 1600s, Brazil dominated the European sugar market
  • As the colony’s sugar industry grew, so too did European colonists’ demand for cheap labor
  • During the 17th century, more than 40% of all Africans brought to the Americas went to Brazil
  • As England’s presence in the Americas grew, it came to dominate the Atlantic slave trade
  • From 1690 until England abolished the slave trade in 1807, it was the leading carrier of enslaved Africans
  • African slaves were also brought to what is now the United States
  • In all, nearly 400,000 Africans were sold to Britain’s North American colonies
  • Many African rulers/merchants played a willing role in the Atlantic slave trade
  • African merchants, with the help of local rulers, captured Africans to be enslaved
  • They then delivered them to the Europeans in exchange for gold, guns, and other goods
  • As the slave trade grew, some African rulers voiced their opposition to the practice, but the slave trade steadily grew regardless
  • African merchants developed new trade routes to avoid rulers who refused to cooperate
  • Africans transported to the Americas were part of a transatlantic trading network known as the triangular trade
  • Over one trade route, Europeans transported manufactured goods to the west coast of Africa
  • Traders exchanged these goods for captured Africans
  • The Africans were then transported across the Atlantic and sold in the West Indies
  • Merchants bought sugar, coffee, and tobacco in the West Indies and sailed to Europe with these products
  • On another triangular route, merchants carried rum and other goods from the New England colonies to Africa
  • They exchanged their goods for Africans
  • The traders transported the Africans to the West Indies and sold them for sugar and molasses
  • They then sold these goods to rum producers in New England
  • The “triangular” trade encompassed a network of trade routes crisscrossing the northern and southern colonies, the West Indies, England, Europe, and Africa
  • The voyage that brought captured Africans to the West Indies and later to North and South America was known as the middle passage
  • In African ports, European traders packed Africans into the dark holds of large ships
  • Africans endured whippings and beatings from merchants, as well as diseases
  • Numerous Africans died from disease or physical abuse aboard the slave ships
  • Many others committed suicide by drowning
  • Scholars estimate that roughly 20% of the Africans aboard each slave ship died during the trip
  • Upon arriving in the Americas, captured Africans usually were auctioned off to the highest bidder
  • After being sold, slaves worked in mines/fields or as domestic servants
  • Many lived on little food in small, dreary huts/worked long days/suffered beatings
  • In much of the Americas, slavery was a lifelong condition, as well as a hereditary one
  • To cope with the horrors of slavery, Africans developed a way of life based on their cultural heritage
  • They kept alive such things as their musical traditions as well as the stories of their ancestors
  • Slaves also found ways to resist:
  • They made themselves less productive by breaking tools, uprooting plants, and working slowly
  • Thousands also ran away
  • Some slaves pushed their resistance to open revolt
  • Larger revolts occurred throughout Spanish settlements during the 16th century
  • In Africa, numerous culture lost generations of their fittest to European traders/plantation owners
  • Countless African families were torn apart/never reunited
  • The slave trade devastated African societies by introducing guns into the continent
  • African slaves contributed greatly to the economic and cultural development of the Americas
  • Their greatest contribution was labor
  • Colonies such as Haiti/Barbados may not have survived w/o slave labor
  • Enslaved Africans brought their expertise (especially in agriculture) and their culture
  • Their art, music, religion, and food continue to influence American societies
  • From the United States to Brazil, many of the nations of the Western Hemisphere today have substantial African-American populations
  • Many Latin American countries have sizable mixed-race populations

CHAPTER 20.4: The Columbian Exchange and Global Trade

  • The global transfer of foods, plants, and animals during the colonization of the Americas is known as the Columbian Exchange
  • The Americas brought tomatoes, squash, pineapples, tobacco, and cacao beans/animals such as the turkey
  • The most important items from the Americas: corn/potatoes
  • Supplied many essential vitamins/minerals
  • Both crops became an important/steady part of diets worldwide/were inexpensive to grow/nutritious
  • These foods helped people live longer → helped boost world population
  • Europeans introduced various livestock animals into the Americas:
  • Horses, cattle, sheep, and pigs
  • Foods from Africa (including some that originated in Asia) migrated west in European ships:
  • Bananas, black-eyed peas, and yams
  • Grains introduced to the Americas included wheat, rice, barley, and oats
  • Disease was just as much a part of the Columbian Exchange as goods/food
  • The diseases Europeans brought with them, which included smallpox and measles, led to the deaths of millions of Native Americans
  • New wealth from the Americas was coupled with a dramatic growth in overseas trade → a wave of new business/trade practices in Europe during the 16th-17th centuries
  • Capitalism: an economic system based on private ownership and the investment of resources, such as money, for profit
  • Governments were no longer the sole owners of great wealth, merchants were able to attain it through overseas colonization/trade
  • These merchants continued to invest their money in trade and overseas exploration
  • Profits from these investments enabled merchants/traders to reinvest even more money in other enterprises, causing businesses across Europe to grow/flourish
  • The increase in economic activity in Europe →  an overall increase in many nations’ money supply
  • This in turn brought on inflation, or the steady rise in the price of goods
  •  Inflation occurs when people have more money to spend/thus demand more goods and services
  • Because the supply of goods is less than the demand for them, the goods become both scarce and more valuable → prices rise
  • At this time in Europe, the costs of many goods rose
  • The joint-stock company worked much like the modern-day corporation, with investors buying shares of stock in a company/involved a number of people combining their wealth for a common purpose
  • For Europe during the 1500-1600s that common purpose was American colonization
  •  It took large amounts of money to establish overseas colonies
  • Because joint-stock companies involved numerous investors, the individual members paid only a fraction of the total colonization cost
  • If the colony failed, investors lost only their small share
  • If the colony thrived, the investors shared in the profits
  • During this time, the nations of Europe adopted a new economic policy known as mercantilism
  • Mercantilism: held that a country’s power depended mainly on its wealth
  • As a result, the goal of every nation became the attainment of as much wealth as possible
  • According to the theory of mercantilism, a nation could increase its wealth and power in two ways:
  • It could obtain as much gold and silver as possible
  • It could establish a favorable balance of trade, in which it sold more goods than it bought
  • A nation’s ultimate goal under mercantilism was to become self-sufficient, not dependent on other countries for goods
  • Mercantilism went hand in hand with colonization, for colonies played a vital role in this new economic practice
  • Aside from providing silver and gold, colonies provided raw materials that could not be found in the home country (wood/furs)
  • Colonies also provided a market
  • The economic revolution spurred the growth of towns and the rise of a class of merchants who controlled great wealth
  • While towns and cities grew in size, much of Europe’s population continued to live in rural areas
  • The majority of Europeans remained poor