age of exploration and discovery in the renaissance new empires in the east and west

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Age of Exploration and Discovery in the Renaissance New Empires in the East and West

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Page 1: Age of Exploration and Discovery in the Renaissance New Empires in the East and West

Age of Exploration and Discovery in the

Renaissance

New Empires in the East and West

Page 2: Age of Exploration and Discovery in the Renaissance New Empires in the East and West

On the Brink of a New WorldThose who had gone before…MAYBE

• Magical Kingdom of Prester John (12th century tale that a Christian kingdom existed in the East)

• Travelogues of Marco Polo (13TH century - Asia) • The Travels of John Mandeville (14th century – Supposed

adventures in the East)

Motives: God, Glory, GoldEconomic motives

• Access to the East – spices, silk, coffee• The New World of the West – gold, silver, coffee, sugar,

tobacco

National and personal pride/fameReligious Zeal

• Jesuits, Franciscans, Dominicans,

Page 3: Age of Exploration and Discovery in the Renaissance New Empires in the East and West

Means

Centralization of political authority Maps

new maps – more advanced cartography

Ships and SailingNaval technology – compass, astrolabe, back-staff, lateen (triangular) sail coupled with square sailIncreased size and structure of ships Knowledge of wind patterns

Page 4: Age of Exploration and Discovery in the Renaissance New Empires in the East and West

Ptolemy’s World Map ca. 150 A.D.

Page 5: Age of Exploration and Discovery in the Renaissance New Empires in the East and West

Ortelius - 1579

Page 6: Age of Exploration and Discovery in the Renaissance New Empires in the East and West

Mercator – 1596

Page 7: Age of Exploration and Discovery in the Renaissance New Empires in the East and West

A Seventeenth-Century World Map

Page 8: Age of Exploration and Discovery in the Renaissance New Empires in the East and West

Sundial & Compass

Page 9: Age of Exploration and Discovery in the Renaissance New Empires in the East and West

Mariner’s Astrolabe

Page 10: Age of Exploration and Discovery in the Renaissance New Empires in the East and West

Back-StaffCross-Staff

Page 11: Age of Exploration and Discovery in the Renaissance New Empires in the East and West
Page 12: Age of Exploration and Discovery in the Renaissance New Empires in the East and West

The Development of a Portuguese Maritime Empire

In Search of SpicesTravel the coast of Africa searching for all-water route

1511 – Albuquerque wants to control Malacca = destroy Arab trade & provide a way station on route to Moluccas (Spice Islands)

Reasons for SuccessExcellent naval technology

More advanced weaponry (gun ships)

Unable to maintain long-term empire abroadLacked the power as a European nation

Lacked the population necessary to expand abroad

Lacked the desire to colonize Asia

Page 13: Age of Exploration and Discovery in the Renaissance New Empires in the East and West

So why was Spain able to Succeed?

Page 14: Age of Exploration and Discovery in the Renaissance New Empires in the East and West

Map 14.1: Discoveries and Possessions in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries

Treaty of Tordesillas (1494) – decreed by Spanish pope Alexander VI, that all trade to the west go to Spain and to the east to Portugal.

Page 15: Age of Exploration and Discovery in the Renaissance New Empires in the East and West

Slaughter of the Natives

Page 16: Age of Exploration and Discovery in the Renaissance New Empires in the East and West

The Spanish Empire in the New World

Administration of the Spanish EmpireEncomienda – natives = subjects of Castile (taxed and put to work) to be protected, paid and spiritually supervised – instead they were exploited and abused

• Anton Montecino and Bartholome las Casas decry abuse• Encomienda abolished in 1542!!

Viceroys &– chief civil and military officer to the king (in Mexico City and Lima)audiencias – advisory group that also functioned as supreme judicial bodyThe Church – Spanish monarchs allowed to appoint bishops & clergy, build churches, collect fees, supervise religious orders in New World; Spanish Inquisition in Peru (1570) and Mexico (1571)

Page 17: Age of Exploration and Discovery in the Renaissance New Empires in the East and West

Consequences: intended or otherwise

In your opinion, in what way(s) did exploration of 15th and 16th centuries impact the conquerors and the conquered the most

Page 18: Age of Exploration and Discovery in the Renaissance New Empires in the East and West

Price Revolution (aka Inflation)Price revolution (a very slow “revolution”)

rise in prices = fall in value of currency Causes for the Price Revolution “Bullionism” influx of gold & silver bullion, provided primarily by Spain Increase in population also increases demand for land and food = higher prices

Who suffers from higher prices?Peasant and laborer wages rose the least = drop in standard of livingSome governments – excessive borrowing from bankers = new and higher taxes

Who benefits?Landowners and Entrepreneurs profit from higher rents, higher prices, bigger markets, and cheap labor costs

Increased Social TensionContinuing cracks in breakdown of feudal society; clergy vs. laity, nobility vs. peasantry, urban elite vs. guilds/artisans