the european conquest of the americas

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The European Conquest of the Americas. Christófo Colón [1451-1506]. Columbus’ Four Voyages. Columbus’ Voyages Spanish Conquests Generally. Religious. Political. The Three G’s. Reasons. Economic. Personal. Activity. Read Columbus’ First Encounters - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The European Conquest of the Americas
Page 2: The European Conquest of the Americas
Page 3: The European Conquest of the Americas

Christófo Colón Christófo Colón [1451-1506][1451-1506]

Christófo Colón Christófo Colón [1451-1506][1451-1506]

Page 5: The European Conquest of the Americas

Columbus’ VoyagesSpanish Conquests Generally

Reasons

ReligiousPolitical

Economic Personal

The Three

G’s

Page 6: The European Conquest of the Americas

Activity

• Read Columbus’ First Encounters

– How does CC characterize/describe these natives?

– In what ways does he embody the three G’s of the Conquistador?

– What accounts for his bias towards the natives?

Page 7: The European Conquest of the Americas

Positive and Negative Effectsof Columbus’ Voyages

• Columbian Exchange• Eastern and Western

Hemisphere • Increased

colonization• Changes in gov’t,

science, religion

• Enslavement of people

• Disregard for culture• Destruction of Native

American civilizations• Diseases like small

pox, typhus, measles

• De Las Casas

Page 8: The European Conquest of the Americas
Page 9: The European Conquest of the Americas

COMPETE

• With a partner…….– Come up with as many foods that we eat

today that were part of the Columbian Exchange.

– Only rule is…..the Bubba Rule• Shrimp Salad, Shrimp Stew, Fried Shrimp, BBQ

Shrimp….you can fry it, sautee it, broil it….

Page 10: The European Conquest of the Americas

Magellan’s Route

Page 11: The European Conquest of the Americas

Global Voyages of Exploration

Page 12: The European Conquest of the Americas

The Hunt for “El Dorado”

Page 13: The European Conquest of the Americas

Fernando CortesFernando CortesFernando CortesFernando Cortes

The First Spanish The First Spanish Conquests:Conquests:The AztecsThe Aztecs

The First Spanish The First Spanish Conquests:Conquests:The AztecsThe Aztecs

Montezuma IIMontezuma IIMontezuma IIMontezuma II

vsvs..

vsvs..

Page 14: The European Conquest of the Americas

The Story

• 1519 – Cortes intrigued by stories of GOLD

• Malintzin (aka Dona Marina) – advisor to Cortes

• Montezuma and the ancient prophecy ‘light skinned god”

• Cortes used other tribes to help fight • The Death of Montezuma• The Siege of Tenochtitlan

Page 15: The European Conquest of the Americas

The Death of The Death of Montezuma IIMontezuma IIThe Death of The Death of Montezuma IIMontezuma II

Page 16: The European Conquest of the Americas

Mexico Surrenders to Mexico Surrenders to CortésCortés

Mexico Surrenders to Mexico Surrenders to CortésCortés

Page 17: The European Conquest of the Americas

Francisco Francisco PizarroPizarro

Francisco Francisco PizarroPizarro

The First Spanish The First Spanish Conquests:Conquests:

The The IncasIncas

The First Spanish The First Spanish Conquests:Conquests:

The The IncasIncas

AtahualpaAtahualpaAtahualpaAtahualpa

vsvs..

vsvs..

Page 18: The European Conquest of the Americas

The Story

• Spanish priest told Atahualpa he must convert to Christianity but refused and imprisoned

• Promised to reward Pizarro with gold and silver if released, which he agreed to but then killed Atahualpa anyway

• Pizarro easily defeated Incas (modern day Peru)

Page 19: The European Conquest of the Americas

The Three G’s: Gold (Silver)

Page 20: The European Conquest of the Americas

Spanish Conquest & Spanish Conquest & ColonizationColonization

Spanish Conquest & Spanish Conquest & ColonizationColonization

ConquistadoresPresidios

Mission

s

EncomiendaSystem

Page 21: The European Conquest of the Americas

Presidios

• Fortified bases created by the Spanish to protect against pirates and other invaders

Page 22: The European Conquest of the Americas

Missions

• Catholic church played central rol

in Spanish exploration and settlements

• Missionaries labored to convert

American Indians to christianity

Page 23: The European Conquest of the Americas

The Encomienda System

• System in Spanish America

• Indian slaves were forced to

work on huge plantation estates

• Treatment was extremely harsh

Page 24: The European Conquest of the Americas

What are England and France doing at the time?

• Northwest Passage – Western route above the North American continent in the Artic Sea area to get to Asia

• Only setting up temporary colonies at this time for trade

• Only setting up temporary colonies at this time because own country is in political turmoil

Page 25: The European Conquest of the Americas

The Middle Passage

8-12 million involved during its time

Page 26: The European Conquest of the Americas

Trans-Atlantic Slave Trans-Atlantic Slave TradeTrade

Trans-Atlantic Slave Trans-Atlantic Slave TradeTrade

Page 27: The European Conquest of the Americas

Slave ShipSlave ShipSlave ShipSlave Ship

Page 28: The European Conquest of the Americas

““Coffin” Position Coffin” Position Below DeckBelow Deck

““Coffin” Position Coffin” Position Below DeckBelow Deck

Page 29: The European Conquest of the Americas

African CaptivesAfrican CaptivesThrown OverboardThrown OverboardAfrican CaptivesAfrican Captives

Thrown OverboardThrown Overboard

Page 30: The European Conquest of the Americas

European Empires in the European Empires in the AmericasAmericas

European Empires in the European Empires in the AmericasAmericas

Page 31: The European Conquest of the Americas

The Scramble for Empire

Page 32: The European Conquest of the Americas

A Growing Divide

• During Reformation, Spain remains Catholic while England switches to Protestant back to Catholic, back to Protestant

• Vying for Religious and Political Dominance

Page 33: The European Conquest of the Americas

Reading: America: LBH

• Read LBH Pages 23-27: “The Rise of England”– Explain the interesting and unfulfilled

relationship between Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon

– What was Henry VIII not allowed to do? – Who ruled England after Mary died?– Explain what characteristics made Elizabeth a

great leader? – How does England become a world power?

Page 34: The European Conquest of the Americas

King Henry VIII – 1509-1547

Page 35: The European Conquest of the Americas

Henry’s wives

Page 36: The European Conquest of the Americas

Henry’s Surviving Children

Page 37: The European Conquest of the Americas

The Elizabethian Era

• Encourages & Sponsors numerous Explorations• Openly Protestant – growing conflict/competition

with Spain• Holds out war with France/Spain for 25 years by

holding out for marriage – Virgin Queen• 1570 – Cold war with Spain after Pope issues

decree absolving English Catholics from obedience to Elizabeth

Page 38: The European Conquest of the Americas

War with Spain

• Sir Francis Drake – Queen’s Sea Dogs– Circumnavigated globe– Explored as far as CA– Pillaged Spanish treasure ship, Cacafuego –

Emeralds of Queen’s crown

• Burned Spanish towns, looted Catholic churches• Queen Elizabeth knighted him in 1581 – open

act of defiance against Spain• 1588, Spain (financed by Pope) assembled 130

ships, 30,000 men

Page 39: The European Conquest of the Americas

England Takes Over

• Spanish Armada --- poor leadership, too big, less maneuverable

• English ships – smaller, faster• Massive storms wrecked Armada

• Victory by England broke Spain’s sea power• Long Term Issue: Inflation• English dominance over the seas = more freedom,

more colonization

Page 40: The European Conquest of the Americas

England’s Reasons

• Military: set up military bases, establish political

dominance

• Economic: need for trading posts if

found the Northwest Passage, new

trading markets with N.A.

• Population: Overcrowding, Chance at Profit,

Religious freedom

Page 41: The European Conquest of the Americas

Roanoke – The Lost Colony

• 1584 – Sir Walter Raleigh – New Foundland to

Florida - Virginia• 1585-87 – Raleigh’s 2 attempts

– 2nd attempt: John White established colony, returns to England to get more supplies

– Return delayed – War with Spain

• 1590, White returns to Roanoke – Vanished w/o trace - Croatoan

Page 42: The European Conquest of the Americas

England tries Again

• 25 years passed before England attempted colonization again

• The Charter of 1606, issued by King James I – Jamestown settlement– Joint stock company- How does it work?– 100 men recruited by London company– Many difficulties – Survival is uncertain