world history have out your bell work paper and spiral
TRANSCRIPT
World HistoryHAVE OUT YOUR BELL WORK PAPER AND SPIRAL.
Bell Work Week 9: Tuesday 03.17.15
Respond to the following in the space for Tuesday on your bell work paper.
Explain how to get to one of your favorite places from your house. (Give the directions on how to get there-use directions, street names, and/or landmarks)
IMPORTANT INFORMATION All Chapter 13 Tests must be made up by FRIDAY!
Chapter 14 Vocabulary Quiz Monday 3/23/15
Mid Term/CHAPTER 14 TEST : TUESDAY March 24, 2015
Table of ContentsUnit 6: Renaissance and Reformation
Reading Summary 13.1
Chapter 13 VocabularyNotes: People of the
Renaissance8-door FoldableNotes: Northern
RenaissanceReading Summary
13.2Notes: Renaissance
WritersNotes: ReformationVideo Notes Martin
LutherReading Summary
13.3Reading Summary
13.4Notes: Reformation
Unit 7: Global AgeNotes: Scientific
RevolutionVideo notes:
CopernicusReading Summary
13.5Vocabulary: Chapter
14Why Explore?ChartReading Summary
14.1 Notes: Exploration
3-2-1 Video Notes
Unit 7: Global AgeWhy Explore? ChartReading Summary 14.1Notes: Exploration3-2-1 Video notes
Table of Contents
Essential QuestionHOW DID EUROPEAN VOYAGES OF EXPLORATION LEAD TO EUROPEAN EMPIRES IN THE EASTERN HEMISPHERE?
• What were the European motivations for exploring the seas?
• Where were the Portuguese and Spanish explorations?
• How and why did the Europeans search for a direct route to Asia?
Topical Questions:
Mental Mapping On one side of your paper:
Draw a map of the school.
Label the important buildings.
Turn your paper over.
Draw a map of the world.
Label the continents and bodies of water.
Pair ShareHOW HARD WAS IT TO DRAW THE SCHOOL? HOW HARD WAS IT TO DRAW THE WORLD? WHY DO YOU THINK THE WORLD WAS HARDER TO DRAW THAN YOUR SCHOOL.
The Beginning of Our Global Age
Why Explore? Reasons to Stay: Reasons to Explore:
Dangers of Exploration: Brainstorm as many dangers as you can on your paper below your “reasons” chart in your spiral.
Why Risk Exploration?WHAT WERE THE PUSH AND PULL FACTORS OF EUROPEAN EXPLORATION?
• Flavor
• Preservation
• Medicine
• Perfume
• Introduced during Crusades. Declined during Plague.
• Demand increased
Europeans desired luxury goods from Asia, especially spices.
• Muslim traders from Asia to the Mediterranean.
• Italian merchants then brought them to European cities.
• Other Europeans realized it could be highly profitable to gain direct access to Asia.
Most spices came from a chain of islands in Southeast Asia called the Moluccas.
magnetic compass
portolan m
aps astrolabe
caravel
As Europeans sought new routes to Asia, they benefited from new or improved technology.
Exploration RacePORTUGAL VS. SPAIN
• Henry gathered cartographers, scientists, and other experts.
• They redesigned ships, trained sea captains, and prepared more accurate maps.
• Henry inspired explorers and sponsored voyages.
Portugal led the way in exploration. Under Prince Henry “The Navigator,” Portuguese expeditions sailed eastward along the coast of Africa.
Vasco de Gama later helped Portugal builda vast trading network around the Indian Ocean.
1497 – Vasco de Gama sailed around Africa and after 10 months reached India.
1488 – Bartholomeu Dias rounded the southern tip of Africa.
Henry died in 1460, but Portuguese navigators continued his quest.
In 1492, Christopher Columbus sailed westward across the Atlantic with three ships.
Columbus explored the islands of the Caribbean, which he believed to be the East Indies. Underestimated the size of the earth.
The pope set a Line of Demarcation dividing all non-European land between Portugal and Spain.
Land to the west of the line went to Spain.
Land to the east of the line went to Portugal.
In 1493, Ferdinand and Isabella (SPAIN) appealed to the pope to support their claim to all land in what Europeans referred to as the “New World.”
Early voyages of European explorers, 1487–1609
Video: European Exploration3 FACTS
2 THINGS YOU FOUND INTERESTING
1 QUESTION YOU STILL HAVE
Text Marking:
Read Silently.
Under the main idea.
Circle Vocabulary words.
Annotate in the margin
Name Class Date
By the 1400s, Europe’s demand for trade goods, especially valuable spices, was growing. The chief source of spices was the Moluccas, an island chain in present-day Indonesia. Arab and Italian merchants controlled most trade between Asia and Europe. Europeans outside Italy wanted their own access to Asia’s trade goods.
Prince Henry encouraged Portuguese sea exploration. He believed that Africa was the source of the riches the Muslim traders controlled. He also hoped to reach Asia by going along the African coast. Cartographers prepared maps for the voy- ages. In 1497, Vasco da Gama led four Portuguese ships around the southern tip of Africa. Evenually, they reached the great spice port of Calicut on the west coast of India. Soon, the Portuguese seized ports around the Indian Ocean and created a vast trading empire.
Now others looked for a sea route to Asia. The Italian navi- gator Christopher Columbus persuaded Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain to pay for his voyage. In 1492, Columbus sailed west with three small ships. When the crew finally spotted land, they thought they had reached the Indies, or Southeast Asia. What Columbus had actually found were previously unknown lands.
The Spanish rulers asked Spanish-born Pope Alexander VI to support their authority, or power, to claim the lands of this “new world.” The pope set the Line of Demarcation. This gave Spain rights to lands west of the line; Portugal had rights to lands east of the line. Both countries agreed to these terms in the Treaty of Tordesillas.
Europeans still had not found a quick sea route to Asia, however. In 1519, a Portuguese nobleman named Ferdinand Magellan sailed west from Spain to find a way to the Pacific Ocean. In 1520, he found a passageway at the southern tip of South America. Magellan was killed along the way, but the survivors of this voyage were the first to circumnavigate, or sail around, the world.
Review Questions 1. Why did European explorers seek a direct sea route to Asia?
2. Who was Vasco da Gama?
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Once you have read the summary and marked the text, answer the questions.
Independent Practice Map of Early Voyages of European Exploration
Using the map on p. 261 and any other maps in your textbook, complete the map of explorations. Be NEAT. Be ACCURATE Due Friday.