Portuguese- Leader in Age of Exploration

Contributed by:
Steve
This booklet covers the basic history of the Portuguese and how they influence the age of exploration. It also depicts the aspects of that period and also conditions prevailing in that region.
1. AGE OF EXPLORATION
2. EUROPE IN 1400’S
 European population had increased
 Demand for Eastern goods is high
 Most valued items were spices
 Major source of spices was the
Moluccas, an island chain in
present-day Indonesia
 Europeans will call them the Spice
Islands
3. MOLUCCA’S SPICES
 PEPPER
 CLOVES
 NUTMEG
 CINNAMON
4. MOTIVES FOR SEEKING
SPICES
 Explorers want to find new trade
routes to spices-Spice trade
dominated by Italian and Muslim
traders (land routes)
 Europeans wanted to cut out the
“Middleman” in Spice trade
 Europeans wanted to convert non-
Christians to Christianity
 Wanted to learn about new lands
5. TECHNOLOGY
 CARTOGRAPHERS—created more accurate
maps and sea charts
 ASTROLABE—find ship’s latitude at sea
 MAGNETIC COMPASS—used to determine
direction
 SEXTANT—used to determine altitude of the
sun or stars which could find latitude
 CARAVEL—Portuguese ship design that used
square sails and lateen (triangular) sails
 STERNPOST RUDDER—steering the ship
6.
7.
8.
9. PORTUGUESE: LEADER IN AGE
OF EXPLORATION
 Prince Henry (the Navigator) wanted to
find source of African gold, share in the
slave trade and start a crusade with the
Muslims in Africa—rumor was that Prestor
John had built Christian kingdom in Africa
 Established school of navigation at Sagres
 Portuguese will discover Madeira, Azores,
Cape Verde and Canary Islands
 First to bring slaves from Africa to Europe
in 1441
10. Portuguese Exploration
cont.
 By 1471 Portuguese in control of West
African trade in gold— (Gold Coast)
 1488 Bartholomeu Dias will be the
first to round the tip of southern Africa
(Cape of Storms)
 Returned to Portugal to report finding
route around Africa to King John II—
renamed Cape of Storms the Cape of
Good Hope
11.  In 1497 Vasco da Gama will be the
first to sail around Africa then all the
way to India
 Voyage was very profitable—starts
the Portuguese Empire in Asia
12. SPANISH EXPLORATION
 In 1492 Christopher Columbus
(Italian) will be given 3 ships by
Isabella and Ferdinand of Spain
 Believed he could sail West to
reach the East
 Problems included underestimation of
the circumference of the earth and no
knowledge of North and South America
13.
14. COLUMBUS’ VOYAGE
 Set sail on August 3, 1492 and will
reach San Salvador (Bahamas) on
October 12, 1492
 Believed he had reached the East
Indies but had “discovered” the West
Indies (New World)
 Columbus called the natives Indians
(why?)--first Europeans to be
introduced to tobacco
 Never found the vast amounts of gold
or spices
15. PORTUGAL AND SPAIN DISPUTE
 Spain and Portugal
disputed each others
claims
 Pope Alexander VI
settled dispute by
drawing up Line of
Demarcation
 Treaty of
Tordesillas moved
line further West
which gave Portugal
Brazil
16. OTHER EXPLORERS
 Pedro Cabral (Portugal) landed in Brazil
and claimed area for Portugal
 Amerigo Vespucci (Italian) will say that
Columbus had discovered a New World—
German mapmakers will name new lands
Americas
 Vasco de Balboa will cross the Isthmus of
Panama—discover South Seas (Pacific
Ocean)
 Juan Ponce de Leon will seek the mythical
“Fountain of Youth”—explored Florida
17. VOYAGE OF MAGELLAN
 Ferdinand Magellan will be the leader
of the voyage that will be the first to
circumnavigate the earth
 Renamed the South Sea the Pacific
Ocean
 Many sailors suffered from scurvy, a
disease caused by a lack of vitamin C
 Encountered islands that he called the
Philippines where he gets killed
18.
19.
20. SEARCH FOR NORTHWEST
PASSAGE
 Other European nations (England, France,
Dutch) will ignore Treaty of Tordesillas
 Explorers searching for Northwest Passage
an all water route through North America
 John Cabot (Italian) sailing for the English
explored the N. American coast from
Delaware to Newfoundland (basis for
England’s claim to N. America)
 Henry Hudson (English) sailing for the
Dutch explored river and bay that bears his
name
21.
22.  Giovanni de Verrazano (Italian)
sailing for the French explored the N.
American coast from the Carolinas to
Nova Scotia
23.  Jacques Cartier (Frenchman) sailing
for the French sailed up the St.
Lawrence River claiming the area for
France
24. PORTUGUESE EMPIRE
 Six months after Da Gama’s return the
Portuguese sent their fleet to India
 Portuguese interested in obtaining spices
 Arab (Muslim) traders tried to resist but
Portuguese had mounted cannons on ships
 In 1509 Afonso de Albuquerque, Portugal’s
most able naval commander, began to
establish Portugal’s empire in Asia (small
trading posts)
 Will use brutal and ruthless methods to gain
control of area—wanted to control the strait of
Malacca, gateway to the Spice Islands—
control spice trade for over 100 years
25.
26.  Portuguese will face stiff competition for the
spice trade—France, England and the Dutch
were all seeking footholds in Asia
 Dutch will be the most successful—
established Dutch East India Company
 First multinational corporation—first to
sell stocks—could wage wars, sign treaties,
coin money, and imprison and execute
 Dutch will attack Portuguese ships at every
opportunity—eventually replaced the
Portuguese in controlling spice trade
 French and English will concentrate
efforts in India—will become rivals in Asia
27. SPAINS CONQUEST OF THE
 Spanish
AMERICAS
quickly settled the islands of
the Caribbean (Hispaniola, Cuba and
Puerto Rico)—Cuba became the
jumping off point for exploration of the
New World
 Relationship with native population
changed—began to exploit the natives
 Spanish crown granted conquistadors,
conquerors the right to establish
outposts in the New World
 Motto became “God, glory and gold”
28.
29. CONQUEST OF THE AZTECS
 Expeditions sent out by governor, Diego
Valasquez, from Cuba to explore Yucatan and
Gulf of Mexico
 Hernan Cortez was commissioned to explore,
trade, and search for Christian captives—one
of the first conquistadors or conquerors
 Set sail from Cuba on Feb. 18, 1519—several
artillery pieces, 16 horsemen, 500 or so
infantry
 Upon landing Cortez founded city of Villa Rica
de la Vera Cruz—goal became conquest of
Mexico
30. Given young native woman named Malinche who will
serve as his translator, advisor and later his mistress
Learned that many conquered natives hated the
Aztecs because they practiced human sacrifice—main
god was Huitzilopochtli, who symbolized the sun
blazing at high noon
The sun, the source of all life, had to be kept moving
in its orbit if darkness was not to overtake the world
To keep it moving the Aztecs believed it must be fed
precious fluids----human blood
Aztec leader was Moctezuma (II)—thought Cortes
was Quetzalcoatl, Aztec god
31.
32.  Cortes and his men allowed to enter
the capital of Tenochtitlan
 Relationship quickly broke down and
Moctezuma was taken prisoner by
Spanish
 Aztecs rose up against Spanish—
Moctezuma killed and Spanish forced
to flee the city
 Later returned with allies and
destroyed the city—Mexico City built
and became capital of New Spain
33.
34.
35.  Francisco Pizarro will be inspired
by Cortes
 Will search for the Inca Civilization
in Peru (Andes Mountains)
 Arrived in 1532 and the Inca were
just recovering from a civil war
 Inca leader was Atahualpa who
will be taken prisoner and held for
ransom (13,420 pounds of gold
and 26,000 pounds of silver)
 Later murdered after paying
ransom
 Inca capital of Cuzco was taken—
Pizarro later killed by own men
36.
37. OTHER SPANISH
CONQUISTADORS
 Francisco Coronado will lead
expedition in search of El Dorado—
first Europeans to see the Grand
Canyon and the Great Plains
 Hernando de Soto explored the
Southeastern United States in search
of gold—first Europeans to see the
Mississippi River
38.
39.
40. REASONS FOR SPANISH
SUCCESS AGAINST NATIVE
POPULATION
 Superior military technology—horse,
cannons, muskets, and armor/metal
helmets
 Division and discontent among Natives—
Spanish used hatred of conquered natives
against Aztecs and Incas
 Diseases severely weakened natives—small
pox, chicken pox, measles etc.
 Aztec and Inca convinced that the world
was ending—gods had abandoned them—
some will still resist
41.
42. SPANISH EMPIRE OF THE
AMERICAS
 Spanish empire stretched from
California to South America—divided in
to 5 provinces—New Spain (Mexico)
and Peru were the most important
 Monarchy set up the Council of the
Indies to pass laws for the colonies
(located in Spain)
 Viceroys ruled colonies in the
monarchs name
43.  RCC played major role in the Spanish
colonies—converting natives to
Christianity was very important to
Spain
 Missionaries (Jesuits, Franciscans,
Dominicans) baptized natives whether
they wanted it or not
 RCC tried to change the culture of
Native Americans (Spanish language
and western clothing etc.)
 Served the government and regulated
activities of Spanish settlers
44.  Strict regulation of economies of colonies
 Colonies could only export items to
Spain and could buy only Spanish
goods (could not trade with other
European countries or colonies in the
Americas)
 Spanish introduced sugar cane to West
Indies (sugar, molasses, and rum)
 Grown on plantations (large estates run
by an owner or overseer) which required
many workers
 Cruel labor practices caused the death of
many natives
45.  Spanish government granted settlers
encomiendas (the right to demand
labor or tribute from Native Americans)
 Used system to enslave Native
Americans which caused population
decline (mines and plantations)
 Bartolome de las Casas, Dominican
priest condemned the treatment of
natives—pleaded for laws to protect
them
 New Laws of the Indies passed in
1542 which allowed natives to grow
crops and own cattle
46.  Native Americans forced to become
peons, workers forced to labor for
landlord in order to pay off their debts
 Las Casas encouraged the importation
of Africans to fill labor shortage—1)
immune to tropical diseases 2) had
skills in farming, mining and metal
working 3) accustomed to working
in heat
 Las Casas later regretted suggestion
and worked hard to help Africans
47. NEW SOCIAL ORDER IN THE
SPANISH COLONIES
 Peninsulares—Spanish born in Spain will
dominate New Spain
 Creoles—Spanish born in the New World—
parents were peninsulares
 Mestizos—were of Native American and
Spanish ancestry
 Mulattoes—were of African and Spanish
ancestry
 Zamboes were of African and Native ancestry
 Not many Spanish women came to New World
48. PORTUGUESE IN THE NEW
WORLD
 Settlers exploited the land
 Brazil wood exported
 Settlers turned to plantation agriculture
(sugar cane and cattle raising)
 Millions of Africans sent to Brazil—
more sent to Brazil than any other
colony in New World
 New culture developed which blended
Portuguese, African and Native American
49. NORTH AMERICAN
COLONIZATION
50.  England, France and Dutch Netherlands
will take very little interest in North
America in the 1500s (lack of gold/silver)
 Unable to find Northwest Passage
 Dutch under the Dutch West India
Company will establish colony called New
Netherlands
 Peter Minuit is named governor—great
land purchase—Manhattan Island
 Dutch granted large estates to patroons,
wealthy landowners—eventually lost
colony to English (New York)
51.  French concentrated on
economic benefit of new lands
 Furs were in demand in
Europe (beaver)
 Also exploited fishing areas
 First permanent settlement
established by Samuel de
Champlain at Quebec in 1608
 Government did not
encourage settlement—only
Catholics allowed to come
to New France
 DID NOT WANT THE LAND
52.  Joliet and Marquette will map a
route from Lake Michigan to the
Mississippi River
 La Salle will reach the mouth of the
Mississippi River claiming the area
for France and naming it Louisiana
53. ENGLISH SETTLEMENT IN THE
NEW WORLD
 Established the first permanent colony at
Jamestown in 1607—English
government encouraged settlement
and population grew quickly
 Colonists came to escape religious
persecution and a chance for a better
life
 English settlers wanted the land—
constant strife between natives and
colonists
54.  Bitterrivalry developed between the
English and the French—war will
erupt and both sides used Native
American tribes to help them fight
 The Seven Years’ War or French
and Indian War was the most
famous
55. IMPACT OF COLONIZATION
 Native Americans taught settlers
about planting and growing crops—
taught them how to hunt and trap
 Trappers adopted Native American
clothing and married native women
 Europeans cheated Native
Americans out of their land,
introduced them to alcoholic drinks
and swindled them in trades
56. ATLANTIC SLAVE TRADE
(Triangular Trade)
 Plantations (sugar, tobacco, and later
cotton) needed large supplies of workers to
make them profitable—Native American pop.
declined rapidly so Africans were brought in
 Slavery in the Americas based largely on
race and became hereditary—Africans were
viewed as naturally inferior by Europeans
 Became known as Atlantic Slave Trade—
estimated that between 9.5 to 11million
Africans imported
57.
58.
59.  African rulers and merchants were
willing to participate in slave trade
(little difference in selling to Westerners
instead of Muslims)
 African slavers captured other
Africans and brought them to the coast
where they were purchased by Europeans
(Europeans forbidden to go inland to
capture slaves themselves)
 Slaves exchanged for guns, gold and
other goods
60.
61. MIDDLE PASSAGE
 The voyage of African slaves to the
Americas known as the Middle Passage
 It made up part of what is called the
Transatlantic Slave Triangle
 Characterized by sickening cruelty and
brutality—whippings and beatings were
common—seasickness and other
diseases devastated the slaves on their
journey (floating coffins)
 Estimated that 20% of slaves died on way
62.
63. African Diaspora
 Resulted from the forced migration of
millions of slaves (West Africa) mostly to
North America and South America
 Diaspora of their culture, food traditions,
and languages
 Colonization resulted in a mixing of the
biota of Eurasia, Africa, and the Americas
 Plant and animal species indigenous to a
given place or region transferred
64. Virgin Soil Epidemic
 When a disease is first introduced to a
place or region in which it had not been
previously known, the people indigenous
to that place have little or no acquired
immunity to that disease
 Virgin soil-epidemics of diseases such as
small pox and measles among Native
Americans killed at least 90% of the
native population between 1500-1700
65. Impact of Slavery
 Destroyed culture of many African societies
—lost generations of the strongest and ablest
African men and women—many claim this is
the reason for under-development of Africa
today
 Caused depopulation of areas of Western
Africa
 Fueled conflict on the continent that still has
lasting effects today
 The stigma of slavery has been difficult to
erase in the modern world
66. END OF SLAVERY
 Between 1807-1820, most European
nations abolished the slave trade
 Slavery itself will not be abolished until
a few decades later (no new slaves
were legally imported from Africa)
 Those already enslaved in Europe and
New World continued to be enslaved
 In some cases freed slaves returned to
Africa (Liberia)
67. MODERN SLAVERY
 There are more people in slavery now than in
any other time in history. (27 million)
 The value of slaves has decreased.
 Slavery still exist in the United States. (1
million)
 Human trafficking has recently been described
as “the fastest growing criminal enterprise in
the world” (7 billion dollars a year)
 The least known method of slavery is the most
widely used. (Bonded slavery—debt)
 Average cost of a slave is $90.00
68. COLUMBIAN EXCHANGE
 Columbus started a vast global exchange
 Plants, animals, people, technology and
disease were exchanged
 New foods brought from Americas to
Europe included tomato, sweet potato,
pumpkins, squash, beans, pineapples and
peppers—tobacco and cacao (chocolate)
 Corn and potato were the most important
 Asia and Africa also shared in the Columbian
Exchange as new foods were introduced
69.  Europe to Americas wheat, melons,
grapes, rice, barley, peaches, pears
and olives
 From Asia and Africa the Europeans
brought banana, sugar cane, coconut
palms and coffee bean
 Europeans brought the horse, cows,
pigs, goats, chickens, sheep and honey
bee to Americas
 Diseases brought to Americas included
small pox, influenza, measles, malaria
 Americas sent syphilis
70.
71. COMMERCIAL REVOLUTION
 Economic changes caused inflation, a
rapid rise in prices linked to a sharp
increase in the amount of money available
 Causes—population grew and the
demand for goods and services rose—
goods became scarce so prices rose (law
of supply/demand)
 Also caused by increased flow of silver and
gold into Europe from the Americas—more
money in circulation
72.  Expanded trade and the push for
overseas empires spurred the growth
of capitalism, the investment of
money to make a profit
 New business men called
entrepreneurs, people willing to take
business risks in the hope of making a
profit expanded into overseas ventures
 Risky business because of piracy and
shipwrecks
 Capitalists developed new ways to
create wealth
73.  From Arabs they adapted methods of
bookkeeping to show profits and loses
 Developed insurance to reduce the risk of
financial disaster
 Joint-stock companies allowed people to
pool large amounts of capital, money to
invest into overseas ventures
 Partnerships formed so people would not
lose all their money in investment
 Capitalists diversified their investments
 Developed the putting out system or
domestic system (goods produced in the
countryside)
74. MERCANTILISM
 New economic system—stresses
system—stresses exporting more than a country imports (don’t buy from enemies)
 Wealth is measured in terms of commodities, especially gold and silver,
silver, rather than in terms of productivity and income-producing investments
 Make country self-sufficient—
self-sufficient—colonies very important to mother country 1) provide raw materials 2) provided closed markets for mother country’s manufactured goods 3) regulate economy 4) nations imposed tariffs,
tariffs, taxes on imports
 very important for the benefit of mother country 1) provide raw materials 2) provided closed markets for mother country’s manufactured goods 3) regulate economy 4) nations imposed tariffs,
tariffs, taxes on imports