The Age of Exploration Getting to Asia. I. Marco Polo A merchant from Venice, Italy. Traveled...

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The Age of Exploration Getting to Asia

Transcript of The Age of Exploration Getting to Asia. I. Marco Polo A merchant from Venice, Italy. Traveled...

Page 1: The Age of Exploration Getting to Asia. I. Marco Polo A merchant from Venice, Italy. Traveled overland to East Asia. Lived in China from 1275-1292. Returned.

The Age of Exploration

Getting to Asia

Page 2: The Age of Exploration Getting to Asia. I. Marco Polo A merchant from Venice, Italy. Traveled overland to East Asia. Lived in China from 1275-1292. Returned.

I. Marco Polo

A merchant from Venice, Italy.

Traveled overland to East Asia.

Lived in China from 1275-1292.

Returned with stories of the wealth and grandeur of the East.

Page 3: The Age of Exploration Getting to Asia. I. Marco Polo A merchant from Venice, Italy. Traveled overland to East Asia. Lived in China from 1275-1292. Returned.

I. Marco Polo (cont.)

His book greatly influenced Europeans to find a water route to Asia.

“I didn’t tell half of what I saw, because no one would have believed me.” – Marco Polo

Page 4: The Age of Exploration Getting to Asia. I. Marco Polo A merchant from Venice, Italy. Traveled overland to East Asia. Lived in China from 1275-1292. Returned.

II. Portugal

Convinced the best water route to Asia is going SOUTH around Africa.

1) Bartolomeu Dias – 1488.

First European to successfully round the Cape of Good Hope.

Page 5: The Age of Exploration Getting to Asia. I. Marco Polo A merchant from Venice, Italy. Traveled overland to East Asia. Lived in China from 1275-1292. Returned.

Cape of Good Hope

Page 6: The Age of Exploration Getting to Asia. I. Marco Polo A merchant from Venice, Italy. Traveled overland to East Asia. Lived in China from 1275-1292. Returned.

II. Portugal (cont.)

2) Vasco da Gama – 1497.

Rounded Africa and continued on to India.

First European to successfully sail to Asia and back.

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India

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II. Portugal (cont.)

3) Pedro Cabral – 1500

Sailed for India but drifted west of da Gama’s route.

Landed on present-day Brazil.

Claimed the land for Portugal. (Treaty of Tordesillas - 1494)

Page 9: The Age of Exploration Getting to Asia. I. Marco Polo A merchant from Venice, Italy. Traveled overland to East Asia. Lived in China from 1275-1292. Returned.

Line of Demarcation

PortugalSpain Spain

Brazil

Page 10: The Age of Exploration Getting to Asia. I. Marco Polo A merchant from Venice, Italy. Traveled overland to East Asia. Lived in China from 1275-1292. Returned.

III. Spain

Sold on the idea that the short cut to Asia was going WEST to get east.

1) Christopher Columbus – 1492

Sailed west and landed in the Bahamas; thought he was near India and China.

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Indies

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III. Spain (cont.)

Columbus would make 3 more trips.

Explored the entire Caribbean looking for a path to Asia.

Established the first European colony in the Americas on Hispaniola.

Page 13: The Age of Exploration Getting to Asia. I. Marco Polo A merchant from Venice, Italy. Traveled overland to East Asia. Lived in China from 1275-1292. Returned.

III. Spain (cont.)

2) Amerigo Vespucci – 1499, 1501.

Followed up on the voyages of Columbus.

Coined the phrase “New World.”

Americas are named after him.

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NorthAmeric

a

SouthAmerica

Old World

New Worl

d

Page 15: The Age of Exploration Getting to Asia. I. Marco Polo A merchant from Venice, Italy. Traveled overland to East Asia. Lived in China from 1275-1292. Returned.

III. Spain (cont.)

3) Vasco de Balboa – 1513.

Hacked through the jungle in Panama and reached the “South Sea.”

Claimed the sea and all surrounding lands for Spain.

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PacificOcean(a.k.a. “South Sea”)

Hispaniola

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III. Spain (cont.)

4) Ferdinand Magellan – 1519-22.

Set out to finish the voyage of Columbus.

Can you go west to get east?

First voyage to sail all the way around the world.

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First circumnavigation of

the globe

Magellan killed

Strait of Magella

n

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IV. England

Believed in the existence of a “Northwest Passage” to Asia.

1) John Cabot – 1497.

Reached the east coast of what is today Canada.

Claimed the lands for England.

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Newfoundland

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IV. England (cont.)

2) Sir Francis Drake – 1577-80.

Set out to raid Spanish settlements on the west coast of the Americas.

Traveled as far north as S.F. bay looking for west end of NW Passage.

Finished by going around the world.

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Nova Albion(New Britain)

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IV. England (cont.)

3) Henry Hudson – 1609, 1610.

Sailed in search of the N.W. Passage.

Explored Hudson River for the Dutch.

Led to the establishment of “New Amsterdam.”

Explored Hudson Bay for England.

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HudsonRiver

Hudson Bay

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V. France

Also sent explorers in search of the fabled Northwest Passage.

1) Giovanni da Verrazano – 1524.

Explored the east coast of what is now the U.S..

Claimed the land as New France.

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New France

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V. France (cont.)

2) Jacques Cartier – 1534, 1535.

Followed up Verrazano’s voyage.

Explored the St. Lawrence River.

Got as far inland as Montreal.

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Montreal

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The Americas ca. 1750