THE COLONIZATION OF AMERICA

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US History - Age of European Exploration and Conquest

Transcript of THE COLONIZATION OF AMERICA

  • THE COLONIZATION OF AMERICA

    Age of European Exploration and Conquest

  • THE COLONIZATION OF AMERICA

    The four major European nations that engaged in exploration and colonization during the 15th

    and 16th centuries were Portugal, Spain, France, and England. During the 15th and 16th

    centuries, European nations engaged in exploration of the world. This is era is now known as the

    Age of Discovery. The progress in the technology of navigation played a big role in this

    movement. In past ages, Europeans thought that the earth was flat. The theories showing that the

    Earth was round and improved navigation techniques such as the introduction of the compass

    and astrolabe, allowed for more freedom of movement. The most significant motivation for

    European exploration was economic: they wanted to find a sea route to India to lower the prices

    for shipments of spices and find a more reliable way to import spices after the fall of

    Constantinople to the Ottoman Turks. Another important role was due to Religious reasons.

    The European countries of Spain and Portugal were the first to begin voyages of exploration. The

    Portuguese Prince Henry the Navigator was involved in the first voyages of explorations. Henry

    sent several expeditions trying to find an alternative road to India along the West African coast.

    Meanwhile, Christopher Columbus of Spain with the support of the Spanish Queen Isabelle tried

    to reach India by sailing westwards. He set sail from the port of Palos in Spain August 3 1492.

    He reached the Bahamas Islands on October 12, falsely believing that he had reached the East

    Indies. Amerigo Vespucci took part in several expeditions on the eastern coast of South America

    from 1499 to 1502. During these voyages he realized that Columbus had in fact discovered an

    entire continent. Vasco da Gama was the first European to reach India through sea. This

    discovery was very impactful and paved the way for the Portuguese to establish a long lasting

    colonial empire in Asia.

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    Under Spain, the Aztecs and the Incas were conquered by conquistadors like Hernando Cortez

    and the Pizarro brothers. The Divisions within Indian empires and the devastation of native

    populations by European diseases aided the Spanish in these conquests. Juan Ponce de Len was

    a Spanish explorer and conquistador, who conquered Puerto Rico. The 15th and 16th century

    voyages of discovery brought Europe, Africa, and the Americas into direct contact, producing an

    exchange of foods, animals, and diseases that is known as the Columbian Exchange.

    John Cabot was an Italian navigator and explorer whose 1497 discovery of Newfoundland

    under the commission of Henry VII of England is commonly thought to have been the

    first European encounter with the mainland of North America since the Vikings visits to

    Vinland in the 11th century.

    Other European powers decided to initiate their own voyages of exploration, after hearing of the

    steady flow of money and treasures that began to enrich Spain and Portugal. England, France and

    the Netherlands sent expeditions and began to establish colonies in America, Asia and Africa.

    Competition between these powers to impose their supremacy on colonies and trade routes

    resulted in long and repetitive wars between these powers. By the end of the 16th century France,

    England and the Netherlands were competing with Spain and Portugal for supremacy. The death

    of King Sebastian I of Portugal in 1578, led to the Portuguese succession crisis of 1580 which

    allowed Philip II of Spain to unite the two kingdoms under the rule of the Spanish kings. He

    neglected the Portuguese colonies and declared war to England.

    This conflict resulted in the disastrous destruction of a large part of the Spanish fleet in 1588

    which marked the end of the Spanish colonial supremacy. In 1602, the Dutch East India

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    Company was established; it gave the Netherlands control over most of the Portuguese colonies,

    and was able to establish a colonial empire based on trade with Southern Asia. In 1621, the

    Netherlands established some colonies in Brazil and North America.

    The English and the French began establishing colonies in different parts of the world at the

    beginning of the 17th century. Elizabeth I, apprehensive that Spain posed threats to English

    economic and military security decided to challenge Spain more aggressively. English merchants

    in search of new markets and new land lent increasing support to colonization as well.

    England tried to establish trading posts in India and along the Persian Gulf as well as establishing

    colonies in North America. England and the Netherlands engaged in a series of wars that

    weakened the Netherlands and England emerged as the predominant naval power in Europe. In

    1601 France establishing a number of trading posts on the eastern and western coasts of India.

    The French turning their attention toward the New World founded many colonies in Canada and

    Atlantic coast. France and England were allies against the Netherlands in The Third Anglo-

    Dutch.

    The three distinct forms of European colonization in the New World were empires of conquest,

    commerce, and settlement. While, Spain regarded the Indians as a usable labor force, France

    treated the Indians primarily as trading partners. The English adopted a policy known as

    plantation settlement: which was the removal of the indigenous population and its replacement

    with native English and Scots.

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    Frances New World Empire was based largely on the fur trade along the St. Lawrence River and

    the interior, where the French constructed forts, missions, and trading posts. The French

    relationships with Indians were less violent than the Spanish or English. Religious persecution

    also motivated English colonization. Some 30,000 English Puritans immigrated to New England,

    Maryland became a refuge for Roman Catholics and Pennsylvania, southern New Jersey, and

    Rhode Island, were haven for Quakers.

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    References

    (2014, September 17). Colonial conflicts and competition between European countries

    Retrieved from:

    http://www.kronoskaf.com/syw/index.php?title=Colonial_conflicts_and_competition_between_

    European_countries#European_voyages_of_exploration

    (2014, September 20). Overview of the Colonial Era: Digital History ID 2909

    Retrieved from: http://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/era.cfm?eraid=2

    James West Davidson, Brian DeLay, Christine Leigh Heyrman and Mark Lytle, (2011) US: A

    Narrative History Volume 1 to 1865, McGraw-Hill Humanities/Social Sciences/Languages; 6

    edition