ONE EUROPEAN’S STORYPope Alexander VI had an important decision to make.
In 1493, the rulers of Spain and Portugal wanted him
to decide who would control the lands that European
sailors were exploring. Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain
expected Alexander VI to give Spain the rights over
many of these lands. But King John II of Portugal
claimed territories, too. What would the new pope do?
In May 1493, Alexander VI issued his ruling. He drew
an imaginary line around the world. It was called the Line
of Demarcation. Portugal could claim all non-Christian
lands to the east of the line. Spain could claim the non-
Christian lands to the west. In this section, you will learn
how Spain and Portugal led Europe in the race to gain
colonies in the Americas.
European Exploration of the Americas 61
11
MAIN IDEA WHY IT MATTERS NOW
Spain Claims an EmpireSpain Claims an Empire
TERMS & NAMESTreaty of
Tordesillas
missionary
mercantilism
Amerigo Vespucci
conquistador
Hernando Cortés
Montezuma
Francisco PizarroSpain claimed a large empire in the Americas.
The influence of Spanish cultureremains strong in modern America.
Spain and Portugal CompeteKing John II was unhappy with the pope’s placement of the line. Hebelieved that it favored Spain. So he demanded that the Spanish rulers meetwith him to change the pope’s decision. In June 1494, the two countriesagreed to the Treaty of Tordesillas (TAWR•day•SEEL•yahs). This treatymoved the Line of Demarcation more than 800 miles farther west.
The change eventually allowed Portugal to claim much of easternSouth America, which later became the Portuguese colony of Brazil.After making this agreement, Spain and Portugal increased their voyagesof exploration in search of wealth, power, and glory.
European countries had three main goals during this age of explo-ration. First, they wanted to spread Christianity beyond Europe. Eachexpedition included missionaries, or people sent to convert the nativepeoples to Christianity. Second, they wanted to expand their empires.Third, they wanted to become rich.
By increasing their wealth, European countries could gain power andsecurity. An economic system called mercantilism describes how
Line ofDemarcation(1493)
Pope Alexander VI Treaty ofTordesillas(1494)
Europeans enriched their treasuries. (See Economics in History, above.)Colonies helped nations do this in several ways. They provided mines thatproduced gold and silver. They also produced goods such as crops thatcould be traded for gold and silver. Finally, they served as a market for thehome country. The search for riches spurred European exploration.
Europeans Explore Foreign LandsAfter Columbus’s first voyage, many explorers went to sea. AmerigoVespucci (vehs•POO•chee) was one of the first. He was an Italian sailorwho set out in 1501 to find a sea route to Asia. Vespucci realized that theland he saw on this voyage was not Asia. A German mapmaker wasimpressed by Vespucci’s account of the lands, so he named the continent“America” after him.
Another famous explorer was the Spaniard Vasco Núñez de Balboa.Balboa heard Native American reports of another ocean. In 1513, he ledan expedition through the jungles of Panama and reached the PacificOcean. Raising his sword, Balboa stepped into the surf and claimed theocean and all the lands around it for Spain. (See page 59.)
Perhaps no explorer was more capable than the Portuguese sailorFerdinand Magellan. He proposed to reach Asia by sailing west aroundSouth America. The Spanish king agreed to fund Magellan’s voyage.
In 1519, Magellan set out from Spain with five ships and about 240
62 CHAPTER 2
MercantilismThe main goal of mercantilism was to increase the money in acountry’s treasury by creating a favorable balance of trade. A country had a favorable balance of trade if it had more exportsthan imports. Colonies helped a country have the goods to maintain a favorable balance of trade.
For example, say Spain sold $500 in sugar to France, and Francesold $300 in cloth to Spain. France would also have to pay Spain $200worth of precious metals to pay for all the sugar. Spain would thenhave a favorable balance of trade because the value of its exports(sugar) was greater than the value of its imports (cloth). Spain wouldbecome richer because of the precious metals it received from France.
CONNECT TO HISTORY1. Finding Main Ideas Under
mercantilism, what did acountry need to do to becomerich? Discuss the way coloniesenriched a country according tomercantilism.
See Skillbuilder Handbook, page R5.
CONNECT TO TODAY2. Making Inferences Think
about your own family budget.What do you think wouldhappen if your family collectedless money than it paid forgoods for several years? Do youthink this situation would bethe same for a nation as itwould for a family?
For more about mercantilism . . .
RESEARCH LINKSCLASSZONE .COM
Vocabularycolony: a regionor people that ispolitically andeconomically con-trolled byanother country
France
Spain
Sugar$500
Gold & Silver$200
Cloth$300
men. After a stormy passage around South America, Magellan enteredthe Pacific Ocean. For several months his crew crossed the Pacific, suf-fering great hardship. A member of the crew described what they ate.
A VOICE FROM THE PAST
We were three months and twenty days without . . . fresh food. We atebiscuit, which was no longer biscuit, but powder of biscuits swarming withworms. . . . We drank . . . water that had been putrid for many days.
Antonio Pigafetta, quoted in The Discoverers
Eventually, Magellan reached the Philippines, where he becameinvolved in a local war and was killed. But his crew traveled on. In 1522,the one remaining ship arrived back in Spain. The sailors in Magellan’screw became the first people to sail around the world.
The Invasion of MexicoWhile Magellan’s crew was sailing around the world, the Spanish begantheir conquest of the Americas. Soldiers called conquistadors(kahn•KWIHS•tuh•DAWRZ), or conquerors, explored the Americas andclaimed them for Spain. Hernando Cortés was one of these conquista-dors. He landed on the Central American coast with 508 men in 1519.
The Spanish arrival shook the Aztec Empire, which dominated mostof Mexico. The Aztec emperor Montezuma feared that Cortés had been
A. Finding MainIdeas What were the maincontributions ofVespucci, Balboa,and Magellan as explorers?A. AnswerVespucci was thefirst to realizethat the Americaswere not Asia.Balboa reachedthe Pacific bycrossing Panama.Magellan led anexpedition thattravelled aroundthe world.
N O R T HA M E R I C A
S O U T HA M E R I C A
A F R I C A
EUROPEFRANCE
CUBA HISPANIOLA
CANARYISLANDS
MADEIRA
AZORESSPAIN
PORTUGAL
ENGLAND
Tenochtitlán(Mexico City)
St. Augustine
Santa Fe
Santo DomingoVeracruz
A T L A N T I CO C E A N
G u l f o fM e x i c o
C a r i b b e a nS e a
P A C I F I CO C E A N
Verrazzano 1524
1534
Cabot 1497
Balboa1510–1513
Pizarro1530–1533
Ponce de León1512–1513
Columbus 1502–1504
Mag
ella
n15
19Cabr
al15
00
Cabrillo1542–1543
Coronado 1540–1542
Cabeza de Vaca 1528–1536
De Soto1539–1542
Magellan's Crew
1522
Cortés 1519
Vesp
ucci
1499–1500
1535–
1536 Cartier
1501–1502
120˚
W
0˚40˚W
80˚W
40˚ N
Tropic of Cancer
0˚ Equator
0
0
1,000 Miles
2,000 Kilometers
SpanishExplorers’ Routes
FrenchEnglishAztec Empire,1519Inca Empire,1525
Portuguese
SkillbuilderAnswers1. Eight2. North America
GEOGRAPHY SKILLBUILDERInterpreting Maps1. Movement How many years did it
take Cabeza de Vaca to travel fromFlorida to Central Mexico?
2. Region Which continent did theEnglish and French explore?
63
European Exploration of the Americas, 1500–1550
sent by an Aztec god to rule Mexico. Montezuma sent Cortés gifts—including two disks of solid gold and silver—to get him to leave. But thegifts only excited Spanish dreams of riches.
The Spaniards marched inland and formed alliances (agreementswith friendly peoples) with the native peoples who hated Aztec rule.After a few months, Cortés reached the Aztec capital, Tenochtitlán(teh•NAWCH•tee•TLAHN). Montezuma received Cortés with great cer-emony and housed the conquistadors in a magnificent palace. But Cortéstook Montezuma captive and tried to rule the Aztec Empire by givingcommands through Montezuma. The Aztecs rebelled.
The Aztecs surrounded the Spaniards and their allies in their head-quarters in Tenochtitlán. On the night of June 30, 1520, the Spaniardstried to sneak out of the city, but the Aztecs discovered them and viciousfighting broke out. About 800 Spaniards and more than 1,000 of theirallies were killed that night. The Spaniards later called the event LaNoche Triste (lah NAW•cheh TREES•teh)—the Sad Night.
Despite this defeat, the Spaniards and their allies regrouped. In May1521, Cortés led his forces back to Tenochtitlán. At this point, theSpaniards got help from an invisible ally. Many Aztecs fell victim to anoutbreak of smallpox, which severely weakened their ranks. The germs
BackgroundOne of the people whomCortés broughtinto his groupwas Malintzin.She was thedaughter of alocal chief andserved as an interpreter for Cortés.
Which man would you prefer to have as leader of your country? Why?
64 CHAPTER 2
HERNANDO CORTÉS
1485–1547
Hernando Cortés was born in Spain to anoble but poor family. In 1504, at the age of 19, he sailed to the Americas to seek his fortune. Although hebecame a wealthy land-owner in Cuba, he was notsatisfied. “I have come towin gold,” he said, “not toplow the fields like apeasant.” His greatchance came when hewas picked to leadthe expedition toMexico. Strong-willed, shrewd,and cruel, Cortéssucceeded againstgreat odds.
MONTEZUMA
1466–1520
Montezuma, ruler of the Aztec Empire, rose tothe throne in 1502. Eloquent and wise, hiswords carried weight with his subjects.
According to Juan de Tovar,a Jesuit, “When he spoke, hedrew the sympathy of othersby his subtle phrases and . . .by his profound reasoning.”
Montezuma lived in greatluxury, receiving officials
and commoners alikeat his lavish palace.His subjects treatedhim almost as a godand were notallowed to look athim. Though brutalat times, he wassaid to be a just andeffective ruler.
that caused this disease had been brought toAmerica by the Europeans.
Cortés placed Tenochtitlán under siege forthree months. When Tenochtitlán finally fell,the Aztec Empire lay in ruins. An Aztec poetdescribed the scene.
A VOICE FROM THE PAST
Broken spears lie in the roads; we have torn our hairin our grief. The houses are roofless now, and theirwalls are red with blood. . . . We have pounded ourhands in despair against the adobe walls, for ourinheritance, our city, is lost and dead.
Aztec poet, quoted in Seeds of Change
On the rubble of the Aztec capital, the Spanish builtMexico City. Over time, the populations and cultures ofSpain and Mexico merged and produced a new society, that of the present-day nation of Mexico.
The Conquest of the Incan EmpireDespite the fall of the Aztecs, a people called the Inca still had a powerfulempire centered in the Cuzco Valley in what is now Peru. By 1525, the Incaruled a 2,000-mile-long territory in the Andes Mountains along the west-ern coast of South America. The Inca also possessed much gold and silver.
Native American stories of Incan wealth reached the Spanish. In1531, a conquistador named Francisco Pizarro led an expedition of 180men into Peru. Like the Aztecs, the Incas feared that the Spanish mightbe gods. The Incan emperor Atahualpa (AH•tuh•WAHL•puh) orderedhis troops not to fight. Then he went to meet the conquistadors. TheSpanish attacked quickly. They killed thousands of Incas and tookAtahualpa captive. In an attempt to free himself, the Incan emperor gavethe Spanish a treasure of gold. The Spaniards strangled him anyway.
With Atahualpa dead, the Incan Empire collapsed. Having beenordered by Atahualpa not to fight, the Incas refused to defend them-selves even after his death. Then Pizarro took control of this area forSpain. The Spanish called the area Peru.
Reasons for Spanish VictoriesPeople have long been amazed that the great Aztec and Incan empiresfell to such small groups of Spanish conquistadors. But Spanish successcan be explained by four major reasons.
1. The spread of European diseases killed millions of NativeAmericans and weakened their resistance to conquest.
2. The Spanish were excellent soldiers and sailors. They also had superior weapons, such as guns, that helped them defeat much larger Native American armies.
European Exploration of the Americas 65
Vocabularysiege: surround-ing of a city
C. DrawingConclusions Whydid the IncanEmpire fall to the Spanish?C. Answer TheIncas feared thatthe Spaniardsmight be gods.The Inca warriorsrefused to defendthemselvesbecause Atahualpahad ordered themnot to fight.
This Aztec maskrepresentsQuetzalcoatl,the god thatMontezumafeared had sent Cortés.
B. Reading a MapUse the map onpage 63 to findthe Incan Empire.
66 CHAPTER 2
2. Taking NotesReview the section and findfour events to place on atime line that shows howSpain built its empire.
Which event do you think isthe most important? Why?
3. Main Ideasa. Why did Europeansexplore different territories?
b. Why did Spain succeed in conquering so much of the Americas?
c. What was significantabout the Magellan expedition?
4. Critical ThinkingComparing What was similar about the conquestsof Mexico and Peru?
THINK ABOUT• the conquistadors• the Incan and Aztec leaders
1. Terms & NamesExplain the
significance of:• Treaty of Tordesillas• missionary• mercantilism• Amerigo Vespucci• conquistador• Hernando Cortés• Montezuma• Francisco Pizarro
Section Assessment
ACTIVITY OPTIONS
ARTLANGUAGE ARTS
Use the library or the Internet to find a photograph of an Aztec or Incan artifact.Create a replica or write a description of the object.
1
3. Spain made alliances with Native Americanswho were enemies of the Aztecs and Incas.
4. The Spanish conquistadors acted brutally towardthe Native Americans under their control.Having conquered the major Native American
empires in Central and South America, theSpaniards began to explore other parts of Northand South America.
Other Spanish ExplorersThe Spaniards hoped to collect treasures fromNorth America as they had from Mexico andPeru. Rumors of golden cities kept Spanishhopes high. For example, a few men, includingthe Spaniard Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca andEstevanico, a slave of North African descent,survived a shipwreck off the North Americanmainland. As the men wandered across the con-tinent, they heard Native American stories aboutcities of gold. When they reached Mexico,Cabeza de Vaca and Estevanico thrilled theSpaniards with these rumors.
Between 1539 and 1542, three expeditions set out to find these cities.Francisco Vázquez de Coronado traveled through present-day Arizonaand New Mexico. Hernando de Soto set out from Florida to explore thesoutheast. Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo sailed up the California coast. But allthree failed to find the fabled cities of gold.
For a while, it seemed that the Spaniards would explore the Americasall by themselves. As you will read in the next section, however, theSpanish would soon face competition from other Europeans.
1492 1542
Spain Builds an Empire
D. DrawingConclusionsWhat was themost importantreason for theSpanish success in conquering territory in theAmericas?D. PossibleResponses Somestudents will saydisease. Othersmight say betterweapons.
Estevanico was aslave who helpedthe Spanishexplore parts ofNorth America. Hewas killed duringCoronado’s searchfor golden cities.
22
MAIN IDEA WHY IT MATTERS NOW
European Competition in North AmericaEuropean Competition in North America
TERMS & NAMESHenry Hudson
John Cabot
Giovanni daVerrazzano
Jacques Cartier
Spanish Armada
Samuel deChamplain
New France
The Search for the Northwest PassageHudson’s voyages showed that some European countries hoped to find awestward route to Asia as late as the 1600s. While Spain was taking con-trol of the Americas, other Europeans were sending out expeditions to findthe Northwest Passage, a water route through North America to Asia.
One of the first explorers to chart a northern route across the Atlanticin search of Asia was the Italian sailor John Cabot. In 1497, Cabotcrossed the Atlantic Ocean to explore for the English. He landed in thearea of Newfoundland, Canada. He was certain that he had reached Asiaand claimed the land for England. The next year he set sail once more,
Other European countries competedwith Spain for control over territoryin the Americas.
European culture has stronglyinfluenced American culture.
ONE EUROPEAN’S STORYIn 1609, an Englishman named Henry Hudson set sail from
Europe. He sailed under the Dutch flag and hoped to find a route
to China. Arriving at the coast of present-day New York, he sailed
up the river that now bears his name. In his journal, Hudson
described what he saw.
A VOICE FROM THE PAST
The land is the finest for cultivation that I ever in my life set footupon, and it also abounds in trees of every description. The nativesare a very good people; for, when they saw that I would not remain,they supposed that I was afraid of their bows, and taking thearrows, they broke them in pieces and threw them into the fire.
Henry Hudson, quoted in Discoverers of America
Hudson did not find a passage to Asia, but he led another
expedition in 1610, this time sailing for the English. He made his way
through ice-clogged waters in Canada and entered a large bay, today
called Hudson Bay. There he sailed for months, but still found no
westward passage.
After enduring a harsh winter, his crew rebelled. They put Hudson,
his young son, and several loyal sailors in a small boat and set them
adrift (shown at right). Hudson’s party was never heard from again.
European Exploration of the Americas 67
NORTHAMERICA
HudsonBay
ATLANTICOCEAN
Cartier
Cabot1497
Hudson 1610
1535
–153
6 1534
Hudson1609
60°N
60˚W
80˚W
hoping to reach Japan. He was never seen again. Even so, his voyageswere the basis for future English colonies along North America’sAtlantic shore.
In 1524, another Italian, Giovanni da Verrazzano, set out under theFrench flag to find the Northwest Passage. He explored the Atlanticcoastline of North America, but there was no passage to be found.
France tried again between 1534 and 1536 with the voyages ofJacques Cartier (ZHAHK kahr•TYAY). Cartier traveled up the St.Lawrence River to the site of present-day Montreal. At that point,rapids blocked the way and ended his search for the NorthwestPassage. It would be almost 75 years before the French would returnto colonize the region.
Spain Responds to CompetitionFrench and English claims to North America angered Spain, which hadclaimed the land under the Treaty of Tordesillas. The tensions betweenSpain, England, and France stemmed from religious conflicts in Europe,such as the Reformation, which you read about in Chapter 1. These con-flicts also led to fighting in the Americas.
Florida was one of the battlegrounds between the Spanish and theFrench. In 1564, a group of French Protestants, called Huguenots(HYOO•guh•NAHTS), founded a colony called Fort Caroline. Beforelong, Spanish troops under the command of Pedro Menéndez de Avilésarrived in that area. “This is the armada of the King of Spain,” he
announced, “who has sent me [here] to burn and hangthe Lutheran [Protestant] French.” Menéndez built afort, St. Augustine, a short distance away. Then he bru-tally massacred the French.
Spain and England ClashReligious differences and the quest for national poweralso led to conflict between Spain and England. In1558, Queen Elizabeth I, a Protestant, came to theEnglish throne. Spain, which was Catholic, plotted toremove the Protestant queen. But Elizabeth fought todefend England and challenge Spain’s power at sea.
Although England’s navy was not as powerful asSpain’s, the English fleet had many speedy ships with skillful sailors. Daring sailors, known as sea dogs,used these ships to attack the bulky Spanish sailingships—called galleons—that brought gold and silver from the Americas.
Sir Francis Drake became the most famous of thesea dogs because of his bold adventures and
attacks against the Spanish. In 1577, Drakebegan a three-year voyage that took him
around the world. During this voyage,
Vocabularyarmada: a fleetof warships
A. Reading a MapUse the maps onpages 63 and 67to see the areasCabot, Hudson,Verrazzano, andCartier visited.
ST. AUGUSTINE
The thick stone walls of the fortat St. Augustine (shown below)still stand guard over the Floridacoast today. Founded in 1565,St. Augustine is the oldest per-manent European settlement inthe United States. For more thantwo centuries, St. Augustine wasan important outpost of Spain’sempire in the Americas. ManySpanish colonial buildings remainat the site. The fort is now anational monument.
68
European Exploration of the Americas 69
he raided Spanish ports and ships in South America. He stole greatamounts of treasure from them. When he arrived home in 1580, he wasa national hero. Not only had Drake and his men hounded the Spanish,but they were also the first Englishmen to sail around the world.
The Defeat of the Spanish ArmadaThe attacks of Drake and other sea dogs enraged Philip II, the Spanishking. Determined to teach the English a lesson, Philip sent the SpanishArmada to conquer England and restore Catholicism to that nation. Thisfleet, made up of 130 ships, set out for England in the summer of 1588.
The English and Spanish navies met in the English Channel, whichseparates England from the European continent. In their smaller butfaster craft, the English darted among the Spanish warships, firingdeadly rounds with their cannons. Confused and crippled, the armadawas retreating when it was hit by a severe storm. With half of its shipsdestroyed, the armada barely made it home.
Spain was still quite strong after the defeat of the armada. It quicklyrebuilt its navy and maintained its large colonial possessions. But Spainwould never again be as powerful as it was in 1588.
The English victory over Spain had two important effects. First,England remained independent and Protestant. Although England wasless powerful than Spain, it had shown that it could defend itself.Second, Spain’s image suffered. The world saw that Spain could bebeaten. Other nations joined England in challenging Spain.
The English navyused its smaller,quicker ships todefeat the larger,slower galleons of the SpanishArmada.
B. PossibleResponseEngland remainedindependent, and Spain wasweakened.
B. DrawingConclusionsWhy was thedefeat of theSpanish Armadaimportant?
English adventurers like Drake continued to attack Spanish interestsabroad. In addition, England challenged Spanish claims to lands inNorth America, such as California and Newfoundland. Even so,England took a cautious approach to overseas expansion. The Englishgovernment refused to provide money to start colonies. Instead, privatecitizens had to provide the money for colonization. As a result, Englanddid not establish a successful colony in America until after 1600.
The French and Dutch Seek TradeFrance and the Netherlands were also looking for ways to gain wealththrough exploration and colonization. At first, their goal in theAmericas was to find the Northwest Passage to Asia. When that searchfailed, they began to focus on North America itself.
The Frenchman Samuel de Champlain (sham•PLAYN) explored theSt. Lawrence River. In 1608, he founded a fur-trading post at Quebec.This post became the first permanent French settlement in NorthAmerica. Champlain’s activities opened a rich fur trade with local NativeAmericans. After a couple of decades, New France, as the colony wascalled, began to thrive.
At the same time, the Dutch were building a colony called NewNetherland. It was located along the Hudson River in present-day NewYork. After Hudson’s voyage up the river in 1609, the Dutch built FortNassau in 1614, near the site of the modern city of Albany.
In 1626, the Dutch bought Manhattan Island from NativeAmericans. The Dutch then founded the town of New Amsterdam onthat site, where New York City is currently located. New Netherlandwas soon thriving from the fur trade with Native Americans.
These early French and Dutch colonies, however, were small com-pared to the large empire Spain was building in the Americas. You willread about the growth of Spain’s American empire in the next section.
70 CHAPTER 2
2. Taking NotesUse a chart like the onebelow to show how Europeannations competed for power.
3. Main Ideasa. What were the English,French, and Dutch searchingfor in their early voyages of exploration?
b. How did England defeatthe Spanish Armada?
c. Where did the French andDutch set up their firstAmerican colonies?
4. Critical ThinkingMaking Inferences Whydo you think Englandfounded colonies later thanSpain did?
THINK ABOUT• conditions in Spain
and England• the lands each country
discovered
1. Terms & NamesExplain the
significance of:• Henry Hudson• John Cabot• Giovanni da
Verrazzano• Jacques Cartier• Spanish Armada• Samuel de
Champlain• New France
Section Assessment2
ACTIVITY OPTIONS
MUSICTECHNOLOGY
Research the life of one of the explorers discussed in this section. Compose a songor design a Web page about that person.
C. PossibleResponse Theywere not as pow-erful as Spain. Atfirst, they lookedfor the NorthwestPassage and onlyset up colonieswhen they couldnot find it.
C. MakingInferences Whydo you think ittook France andthe Netherlandsso long to set upcolonies in theAmericas?
England
France
Netherlands
Spain
European Exploration of the Americas 71
33
MAIN IDEA WHY IT MATTERS NOW
The Spanish and Native AmericansThe Spanish and Native Americans
TERMS & NAMESviceroyalty
encomienda
hacienda
mission
Popé
plantation
Bartolomé de LasCasas
ColumbianExchange
Spanish Colonies in the AmericasThe Spanish Empire grew rapidly, despite efforts by other Europeancountries to compete with Spain. By 1700, it controlled much of theAmericas. Spain took several steps to establish an effective colonial gov-ernment. First, it divided its American empire into two provinces calledNew Spain and Peru. Each province was called a viceroyalty. The top offi-cial of each viceroyalty was called the viceroy. He ruled in the king’s name.
The Spanish also built new roads to transport people and goods acrossthe empire. These roads stretched outward from the capitals at MexicoCity and Lima. The roads helped Spain to control the colonies by allow-ing soldiers to move quickly from place to place. Roads also improved theSpanish economy because materials, such as gold and silver, could betransported efficiently to the coast and then to Spain.
ONE AMERICAN’S STORYHuamán Poma, a Peruvian Native American, was
angry about the abuse the Spanish heaped upon
Native Americans. He wrote to King Philip III of Spain
to complain about the bad treatment.
A VOICE FROM THE PAST
It is their [the Spanish] practice to collect Indians intogroups and send them to forced labor without wages,while they themselves receive the payment for thework. . . . The royal administrators and the otherSpaniards lord it over the Indians with absolute power.
Huamán Poma, Letter to a King
In his letter, Poma asked the king to help the
Native Americans and uphold the rule of law in Peru.
If the king actually read the letter, it made no
difference. Spanish colonists continued to mistreat
Native Americans as the Spanish Empire expanded in
the Americas.
A Spanish priestforces a NativeAmerican womanto work at a loom.
Spanish rule in the Americas had terrible consequences for Native Americans.
The destruction of Native Americancultures created social problems thatcontinue today.
Life in SpanishAmericaSpanish colonists received encomien-das to help them make the coloniesproductive. An encomienda was agrant of Native American labor.Hernando Cortés received a grant ofmore than 100,000 Native Americansto work his estate.
The Spanish rulers also createdlarge estates, called haciendas, to pro-vide food for the colony. Haciendasusually became large farms whereNative Americans worked to growcash crops, such as coffee and cotton.The encomienda and hacienda systemsput much of the power and land inthe hands of a few people.
The Spaniards made sure that peo-ple with Spanish backgrounds heldpower in the colonies. Spanish-borncolonists such as Cortés made up thetop layer of colonial society. Justbelow the Spanish were the
Creoles—people of Spanish descent who were born in the colonies. Thenext step down the social order were the mestizos. Mestizos are people ofmixed Spanish and Native American ancestry. The people with the leastpower and fewest rights were Native Americans and enslaved Africans.
The Role of the ChurchThe Catholic Church played an important role in Spanish colonial soci-ety. In places like New Mexico and California, the church built missions, settlements that included a church, a town, and farmlands.The goal of the missions was to convert Native Americans toChristianity. The missions also increased Spanish control over the land.
Missionaries helped the Native Americans to create a better supply offood. They also offered Native Americans protection against enemies.Many Native Americans learned how to read and write in the missions.Others developed skills such as carpentry and metalworking.
Over time, however, many Native Americans grew increasinglyunhappy. The missionaries often worked them as if they were slaves. Themissionaries also tried to replace Native American religions and tradi-tions. As a result, some Native Americans ran away, while othersrebelled. Some destroyed churches and killed missionaries.
In 1680, a man named Popé led the Pueblo Indians in a rebellionagainst the Spanish. His forces surrounded the Spanish settlement at
72 CHAPTER 2
A. SummarizingHow did theSpanish missionschange the lives of NativeAmericans?A. Answer Theyhelped NativeAmericans getbetter food andprotected themfrom enemies.They also taughtmany NativeAmericans to read and learnother skills.
A T L A N T I CO C E A N
P A C I F I CO C E A N
Lima
MexicoCity CENTRAL
AMERICA
WEST INDIES
NORTHAME RICA
SOUTHAMERICA
40°W
80°W
120°W
40°N
0° Equator
40°S
Tropic of Cancer
Tropic of Capricorn
0
0
1,000 Miles
2,000 Kilometers
Viceroyaltyof New SpainViceroyaltyof Peru
Spain’s American Empire, 1700
GEOGRAPHY SKILLBUILDER Interpreting Maps1. Location Which viceroyalty included the West Indies?
2. Region Which viceroyalty covered more territory?
BackgroundThe problem ofunequal wealth,especially in land,continues to trouble LatinAmerican societies today.
SkillbuilderAnswers1. New Spain2. Peru
Santa Fe, in present-day New Mexico, and forced the colonists to flee.Popé ordered the churches and other Spanish buildings to be destroyed.He then tried to revive native customs that had been lost under Spanishrule. But before long, attacks from neighboring tribes weakened Pueblocontrol. In 1692, the Spanish regained control of Santa Fe.
Sugar Plantations DevelopThe Spanish also forced Native Americans to work on plantations,large farms that raised cash crops. These crops were usually exported toEurope. The most important crop was sugar.
Although sugar was in great demand in Europe, there was not muchland there to grow it. The resulting demand led to the development ofsugar plantations in the Americas. On his second voyage to theAmericas, in 1493, Columbus brought sugar cane to Hispaniola, one ofthe Caribbean islands he had landed on in 1492. He found ideal condi-tions for sugar production there. Spanish planters soon expanded oper-ations to the nearby islands that Spain colonized.
Sugar plantations required many workers, so the Spanish plantersturned to native peoples, such as the Taino. Through encomiendas, theSpaniards forced thousands of Taino to work in the fields. The planta-tions thrived, but many of the Taino suffered and died.
The Abuse of Native AmericansMost Spaniards treated the Native Americans as littlemore than beasts of burden. According to Fray Toribiode Benavente, a Catholic missionary, the Spanish “donothing but command. They are the drones who suckthe honey which is made by the poor bees, the Indians.”
Not all Spaniards approved of this treatment. One manin particular fought for better treatment of Native
BackgroundOther plantationcrops includedtobacco, cotton,cochineal (a dye),and cacao.
Theodore de Bry created thispicture, Sugar: the greatest giftof the Old World to the New, inthe 1600s. It shows workers pro-cessing sugar in the Americas.Europeans brought sugar pro-duction to the Americas fromthe Mediterranean.
How does the picture helpexplain why the Europeansused slaves to make sugar?
73
Americans. His name was Bartolomé de Las Casas. Las Casas had cometo Hispaniola in 1502 and taken part in the conquest of Cuba a decadelater. For his part in the conquest, he received an encomienda. Las Casas wasalso a Catholic priest, however, and he soon faced a moral dilemma: Howcan a person serve God and enslave Native Americans at the same time?
In 1514, Las Casas gave up his claim to the Native Americans whoworked for him. For the next 50 years, he fought against the abuse ofNative Americans, earning the title “Protector of the Indians.”
Because of his efforts, the Spanish king issued the New Laws in 1542.These laws ordered the gradual freeing of all enslaved NativeAmericans. Holders of encomiendas who were found guilty of mistreat-ing Native Americans had their encomiendas taken away. However,Spanish colonists strongly protested against the New Laws, and the kingeventually reversed many of them.
The Columbian ExchangeThe arrival of the Spanish in the Americas brought more than a clash ofpeoples and cultures. It also brought a movement of plants, animals, anddiseases between the Eastern and Western hemispheres. This movementof living things between hemispheres is called the Columbian Exchange.
One result of the Columbian Exchange was the transfer of germsfrom Europe to the Americas. When Europeans came to America, theybrought with them germs that caused diseases such as smallpox, measles,and influenza. Native Americans had no immunity to them.
Although exact numbers are unknown, historians estimate that dis-eases brought by Europeans killed more than 20 million NativeAmericans in Mexico in the first century after conquest. Many scholarsagree that the population of Native Americans in Central Americadecreased by 90 to 95 percent between the years 1519 and 1619. The
74 CHAPTER 2
EUROPE, AFRICA, AND ASIA TO AMERICAS
Squash
Tomatoes
Peppers
Turkeys
Pumpkins Beans
CornPeanuts Potatoes
Vanilla
Livestock• Cattle• Sheep• Pigs• Horses
Grains• Wheat• Rice• Barley• Oats
Disease• Smallpox• Influenza• Typhus• Measles• Malaria• Diphtheria• Whooping Cough
Tobacco
HoneybeesSugar Cane
Citrus Fruits
Turnips
Bananas
OlivesOnions
Peaches, PearsCoffee Beans
Grapes
Cacao
Sweet Potatoes
Pineapples
N O R T HA M E R I C A
E U R O P E
A F R I C A
AMERICAS TO EUROPE, AFRICA, AND ASIA
B. MakingInferences Whatmight have hap-pened if NativeAmericans hadbeen immune to European diseases?B. Answer Theywould not havebeen so easilyconquered ordominated.
The Columbian Exchange
result was similar in Peru and other parts of theAmericas. A Spanish missionary in Mexico describedthe effects of smallpox on the Aztecs.
A VOICE FROM THE PAST
There was a great havoc. Very many died of it. They couldnot walk. . . . They could not move; they could not stir; theycould not change position, nor lie on one side; nor facedown, nor on their backs. And if they stirred, much did theycry out. Great was its destruction.
Bernardino de Sahagún, quoted in Seeds of Change
Other effects of the Columbian Exchange were morepositive. The Spanish brought many plants and animalsto the Americas. European livestock—cattle, pigs, andhorses—all thrived in the Americas. Crops from theEastern Hemisphere, such as grapes, onions, and wheat,also thrived in the Western Hemisphere.
The Columbian Exchange benefited Europe, too.Many American crops became part of the Europeandiet. Two that had a huge impact were potatoes andcorn, which are highly nutritious. They helped feedEuropean populations that might otherwise have gone hungry.Potatoes, for example, became an important food in Ireland,Russia, and other parts of northern Europe. Without potatoes, Europe’spopulation might not have grown as rapidly as it did.
By mixing the products of two hemispheres, the Columbian Exchangebrought the world closer together. Of course, people were also movingfrom one hemisphere to the other, blending their cultures in the process.The next section focuses on one important aspect of the movement ofpeoples: the forced migration of enslaved Africans to the Americas.
European Exploration of the Americas 75
1. Terms & NamesExplain the
significance of:• viceroyalty• encomienda• hacienda• mission• Popé• plantation• Bartolomé de
Las Casas• Columbian Exchange
Section Assessment
ACTIVITY OPTIONS
ARTLANGUAGE ARTS
Make a collage that shows the plants and animals involved in the ColumbianExchange, or write a story that tells how Native Americans reacted to the animals.
3
KILLER BEES
Even today, plant and animalspecies continue to move fromone hemisphere to the other. A recent example of this is thekiller bee (shown below).
Killer bees were first broughtto Brazil from Africa to helpmake honey in the 1950s. Killerbees are aggressive, however,and can kill large animals whenthey swarm. After some of thesebees escaped from a Brazilianlaboratory in 1957, they beganto migrate. In recent years, theyhave been responsible for thedeaths of a number of pets inthe American Southwest.
BackgroundIn Ireland, thepopulationincreased from3.2 million in1754 to morethan 8 million in 1845, largelybecause of thehigh level ofnutrients inpotatoes.
2. Taking NotesUse a cluster diagram like theone below to show howSpain organized its colonies.
How did these actions help the Spanish control the Americas?
3. Main Ideasa. What were the four levelsof Spanish colonial society?
b. What was the main crop grown on colonial plantations?
c. How were NativeAmericans abused in the colonies?
4. Critical ThinkingRecognizing EffectsWhat were the positive andnegative effects of theColumbian Exchange?
THINK ABOUT• disease• food• livestock
SpanishColonies
European Exploration of the Americas 71
33
MAIN IDEA WHY IT MATTERS NOW
The Spanish and Native AmericansThe Spanish and Native Americans
TERMS & NAMESviceroyalty
encomienda
hacienda
mission
Popé
plantation
Bartolomé de LasCasas
ColumbianExchange
Spanish Colonies in the AmericasThe Spanish Empire grew rapidly, despite efforts by other Europeancountries to compete with Spain. By 1700, it controlled much of theAmericas. Spain took several steps to establish an effective colonial gov-ernment. First, it divided its American empire into two provinces calledNew Spain and Peru. Each province was called a viceroyalty. The top offi-cial of each viceroyalty was called the viceroy. He ruled in the king’s name.
The Spanish also built new roads to transport people and goods acrossthe empire. These roads stretched outward from the capitals at MexicoCity and Lima. The roads helped Spain to control the colonies by allow-ing soldiers to move quickly from place to place. Roads also improved theSpanish economy because materials, such as gold and silver, could betransported efficiently to the coast and then to Spain.
ONE AMERICAN’S STORYHuamán Poma, a Peruvian Native American, was
angry about the abuse the Spanish heaped upon
Native Americans. He wrote to King Philip III of Spain
to complain about the bad treatment.
A VOICE FROM THE PAST
It is their [the Spanish] practice to collect Indians intogroups and send them to forced labor without wages,while they themselves receive the payment for thework. . . . The royal administrators and the otherSpaniards lord it over the Indians with absolute power.
Huamán Poma, Letter to a King
In his letter, Poma asked the king to help the
Native Americans and uphold the rule of law in Peru.
If the king actually read the letter, it made no
difference. Spanish colonists continued to mistreat
Native Americans as the Spanish Empire expanded in
the Americas.
A Spanish priestforces a NativeAmerican womanto work at a loom.
Spanish rule in the Americas had terrible consequences for Native Americans.
The destruction of Native Americancultures created social problems thatcontinue today.
Life in SpanishAmericaSpanish colonists received encomien-das to help them make the coloniesproductive. An encomienda was agrant of Native American labor.Hernando Cortés received a grant ofmore than 100,000 Native Americansto work his estate.
The Spanish rulers also createdlarge estates, called haciendas, to pro-vide food for the colony. Haciendasusually became large farms whereNative Americans worked to growcash crops, such as coffee and cotton.The encomienda and hacienda systemsput much of the power and land inthe hands of a few people.
The Spaniards made sure that peo-ple with Spanish backgrounds heldpower in the colonies. Spanish-borncolonists such as Cortés made up thetop layer of colonial society. Justbelow the Spanish were the
Creoles—people of Spanish descent who were born in the colonies. Thenext step down the social order were the mestizos. Mestizos are people ofmixed Spanish and Native American ancestry. The people with the leastpower and fewest rights were Native Americans and enslaved Africans.
The Role of the ChurchThe Catholic Church played an important role in Spanish colonial soci-ety. In places like New Mexico and California, the church built missions, settlements that included a church, a town, and farmlands.The goal of the missions was to convert Native Americans toChristianity. The missions also increased Spanish control over the land.
Missionaries helped the Native Americans to create a better supply offood. They also offered Native Americans protection against enemies.Many Native Americans learned how to read and write in the missions.Others developed skills such as carpentry and metalworking.
Over time, however, many Native Americans grew increasinglyunhappy. The missionaries often worked them as if they were slaves. Themissionaries also tried to replace Native American religions and tradi-tions. As a result, some Native Americans ran away, while othersrebelled. Some destroyed churches and killed missionaries.
In 1680, a man named Popé led the Pueblo Indians in a rebellionagainst the Spanish. His forces surrounded the Spanish settlement at
72 CHAPTER 2
A. SummarizingHow did theSpanish missionschange the lives of NativeAmericans?A. Answer Theyhelped NativeAmericans getbetter food andprotected themfrom enemies.They also taughtmany NativeAmericans to read and learnother skills.
A T L A N T I CO C E A N
P A C I F I CO C E A N
Lima
MexicoCity CENTRAL
AMERICA
WEST INDIES
NORTHAME RICA
SOUTHAMERICA
40°W
80°W
120°W
40°N
0° Equator
40°S
Tropic of Cancer
Tropic of Capricorn
0
0
1,000 Miles
2,000 Kilometers
Viceroyaltyof New SpainViceroyaltyof Peru
Spain’s American Empire, 1700
GEOGRAPHY SKILLBUILDER Interpreting Maps1. Location Which viceroyalty included the West Indies?
2. Region Which viceroyalty covered more territory?
BackgroundThe problem ofunequal wealth,especially in land,continues to trouble LatinAmerican societies today.
SkillbuilderAnswers1. New Spain2. Peru
Santa Fe, in present-day New Mexico, and forced the colonists to flee.Popé ordered the churches and other Spanish buildings to be destroyed.He then tried to revive native customs that had been lost under Spanishrule. But before long, attacks from neighboring tribes weakened Pueblocontrol. In 1692, the Spanish regained control of Santa Fe.
Sugar Plantations DevelopThe Spanish also forced Native Americans to work on plantations,large farms that raised cash crops. These crops were usually exported toEurope. The most important crop was sugar.
Although sugar was in great demand in Europe, there was not muchland there to grow it. The resulting demand led to the development ofsugar plantations in the Americas. On his second voyage to theAmericas, in 1493, Columbus brought sugar cane to Hispaniola, one ofthe Caribbean islands he had landed on in 1492. He found ideal condi-tions for sugar production there. Spanish planters soon expanded oper-ations to the nearby islands that Spain colonized.
Sugar plantations required many workers, so the Spanish plantersturned to native peoples, such as the Taino. Through encomiendas, theSpaniards forced thousands of Taino to work in the fields. The planta-tions thrived, but many of the Taino suffered and died.
The Abuse of Native AmericansMost Spaniards treated the Native Americans as littlemore than beasts of burden. According to Fray Toribiode Benavente, a Catholic missionary, the Spanish “donothing but command. They are the drones who suckthe honey which is made by the poor bees, the Indians.”
Not all Spaniards approved of this treatment. One manin particular fought for better treatment of Native
BackgroundOther plantationcrops includedtobacco, cotton,cochineal (a dye),and cacao.
Theodore de Bry created thispicture, Sugar: the greatest giftof the Old World to the New, inthe 1600s. It shows workers pro-cessing sugar in the Americas.Europeans brought sugar pro-duction to the Americas fromthe Mediterranean.
How does the picture helpexplain why the Europeansused slaves to make sugar?
73
Americans. His name was Bartolomé de Las Casas. Las Casas had cometo Hispaniola in 1502 and taken part in the conquest of Cuba a decadelater. For his part in the conquest, he received an encomienda. Las Casas wasalso a Catholic priest, however, and he soon faced a moral dilemma: Howcan a person serve God and enslave Native Americans at the same time?
In 1514, Las Casas gave up his claim to the Native Americans whoworked for him. For the next 50 years, he fought against the abuse ofNative Americans, earning the title “Protector of the Indians.”
Because of his efforts, the Spanish king issued the New Laws in 1542.These laws ordered the gradual freeing of all enslaved NativeAmericans. Holders of encomiendas who were found guilty of mistreat-ing Native Americans had their encomiendas taken away. However,Spanish colonists strongly protested against the New Laws, and the kingeventually reversed many of them.
The Columbian ExchangeThe arrival of the Spanish in the Americas brought more than a clash ofpeoples and cultures. It also brought a movement of plants, animals, anddiseases between the Eastern and Western hemispheres. This movementof living things between hemispheres is called the Columbian Exchange.
One result of the Columbian Exchange was the transfer of germsfrom Europe to the Americas. When Europeans came to America, theybrought with them germs that caused diseases such as smallpox, measles,and influenza. Native Americans had no immunity to them.
Although exact numbers are unknown, historians estimate that dis-eases brought by Europeans killed more than 20 million NativeAmericans in Mexico in the first century after conquest. Many scholarsagree that the population of Native Americans in Central Americadecreased by 90 to 95 percent between the years 1519 and 1619. The
74 CHAPTER 2
EUROPE, AFRICA, AND ASIA TO AMERICAS
Squash
Tomatoes
Peppers
Turkeys
Pumpkins Beans
CornPeanuts Potatoes
Vanilla
Livestock• Cattle• Sheep• Pigs• Horses
Grains• Wheat• Rice• Barley• Oats
Disease• Smallpox• Influenza• Typhus• Measles• Malaria• Diphtheria• Whooping Cough
Tobacco
HoneybeesSugar Cane
Citrus Fruits
Turnips
Bananas
OlivesOnions
Peaches, PearsCoffee Beans
Grapes
Cacao
Sweet Potatoes
Pineapples
N O R T HA M E R I C A
E U R O P E
A F R I C A
AMERICAS TO EUROPE, AFRICA, AND ASIA
B. MakingInferences Whatmight have hap-pened if NativeAmericans hadbeen immune to European diseases?B. Answer Theywould not havebeen so easilyconquered ordominated.
The Columbian Exchange
result was similar in Peru and other parts of theAmericas. A Spanish missionary in Mexico describedthe effects of smallpox on the Aztecs.
A VOICE FROM THE PAST
There was a great havoc. Very many died of it. They couldnot walk. . . . They could not move; they could not stir; theycould not change position, nor lie on one side; nor facedown, nor on their backs. And if they stirred, much did theycry out. Great was its destruction.
Bernardino de Sahagún, quoted in Seeds of Change
Other effects of the Columbian Exchange were morepositive. The Spanish brought many plants and animalsto the Americas. European livestock—cattle, pigs, andhorses—all thrived in the Americas. Crops from theEastern Hemisphere, such as grapes, onions, and wheat,also thrived in the Western Hemisphere.
The Columbian Exchange benefited Europe, too.Many American crops became part of the Europeandiet. Two that had a huge impact were potatoes andcorn, which are highly nutritious. They helped feedEuropean populations that might otherwise have gone hungry.Potatoes, for example, became an important food in Ireland,Russia, and other parts of northern Europe. Without potatoes, Europe’spopulation might not have grown as rapidly as it did.
By mixing the products of two hemispheres, the Columbian Exchangebrought the world closer together. Of course, people were also movingfrom one hemisphere to the other, blending their cultures in the process.The next section focuses on one important aspect of the movement ofpeoples: the forced migration of enslaved Africans to the Americas.
European Exploration of the Americas 75
1. Terms & NamesExplain the
significance of:• viceroyalty• encomienda• hacienda• mission• Popé• plantation• Bartolomé de
Las Casas• Columbian Exchange
Section Assessment
ACTIVITY OPTIONS
ARTLANGUAGE ARTS
Make a collage that shows the plants and animals involved in the ColumbianExchange, or write a story that tells how Native Americans reacted to the animals.
3
KILLER BEES
Even today, plant and animalspecies continue to move fromone hemisphere to the other. A recent example of this is thekiller bee (shown below).
Killer bees were first broughtto Brazil from Africa to helpmake honey in the 1950s. Killerbees are aggressive, however,and can kill large animals whenthey swarm. After some of thesebees escaped from a Brazilianlaboratory in 1957, they beganto migrate. In recent years, theyhave been responsible for thedeaths of a number of pets inthe American Southwest.
BackgroundIn Ireland, thepopulationincreased from3.2 million in1754 to morethan 8 million in 1845, largelybecause of thehigh level ofnutrients inpotatoes.
2. Taking NotesUse a cluster diagram like theone below to show howSpain organized its colonies.
How did these actions help the Spanish control the Americas?
3. Main Ideasa. What were the four levelsof Spanish colonial society?
b. What was the main crop grown on colonial plantations?
c. How were NativeAmericans abused in the colonies?
4. Critical ThinkingRecognizing EffectsWhat were the positive andnegative effects of theColumbian Exchange?
THINK ABOUT• disease• food• livestock
SpanishColonies
76 CHAPTER 2
44 Beginnings of Slavery in the AmericasBeginnings of Slavery in the Americas
TERMS & NAMESslavery
African Diaspora
middle passage
slave codes
racism
ONE AMERICAN’S STORYIn 1546, Diego de Campo may have been the most powerful
man on the island of Hispaniola. He was the leader of 7,000
maroons, or runaway slaves. By contrast, there were only about
1,000 European men on the island.
The Spanish planters greatly feared de Campo. They did not
dare to order their slaves around too harshly because the slaves
might rebel with the help of the maroons. When the Spanish
attacked the maroons, de Campo and his followers defeated the
Spanish. Then the maroons burned the Spaniards’ sugar mills.
Eventually the Spaniards captured de Campo. He pleaded to
be spared and offered to lead the fight against the maroons. The
Spanish accepted the offer. With de Campo’s help, the Spanish
brought the maroons under control, and slavery in Hispaniola
grew. In this section, you will read how slave labor expanded
and threatened the freedom of Native Americans and Africans.
The Origins of American SlaveryBy the 1600s, slavery, the practice of holding a person in bondage forlabor, was firmly established in the Americas. But slavery was not new.Its roots went back to the world’s ancient civilizations.
Slavery took many different forms throughout history. In some soci-eties, slaves were mainly domestic servants in wealthy households. Someslaves also labored in mines and fields.
People were often enslaved when they were captured in battle or soldto pay off debts. Some slaves were treated with respect. Some wereallowed to marry and own property. The children of many slaves wereallowed to go free.
Slavery began to change, however, with the rise of sugar plantations.Europeans had used slaves to grow sugar in the eastern Mediterraneansince the 1100s. Then, in the 1400s and 1500s, Portugal and Spain setup sugar plantations on islands in the eastern Atlantic. To work theseplantations, they used African slaves bought from traders in Africa.
Slavery in the Americas began inorder to provide cheap labor for the colonies.
The effects of slavery, includingracism, helped shape attitudes andsocial conditions in the United States.
MAIN IDEA WHY IT MATTERS NOW
Colonial troopssearched forcommunities of maroons todestroy them.
When the Spanish and Portuguese founded their colonies in theAmericas, they brought the plantation system with them. At first theytried to enslave Native Americans to work in the fields and mines. Butthe Native Americans quickly died from overwork and disease. In somecases, they rebelled with the help of local allies.
The Spaniards then looked to other sources of slave labor, includingSpanish slaves, black Christian slaves, and Asian slaves. But there wasnot enough of any of these groups to meet demand.
Finally, the Spanish and Portuguese enslaved Africans to providelabor. They enslaved Africans for four basic reasons. First, Africans wereimmune to most European diseases. Second, Africans had no friends orfamily in the Americas to help them resist or escape enslavement. Third,enslaved Africans provided a permanent source of cheap labor. Eventheir children could be held in bondage. Fourth, many Africans hadworked on farms in their native lands.
The Slave TradeThe slave trade grew slowly at first. In 1509, the Spanish governor ofHispaniola, Diego Colón—Columbus’s son—wrote to King Ferdinandto complain about a labor shortage on the island. In response, the kingsent 50 African slaves to Hispaniola. The slave trade increased with thedemand for slaves to work in the colonies. Eventually the colonies cameto depend on slave labor. As one Spanish official in Peru wrote, “Theblack slave is the basis of thehacienda and the source of allwealth which this realm produces.”
European slave traders carriedout the shipment of Africans tothe Americas. The rulers of WestAfrican kingdoms participated inthe trade, too. On the coast ofAfrica, local kings gathered cap-tives from inland. The local kingsthen traded these captives forEuropean goods, such as textiles,ironware, wine, and guns.
This trade made the coastalkingdoms rich while weakeninginland African societies. In 1526,King Afonso, a West Africanruler, protested against the slavetrade in a letter to Portugal’s king.Afonso wrote, “Everyday these[slave] merchants take our people.. . . So great is this corruption andevil that our country is becomingcompletely depopulated.”
European Exploration of the Americas 77
A. DrawingConclusions Whydid colonistsdecide thatAfrican slaveswere more usefulthan NativeAmerican slaves?A. AnswerAfricans survivedlonger andseemed to workbetter than Native Americans. They also were cut off from theirhomelands andmight be easier to control thanNative Americansor Europeans.
Vocabularydepopulated: tolose population
SkillbuilderAnswers1. about 7.5 million2. PossibleResponse As colo-nial plantationsgrew, Europeansneeded many people to work on them. So theyimported increas-ing numbers ofslaves from Africa.
SKILLBUILDER Interpreting Graphs1. About how many slaves were imported to the Americas
between 1493 and 1810?2. Why do you think the numbers increased?
CONNECTIONS TO MATH
Slaves Imported to the Americas, 1493–1810
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
1701 – 18101601 – 17001493 – 1600
Nu
mb
er
of
slaves
(in
mill
ion
s)
Dates
Source: Philip D. Curtin, The Atlantic Slave Trade
Vocabularydiaspora: thescattering ofpeople outsidetheir homeland
The Middle PassageAfonso’s protest did not stop the forced removal of people from Africa.This removal has become known as the African Diaspora. Before theslave trade ended in the late 1800s, approximately 12 million Africanshad been enslaved and shipped to the Western Hemisphere. Of these,perhaps two million died during the voyage.
The voyage from Africa to the Americas was called the middlepassage. The voyage was given this name because it was the middle legof the triangular trade. The triangular trade refers to the movement oftrade ships between Europe, Africa, and the Americas. You will learnmore about the triangular trade in Chapter 4.
Olaudah Equiano (oh•LOW•duh EHK•wee•AHN•oh) was one ofthese kidnapped Africans. He made this journey in the 1700s. He wasabout 11 years old when he was taken from his home and sold into slav-ery. Later, after he bought his freedom, he wrote his life story and toldwhat the middle passage was like.
A VOICE FROM THE PAST
The first object which saluted my eyes when I arrived on the coast, was thesea, and a slave ship . . . waiting for its cargo. These filled me with astonish-ment, which was soon converted into terror, when I was carried on board.
Olaudah Equiano, quoted in Great Slave Narratives
Equiano saw a row of men shackled together in chains. He also saw alarge boiling kettle. He feared that he was going to be cooked and eaten“by those white men with horrible looks, red faces, and long hair.”
The scene on the slave deck below was even worse. Several hundredslaves were crammed into a space so small that there was not evenenough room to stand up. Foul smells and disease, along with the shrieksand groans of the dying, made the middle passage a terrifying experi-ence. The captives who did not die faced new horrors in the Americas.
78 CHAPTER 2
The diagramabove shows howslave traderspacked enslavedAfricans ontoslave ships for themiddle passage. A British navalofficer painted the picture on theright, which alsoshows thecrowdedconditions onslave ships.
B. PossibleResponse Theslave traders didnot care aboutthe captives. Theirgoal was to sell as many captivesas they could toslave owners.
B. MakingInferences Whywould slavetraders pack somany captivesonto slave ships?
C. AnalyzingCauses Whatcould havecaused slavetraders to treatother humanswith such cruelty?C. PossibleResponse Theysaw the slaves asgoods that had tobe kept alive butlittle more. Overtime, racismplayed an impor-tant role in main-taining thisattitude.
Slavery in the AmericasOnce the enslaved Africans arrived in the colonies, they were sold atauction. Some were taken to large homes where they worked as servants.Most were forced to do hard labor in haciendas or mines. They were alsofed and housed poorly.
Many slaves resisted slavery by running away. Across Peru and NewSpain, maroons formed communities, often with Native Americans.Sometimes enslaved Africans rebelled. To prevent rebellion, the Spanishgovernment passed slave codes, laws to regulate the treatment of slaves.Some of these laws tried to soften the harsh conditions of slavery, butmost were designed to punish slaves and keep them in bondage.
Over time, Europeans came to associate slavery with black Africans.To many Europeans, dark skin color became a sign of inferiority. Slavery,which developed to provide a labor force, led to racism. Racism is thebelief that some people are inferior because of their race.
The slave trade lasted for nearly 400 years, from the early 1500s to themid-1800s. This contact between Africa and the Americas also formedpart of the Columbian Exchange that you read about in Section 3.Africans brought to the Americas a vast knowledge about farming andanimals. At the same time, American crops such as sweet potatoes,peanuts, and chilies made their way to Africa.
Enslaved Africans also brought with them a strong artistic heritage ofdance, music, and storytelling. The slave trade brought together peoplefrom different parts of Africa with different cultural traditions. Theexperience of slavery helped create a common African-based culture inthe Americas. By the 1700s, all the American colonies of Europeancountries had African slaves. As you will read in the next chapter,African culture would be one of the forces that shaped life in theAmerican colonies.
European Exploration of the Americas 79
2. Taking NotesUse a diagram like the onebelow to compare the experi-ence of Native Americans andAfricans under slavery.
3. Main Ideasa. When did slavery begin?
b. Why did Europeans bringAfricans to the Americas?
c. What are three examples ofbad conditions faced byenslaved Africans?
4. Critical ThinkingRecognizing Effects Whatwere the long-term effects ofslavery in the Americas?
THINK ABOUT• the economy in the
Americas• the African Diaspora• cultural diversity in the
Americas
1. Terms & NamesExplain the
significance of:• slavery• African Diaspora• middle passage• slave codes• racism
Section Assessment
ACTIVITY OPTIONS
ARTMATH
Research some aspect of the slave trade, such as the middle passage or the numberof people enslaved. Paint a picture or draw a graph to show what you learned.
4
NativeAmericans
AfricansBoth
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