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THE COLLISION OF TWO WORLDS

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Title: THE COLLISION OF TWO WORLDS


1
THE COLLISION OF TWO WORLDS
Instructor Carol Jean Cox
2
THE COLLISION OF TWO OLD WORLDS
  • Discovery of the New World
  • Europe In Transition
  • The First Americans
  • Exploration Conquest or Invasion Genocide

3
THE FIRST AMERICANS
  • Origins
  • Food Shelter
  • Skills Technology
  • Religion
  • Geographic Regions

4
THE FIRST AMERICANS
  • Origins
  • Asian nomads from Mongolia
  • Blood DNA similarities of North American
    Asians
  • Evolution of teeth structures
  • Archeological Sites
  • Radio carbon dating of stone tools
  • Yukon blue fish caves
  • Pennsylvania Meadow craft 16000 bp
  • Clovis Period 13,000-12800 bp
  • Monteverde, Chile 13000 bp
  • Pedraferata, Brazil 48,000 bp

5
THE FIRST AMERICANS
  • Diversity Isolation
  • Isolation caused a diversity of cultures
    languages
  • 15 million inhabitants
  • Two million today
  • 1-2000 languages in all of the Americas
  • 600 languages in North America
  • Video In Search of the First Americans

6
THE FIRST AMERICANS
  • Called Indians by Columbus
  • Geographic error
  • Label of all peoples as one
  • Food Shelter
  • hunter-gatherers (nomadic sedentary
  • Teepees, caves
  • Farming irrigation (sedentary)
  • wood homes, adobe
  • Fermented wines beers

7
THE FIRST AMERICANS
  • Skills Technology
  • Primitive tools skills
  • Reed grass baskets
  • Bows arrows, harpoons
  • Hunting related skills (running, stalking)
  • 200 drugs medicines

8
THE FIRST AMERICANS
  • Writing system (Olmecs Mayans)
  • Carved records in stone on cactus fiber
  • (most destroyed in 1500s by Spanish)
  • Architecture
  • Mayans built over 40 cities in Meso-America
  • Populations up to 20,000 each
  • Olmec, Mayan, Inca, Azec cultures
  • Pyramids, temples, aqueducts

9
THE FIRST AMERICANS
  • Skills Technology
  • Tools skills
  • Medicines
  • Writing
  • Architecture
  • Religion
  • Animistic worship of spirits in the natural
    environment
  • gods demanding human blood sacrifices
  • Some peaceful some warlike

10
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11
THE FIRST AMERICANS
  • Geographic Regions
  • Coastal pacific Western Tribes
  • Coastal habitation
  • Totem poles landmarks of stories
  • Descendants of animals man
  • Redwood homes dug-out canoes
  • Inland forests Sub Arctic
  • Movement by the water
  • Birch houses canoes cooking utensils
  • Caribou/elk/otter/mink/beaver/maple sap

12
THE FIRST AMERICANS
  • Geographic Regions
  • Eastern Woodlands
  • Matrilineal heritage
  • Women choose tribal chiefs
  • Gender Specialized tasks
  • Women grew beans/corns
  • Children keep birds away men-hunter/warriors
  • Men hunter/warriors
  • Shells/pearls/birch houses

13
THE FIRST AMERICANS
  • Geographic Regions
  • Plains Indians
  • Nomadic
  • Teepees as moveable homes
  • Grasses for baskets, hides for clothing homes
    blankets
  • Hunter Gatherers
  • Buffalo the main stay of their diet
  • After the arrival of the Europeans, horses were
    used for hunting and transporting

14
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15
THE FIRST AMERICANS
  • Origins
  • Food Shelter
  • Skills Technology
  • Religion
  • Geographic Regions

16
THE COLLISION OF TWO OLD WORLDS
  • Discovery of the New World
  • Europe In Transition
  • The First Americans
  • Exploration Conquest or Invasion Genocide

17
THE COLLISION OF TWO OLD WORLDS
  • Exploration Conquest

18
EXPLORATION CONQUEST
  • The First Explorers
  • Eskimos Aleuts (Native Americans)
  • Japanese Chinese Fishermen
  • West Africans (Olmec Legend)
  • European Vikings
  • Thorfinn Karlsefni mapped part of North
    American coast
  • Tried to settle Newfoundland

19
EXPLORATION CONQUEST
  • The European Explorers / 15 16th centuries
  • Portugal the African Coast Route
  • Prince Henry the Navigator
  • 30 voyages along the African Coast
  • Bartholomeu Dias Cape Good Hope 1488
  • Vasco De Gama Calicut, India 1498
  • Pedro Cabal East South America 1500
  • The Brazilian Mistake
  • Colonies in West Africa, the Persian Gulf, Macao,
    and Brazil

20
EXPLORATION CONQUEST
  • The European Explorers / 15 16th centuries
  • Spain Colonization of the Americas
  • Columbus and the route west 1492
  • An Italian sailing for Spain
  • Isabella invested 14,000
  • Plan to reach Indies by sailing west
  • Japan only 2,500 west of Canary Islands
  • Four trips to Americas
  • Died believing he had landed in Asia

21
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22
EXPLORATION CONQUEST
  • The European Explorers /15 16th centuries
  • Spain Colonization of the Americas
  • Columbus - the route west 1492
  • Vasco Nunez de Balboa Panama 1513
  • Ponce de Leon Florida 1513
  • Ferdinand Magellan World 1519-1522
  • Hernando De Soto - southeast interior 1539-1542
  • Coronado - southwest
  • Cortez Aztec city of Tenochtitlan 1519
  • Pizarro Incas of South America

23
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24
EXPLORATION CONQUEST
  • The European Explorers /15 16th centuries
  • English Colonies of the East Coast of North
    America, India, S.E. Asia, E. Asia Coast
    Oceania, the Middle East
  • THE BRITISH EMPIRE

25
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26
EXPLORATION CONQUEST
  • The European Explorers of the 15 16th
    centuries
  • Dutch Colonization of the East Indies
    (Indonesia) and southern Pacific (New Zealand)
  • Abel Tasman
  • France Colonization in North America
  • St. Lawrence Seaway New Orleans
  • Russia - Exploration of the Pacific North West
  • Sitka Fur Trapping
  • Bodega Bay/Fort Ross
  • English Colonies of the East Coast of North
    America, India, S.E. Asia, E. Asia Coast
    Oceania, the Middle East

27
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28
EXPLORATION CONQUEST
  • Motivational Factors for European Exploration
  • 1. Improvement of quality of life
  • Precious stones metals, silks, crafts, spices,
    drugs
  • Marco Polo and Crusaders introduced Europeans to
    new lifestyles and created demand for goods from
    the East

29
EXPLORATION CONQUEST
  • Motivational Factors European Exploration in the
    Americas
  • 2. Establishment of new trade routes and national
    claims of territories
  • Existing routes were expensive and dangerous due
    to pirates wars
  • Monopolized by Italian merchants who functioned
    as middlemen in trade between Europe Asia

30
EXPLORATION CONQUEST
  • Motivational Factors European Exploration in the
    Americas
  • 3. Spread Christianity
  • 4. Control Profit
  • New Territories mean greater wealth
  • Bypassing middlemen would bring greater wealth to
    a country and to the discoverer of a new route to
    the East

31
EXPLORATION CONQUEST
  • Motivational Factors for 15th 16th century
    European Exploration
  • Spread Christianity
  • Establishment of trade routes and national claims
    to land
  • Sea routes through Indian Oceans Persian Gulf
  • Overland routes through Middle Est (Levant) to
    Asia

32
THE COLLISION OF TWO OLD WORLDS
  • Discovery of the New World
  • Europe In Transition
  • The First Americans
  • Exploration Conquest or Invasion Genocide

33
THE COLLISION OF TWO WORLDS
Instructor Carol Jean Cox
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