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Lecture 11 : The Age Of Discovery Overview

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Title: Lecture 11 : The Age Of Discovery Overview


1
Lecture 11 The Age Of DiscoveryOverview
  • LATE MEDIEVAL
  • AGE OF DISCOVERY
  • Pre-Columbian America
  • The Spanish Conquests
  • DISEASES
  • Smallpox
  • Later Epidemics
  • IMPACT
  • Impact On The America
  • Impact Elsewhere

2
Late Medieval
  • Black Death triggered the slow transition to
    capitalism, but industrial capitalism did not
    emerge until the late 18th century.
  • Population took 200 years to recover after the
    Black Death.
  • Kings consolidated their power and established
    territorial states which evolved into nation
    states.
  • Trade routes with the Orient were severed in 14th
    century, resulting in exploration for new routes.
  • By end of the 15th century expansion could only
    take place overseas, resulting in overseas
    colonisation.

3
Pre-Columbian America
  • By the time Columbus discovered America
    probably San Salvador in the Bahamas there was
    already a lengthy history of urban civilisation
    in the Americas.
  • Olmec civilistion lasted 1200-300 BC.
  • Mayan civilisation peaked in second half of first
    millennium AD. Toltecs in mexico 900-1200.
  • Aztec and Inca empires in Mexcio and Peru were at
    their peak in the 15th century.
  • Total population of the Americas was about 100
    million, with 25-30 million in each of the Aztec
    and Inca empires.

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North America
  • Most of the North America Indian tribes were
    hunter-gatherers, but there was a major
    civilisation in the Mississippi valley (mound
    builders).
  • Cahokias population had once had a population of
    20,000. This was only exceeded by Philadelphia at
    the time of US independence (1775).

7
Conquest
  • Hernan Cortes captured the Aztec empire in 1521
    with an army of only 600 Spaniards.
  • Francisco Pizarro captured the Inca empire in
    1532 with an army of 168 Spaniards.
  • Why were they so successful?

8
Smallpox (1)
  • Smallpox epidemics had occurred in the Spanish
    West Indies previously, but a major epidemic
    arrived from Spain in 1518.
  • This killed one third to one half of the Arawaks
    in Hispaniola and then spread to Cuba and Peurto
    Rica.
  • It was transmitted to Mexico by an infected slave
    in 1520.

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Smallpox (2)
  • Smallpox killed about one half of the Aztecs,
    paving the way for conquest by Cortes.
  • Smallpox reached the Incas in 1526. It killed the
    Inca emperor and his son, resulting in a civil
    war.
  • Resistance to Pizarro was limited.
  • By 1530 smallpox had spread south to the pampas
    and north to the Great Lakes.
  • When Spanish explorers reached the Mississippi in
    the 1540s many towns had already been abandoned,
    although some still functioned.
  • The Mississippi towns had vanished when the
    French arrived in the 1600s.

11
Other Epidemics
  • 1529 Measles killed two third of the surviving
    native population of Cuba, before sweeping
    through Honduras, Mexico and Peru.
  • 1546 Aztecs and Incas ravaged by typhus.
  • 1558-59 Americas hit by influenza pandemic.
  • 1589 Peru hit by unidentified disease. Thre
    quarters of the Indian population of Chile
    killed.
  • Diphtheria, mumps, plague, pertussis, scarlet
    fever, typhoid, typhus, and tuberculosis
    followed. Also malaria and yellow fever.
  • Pilgrim Fathers in 1620 found a landscape
    depopulated by smallpox which arrived via Nova
    Scotia.

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Impact (1)
  • Population of Mexico declined from 30 million to
    3 million in 50 years, then to 1.6 million by
    1602.
  • Figures for Inca empire similar 8 million by
    1553, 1 million by 1791.
  • Main decline was in the first few decades, but it
    continued into the 19th century.

15
Impact (2)
  • Smallpox killed half the Hurons in 1684. Their
    enemies, the Iroquois, were halved also.
  • In 1738, smallpox killed half of the Cherokees in
    the Charleston area.
  • In the early nineteenth century, smallpox
    destroyed two-thirds of the Omahas.
  • In 1837 the Mandan Indian tribe was totally wiped
    out by smallpox.
  • Overall, native populations reduced by about
    90-95 per cent.

16
Questions
  • What was the impact in the opposite direction?
    Syphilis would seem to have been the only
    possible export.
  • Why was there so little impact on Europeans?
    Amerindians carried very few infectious diseases
    to infect Europeans.
  • Why were there so free of infectious diseases? No
    one knows for certain, but it may because
    Amerindians had very few domesticated animals
    turkey (Mexico), llama / alpaca (Andes), guinea
    pig (Andes), muscovy duck (tropics), dog
    (everywhere).

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Impact Elsewhere
  • 100,000 Guanches in Canary Islands more or less
    wiped out by 1530s.
  • Indian population in Hispaniola declined from 8
    million in 1492 to zero by 1535.
  • Hawaiis population was about 500,000 when
    Captain Cook arrived in 1792, but it fell to
    84,000 by 1853 the year smallpox killed another
    10,000.
  • Fiji lost about one quarter of its remaining
    population to smallpox in 1875.
  • Australian aborigine population declined from
    about 1 million in 1788 to 90,000 by 1901.

19
Disease Curbs On Expansion
  • Decline of native populations facilitated
    European conquest and colonisation.
  • However, some environments were hostile to
    Europeans, especially tropical Africa (the white
    mans graveyard).
  • Africa was not partitioned between the Europeans
    until the 1870s (Scramble for Africa).
  • European settlement was largely confined to less
    hostile areas in north (French) and south (Dutch
    and British).
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