AP World History - Unit 4: Transoceanic Interconnections (copy)

0.0(0)
studied byStudied by 67 people
learnLearn
examPractice Test
spaced repetitionSpaced Repetition
heart puzzleMatch
flashcardsFlashcards
Card Sorting

1/29

Study Analytics
Name
Mastery
Learn
Test
Matching
Spaced

No study sessions yet.

30 Terms

1
New cards

Explorations Financed by Portugal

  1. Prince Henry the Navigator

  2. Vasco da Gama: explored eastern Africa, India

2
New cards

Explorations Financed by Spain

Christopher Columbus: explored Americas

3
New cards

Treaty of Tordesillas (1494)

agreement between Spain and Portugal to split colonized land between them

4
New cards

Explorer Amerigo Vespucci (1500)

South America

5
New cards

Ponce de Leon (1513)

Explored Florida

6
New cards

Vasco de Balboa (1513)

Explored Central America

7
New cards

Ferdinand Magellan (1519)

Explored South America to Philippines

8
New cards

Giovanni da Verrazzano (1524)

Explored North America

9
New cards

Sir Francis Drake (1578)

circumnavigated the globe

10
New cards

John Cabot (1497)

Explored North America

11
New cards

Henry Hudson (1609)

Explored the Hudson River

12
New cards

Products that aided new explorations

  1. Sternpost Rudder

  2. Lateen Sails

  3. Astrolabe

  4. Magnetic Compass

  5. Three-Masted Caravels

13
New cards

Sternpost Rudder

invented in China - better control of ships

14
New cards

Lateen Sails

invented in Roman Empire - allowed directional control of ships

15
New cards

Astrolabe

navigation device that measured distance between sun and stars on horizon to determine latitude

16
New cards

Magnetic Compass

developed in China - determine direction

17
New cards

Three-Masted Caravels

large ships fit for longer journeys

18
New cards

Hernando Cortes

landed on coast of Mexico in 1519 - sought to exploit the Aztec Empire of their gold and spices

  • Became very hungry for wealth and quickly seized Montezuma and began a siege of Tenochtitlan

19
New cards

Disease in the Aztec Empire

Spanish brought smallpox which reduced their population from 20 million in 1520 to 2 million in 1580

  • Spanish were able to take control in 1525

20
New cards

Francisco Pizarro

  • took over Inca Empire in 1531 partially due to spreading disease to them

    • Pizarro was in control of the Inca Empire by 1535

21
New cards

Encomienda System

Spanish implemented a hierarchical colonial society as they took over the New World:

  1. Peninsulares: Spanish officials governing the colonies

  2. Creoles: Spanish born in colonies to Spanish parents - barred from high positions but were educated and wealthy

  3. Mestizos: those with European/Native American ancestry

  4. Mulattos: those with European/African ancestry

  5. Native Americans

22
New cards

Viceroys

governors of each of 5 regions of New Spain - established the encomienda system

23
New cards

Start of the African Slave Trade

  • Europe exploited a system of slavery already existing in Africa - prisoners were supposed to serve their captors before being released

  • Europeans traded for their surplus of enslaved people, but didn’t understand that they were supposed to be released

24
New cards

Middle Passage

Ocean passage from Africa to Americas that was brutal with treacherous waters

25
New cards

Where did Europe take the African slaves?

Around 13 million Africans were taken - 60% to South America, 35% to Caribbean, 5% to North America, around 20% of people on each trip perished

26
New cards

Columbian Exchange

  • Transatlantic transfer of animals, plants, diseases, people, technology, ideas among Europe, Americas, and Africa

  • Never before had so much moved across the ocean

27
New cards

Key Products of the Columbian Exchange

  1. sugar (plantations appeared all over Spanish colonies),

  2. silver (mining also in Spanish colonies)

  • both used significant forced labour

28
New cards

Age or Exploration

trading, empire building, conquest - due to financing schemes

29
New cards

Joint-stock Company

pool resources of merchants to distribute costs and reducing dangers of individual investors

  • Led to huge profits and modern-day concept of stock markets

30
New cards

Mercantilism

theory that creating a favourable balance of import and export was best - of course, this led to Europe’s intense colonialism to match their import demand