Pre-Columbian European explorations
VIKINGS IN AMERICA
c. 1000 AD – a Viking expedition from Greenland led by Leif Ericson (‘Lucky Leif’) reaches North America
· scattered Viking settlements from Newfoundland to Virginia: Helluland (Baffin Island), Markland (Labrador), Vinland (Newfoundland) - described in the sagas
· LAnse aux Meadows, Newfoundland – a Viking settlement excavated in 1960 – UN World Heritage Site
· conflicts with the natives (skraelings) leads to abandoning of Viking settlements by 1020
European exploration of the Americas in the 15th century
European developments:
growth of global trade, commercial towns, and modern corporations
decline of feudalism and the formation of nations
Protestant Reformation and the Catholic Counter-Reformation
greed, conquest, exploitation, oppression, racism, slavery
Reasons for exploration:
search for SPICES (especially after the Ottomans closed overland trade routes to the East)
search for GOLD and SILVER
search for a new PASSAGE to Asia
new shipping technologies
the growth of Portugal and Spain:
1488 - Bartholomew Diaz reaches Cape of Good Hope
1492 – the end of Spanish Reconquista
1497 – Vasco da Gama’s voyage to India
EUROPEAN EXPLORERS
Christopher Columbus
(first voyage: Aug 3 - Oct 12, 1492)
· a Genoese in service of King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain in search of a sea route to the Indies and the Spice Islands (the Moluccas)
· FOUR VOYAGES: first landing - San Salvador, Bahamas and Hispaniola (Haiti), followed by exploration of Jamaica, Puerto Rico, Cuba and Central America
· Columbus dies in 1506 certain of discovering Asia or India
· INDIANS - the most (in)famous misnomer in world history
· October 12, Columbus Day (celebrated since 1792)
Consequences:
· Conquistadors and THE SPANISH EMPIRE (1492-1898)
· the encomienda – system land grants with provision of Indian forced (tribute) labor
· introduction of sugar cane from the Canary Islands leading to sugar plantations and rum production
· EXTERMINATION of Caribbean Indians and subsequent SLAVE TRADE with Africa
· COLUMBIAN EXCHANGE of plants, culture and diseases between the Old and the New Worlds
1494 - Treaty of Tordesillas – division of newly discovered lands between Spain and Portugal
WHY 'AMERICA'?
1490s - Amerigo Vespucci from Florence describes the new land in letters
1507 - Martin Waldeseemuller calls the new land America in honor of Vespucci.
1541 – Flemish cartographer Gerardus Mercator (inventor of geographical latitude and longitude) applies the name to both continents.
European explorers of North America after Columbus
John Cabot (1497) - Italian explorer in service of Henry VII of England in America explores Newfoundland and Chesapeake Bay and opens English claim to America – New Found Land
Juan Ponce de León (1513) - first governor of Puerto Rico - sailing around Florida and claiming it for Spain - supposedly in search of the legendary Fountain of the Youth
Giovanni Verrazano (1524) - in service of Francis I of France explores the Atlantic coast of North America, including New York Bay and Narragansett Bay - establishing French claim to eastern North America
Jacques Cartier (1536) – explores St. Lawrence River up to Montreal and claims Canada for France: “area rich in fur and fish”
Hernando de Soto (1539-41) explores the South, from Florida to Texas, and discovery of the Mississippi river
Francisco Vasquez de Coronado (1540-42) – expedition from Mexico in search of legendary 'Seven Cities of Cibola' - exploration of the Southwest, the Pueblos, Colorado River, Grand Canyon, reaching Kansas
Francis Drake (1578) - claims San Francisco Bay for England during his circumnavigation
Henry Hudson (1609, 1610-11) in Dutch service - discovery of Hudson River, Hudson Strait, Hudson Bay – opening Dutch claim to America
SPANISH colonies in North America
NEW SPAIN: Mexico, California, Southwest, Florida
1565 - St. Augustine, Florida - the oldest continuously occupied European settlement in the USA
Juan de Oñate
1610 – establishment of Santa Fe, New Mexico – the oldest state capital in the USA
Characteristics:
conquistadors and Catholic priests
conquest and missionary activities
tribute colonies - forced labor (later slavery)
mission system – lack of big cities
CONVERSION and forced assimilation of Indians (Spanish is learnt by natives)
appointed officials answer only to the Spanish Crown
peninsulares, creoles, mestizos
mixed blood population
Linguistics impact:
- state names: California, Colorado, Florida, Montana, Nevada
- words: vaqueros, ranch, corral, lasso, lariat, chaps, bronco, rodeo
FRENCH colonies in North America
NEW FRANCE: Canada, Mississippi, Louisiana
1608 - Samuel de Champlain founds New France (Quebec)
1670s-1680s - Robert de La Salle claims Louisiana
Characteristics:
fur traders and Jesuit priests
extensive fur trade and sparse settlements (trading posts)
Indians treated as allies and trading partners
conversion of Indians in their own communities (not missions) and using the native languages
mixed marriages – the Metis
VIKINGS IN AMERICA
c. 1000 AD – a Viking expedition from Greenland led by Leif Ericson (‘Lucky Leif’) reaches North America
· scattered Viking settlements from Newfoundland to Virginia: Helluland (Baffin Island), Markland (Labrador), Vinland (Newfoundland) - described in the sagas
· LAnse aux Meadows, Newfoundland – a Viking settlement excavated in 1960 – UN World Heritage Site
· conflicts with the natives (skraelings) leads to abandoning of Viking settlements by 1020
European exploration of the Americas in the 15th century
European developments:
growth of global trade, commercial towns, and modern corporations
decline of feudalism and the formation of nations
Protestant Reformation and the Catholic Counter-Reformation
greed, conquest, exploitation, oppression, racism, slavery
Reasons for exploration:
search for SPICES (especially after the Ottomans closed overland trade routes to the East)
search for GOLD and SILVER
search for a new PASSAGE to Asia
new shipping technologies
the growth of Portugal and Spain:
1488 - Bartholomew Diaz reaches Cape of Good Hope
1492 – the end of Spanish Reconquista
1497 – Vasco da Gama’s voyage to India
EUROPEAN EXPLORERS
Christopher Columbus
(first voyage: Aug 3 - Oct 12, 1492)
· a Genoese in service of King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain in search of a sea route to the Indies and the Spice Islands (the Moluccas)
· FOUR VOYAGES: first landing - San Salvador, Bahamas and Hispaniola (Haiti), followed by exploration of Jamaica, Puerto Rico, Cuba and Central America
· Columbus dies in 1506 certain of discovering Asia or India
· INDIANS - the most (in)famous misnomer in world history
· October 12, Columbus Day (celebrated since 1792)
Consequences:
· Conquistadors and THE SPANISH EMPIRE (1492-1898)
· the encomienda – system land grants with provision of Indian forced (tribute) labor
· introduction of sugar cane from the Canary Islands leading to sugar plantations and rum production
· EXTERMINATION of Caribbean Indians and subsequent SLAVE TRADE with Africa
· COLUMBIAN EXCHANGE of plants, culture and diseases between the Old and the New Worlds
1494 - Treaty of Tordesillas – division of newly discovered lands between Spain and Portugal
WHY 'AMERICA'?
1490s - Amerigo Vespucci from Florence describes the new land in letters
1507 - Martin Waldeseemuller calls the new land America in honor of Vespucci.
1541 – Flemish cartographer Gerardus Mercator (inventor of geographical latitude and longitude) applies the name to both continents.
European explorers of North America after Columbus
John Cabot (1497) - Italian explorer in service of Henry VII of England in America explores Newfoundland and Chesapeake Bay and opens English claim to America – New Found Land
Juan Ponce de León (1513) - first governor of Puerto Rico - sailing around Florida and claiming it for Spain - supposedly in search of the legendary Fountain of the Youth
Giovanni Verrazano (1524) - in service of Francis I of France explores the Atlantic coast of North America, including New York Bay and Narragansett Bay - establishing French claim to eastern North America
Jacques Cartier (1536) – explores St. Lawrence River up to Montreal and claims Canada for France: “area rich in fur and fish”
Hernando de Soto (1539-41) explores the South, from Florida to Texas, and discovery of the Mississippi river
Francisco Vasquez de Coronado (1540-42) – expedition from Mexico in search of legendary 'Seven Cities of Cibola' - exploration of the Southwest, the Pueblos, Colorado River, Grand Canyon, reaching Kansas
Francis Drake (1578) - claims San Francisco Bay for England during his circumnavigation
Henry Hudson (1609, 1610-11) in Dutch service - discovery of Hudson River, Hudson Strait, Hudson Bay – opening Dutch claim to America
SPANISH colonies in North America
NEW SPAIN: Mexico, California, Southwest, Florida
1565 - St. Augustine, Florida - the oldest continuously occupied European settlement in the USA
Juan de Oñate
1610 – establishment of Santa Fe, New Mexico – the oldest state capital in the USA
Characteristics:
conquistadors and Catholic priests
conquest and missionary activities
tribute colonies - forced labor (later slavery)
mission system – lack of big cities
CONVERSION and forced assimilation of Indians (Spanish is learnt by natives)
appointed officials answer only to the Spanish Crown
peninsulares, creoles, mestizos
mixed blood population
Linguistics impact:
- state names: California, Colorado, Florida, Montana, Nevada
- words: vaqueros, ranch, corral, lasso, lariat, chaps, bronco, rodeo
FRENCH colonies in North America
NEW FRANCE: Canada, Mississippi, Louisiana
1608 - Samuel de Champlain founds New France (Quebec)
1670s-1680s - Robert de La Salle claims Louisiana
Characteristics:
fur traders and Jesuit priests
extensive fur trade and sparse settlements (trading posts)
Indians treated as allies and trading partners
conversion of Indians in their own communities (not missions) and using the native languages
mixed marriages – the Metis