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Exploration
Exploration and Expansion
Term | Definition |
---|---|
caravel | a sailing vessel that uses square and triangular sails to help it sail against the wind |
Henry the Navigator | Prince of Portugal and patron of exploration; he made no voyages himself but spent his life directing voyages of discovery along the African coast |
Vasco da Gama | Portuguese navigator, in 1497-1499, he became the first European to sail around Africa and reach India by sea |
Christoper Columbus | Italian explorer, sailing for Spain, who reached the Americans in 1492 while searching for a western sea route form Europe to Asia |
Ferdinand Magellan | Portuguese navigator, his ships were the first to circumnavigate the globe, though he died on the journey |
circumnavigate | to proceed completely around |
Sir Francis Drake | English admiral; he rounded the tip of South America and explored the west coast. He ended up heading West to return to England, thus becoming the second man to circumnavigate the globe. |
Henry Hudson | English navigator he sailed for The Dutch East Indian Country and discovered the Hudson River in present-day New York |
encomienda | Spanish colonial system in which a colonist was given a certain amount of land and a number of native Americans to work the land in exchange for teaching the native Americans Christianity. |
Hernan Cortes | Spanish conquistador; form 1519 to 1521, he defeated the Aztec empire, conquering Mexico for Spain |
conquistador | a Spanish soldier and explorer who led military expeditions in the Americans and captured land for Spanish |
Moctezuma II | Aztec ruler from 1502 to 1520; he was the emperor of the Aztecs when Cortes and his army conquered the empire. He was taken prisoner and killed during battle with the Spanish army. |
Francisco Pizarro | Spanish conquistador, conquer of Peru; founder of Lima, Peru. From 1530 to 1533, he conquered the Inca empire |
Atahualpa | Last Inca king; he was taken prisoner by Pizarro and his army after refusing to accept Christianity and surrender his empire to Spanish conquistadors. He was killed by the Spanish and his empire was taken over. |
viceroys | officials who ruled Spain's American empire |
Bartolome de Las Casas | Spanish missionary and historian; he sought to protect Native Americans from Spanish mistreatment by replacing them as laborers with imported African slaves |
Treaty of Tordesillas | the agreement between Spain and Portugal that created a imaginary north-south line dividing there territory in the Americas |
Colombian Exchange | the transfer of plants, animals, and diseases between the Americas and Europe, Asia, and Africa beginning with the voyages of Columbus |
mercantilism | an economic system used from about the 1500s to the 1700s that held that a nations power was directly related to its wealth |
balance of trade | the difference in value between what a nation imports and exports over a period of time |
subsidies | grants of money |
capitalism | economic system in which most businesses are privately owned |
joint-stock companies | businesses formed by groups of people who jointly make an investment and share in the profits and losses |
plantation | large farms that usually specialized in the growing of one type of crop for a profit |
triangular trade | trading network lasting from 1600s to the 1800s that carried goods and enslaved people between Europe, the Americas, and Africa |
Middle Passage | the name fro voyages that brought enslaved Africans across the Atlantic Ocean to North America and the West Indies |
Olaudah Equiano | African American abolitionist; he was an enslaved African who was eventually freed, became a leader of the abolitionist movement and wrote The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano |
African Diaspora | the dispersal of people of Africa descent throughout the Americas and Western Europe due to the slave trade |