Page 1 - Student Edition Week 21
P. 1

Week 21 of 32 • Page 4                                                                                                                                                                                                        UNIT: EUROPEAN EXPLORATION AND COLONIZATION
              eek 20 o
              eek 20 o
                                 e 4
                                 e 4
                       f 32 • P
                       f 32 • P
              eek 20 o
                       f 32 • P
                                 e 4
            W
            W
            Week 20 of 32 • Page 4
            W
                              ag
                              ag
                              ag
                                                                                                                                                                                                                       fec
                                                                                                                                                                                                                            ts o
                                                                                                                                                                                                           ting Ef
                                                                                                                                                                                                     La
                                                                                                                                                                                                         s
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  f
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                             niza
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                          n
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     tio
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     Co
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  WEEK 21
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                          lo
                                                                                                         Name _________________                                                                      Lasting Effects of Colonization                                              WEEK 20
            W eek 21 o f 32 • P ag e 4                                                                   Name _________________
            Week 21 of 32 • Page 4

                                                                                                                       _________________
                                                                                                         Name
              Name ________________________________________________________________________________
                                                                                                       ____________________________
            _______________________________________________________________
            _______________________________________________________________
            ___________________________________
            ___________________________________
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       REGIONS AND PEOPLE OF THE
                          Sugar Production and the Slave Trade                                                                                                                                                                                WESTERN HEMISPHERE
                                                                                                                                                                                        ts of C
                                                                                                                                                                                        ts of C
                                                                                                                                                                                  ec
                                                                                                                                                                                  ec
                                                                                                                                                                                  ec
                                                                                                                                                                  The Eff
                                                                                                                                                                                                      onquest
                                                                                                                                                                                                      onquest
                                                                                                                                                                                                      onquest
                                                                                                                                                                                        ts of C
                                                                                                                                                                  The Eff
                                                                                                                                                                  The Eff
                          In the 1400s, Europe traded with Asia for sugar. People   children were kidnapped in Africa and taken to the                            The Effects of Conquest
                          loved the taste of sugar and paid high prices for it. Sugar   Caribbean and South America. Enslaved Africans were                       The Native Peoples of the Western Hemisphere met their wants and   of the Americas were inferior because their ways were different.
                          is produced from sugarcane. Sugarcane needs a warm   sold to plantation owners and forced to work in harsh                              needs using resources from the land around them. They had vibrant   Intolerance caused conflict and the captivity and deaths of
                          environment to grow. It also needs lots of rain or good   conditions without pay or freedom. In Europe, sugar                           societies and extensive trade routes. They had art, history, and protection  many Native Peoples.
                          irrigation. Europe did not have the right climate to grow   became easier to buy as the supply increased. European                      for their communities. They had government and religion. They fed their   The introduction of domesticated animals in the Americas caused
                          sugar, so they had to trade for it.                  plantation owners became very wealthy at the expense                               families by hunting animals and gathering berries, nuts, and fruits. They   an imbalance in the ecosystem. Pigs were turned loose to forage in the
                             When European explorers came to the Americas,     of enslaved people.                                                                cultivated crops of corn, squash, beans, tomatoes, potatoes, and some   forests. The pigs multiplied until there were so many they depleted the
                          they found a warm, wet climate where sugarcane could                                                                                    grains. They created tools from the resources around them. They traveled  vegetation. Other animals that depended on the same vegetation had
                          grow. Sugarcane grew especially well on islands in the                                                                                  by walking or by using boats on the waterways.                   nothing to eat.
                          Caribbean Sea. European colonists realized sugarcane                                                                                       The Europeans used natural resources to create manufactured goods.   The horse was a new animal to the Western Hemisphere. The horse
                          could become a cash crop. A cash crop is a crop people                                                                                  Like the Native Peoples of the Americas, they also had vibrant societies   quickly became popular to help the people of the Western Hemisphere
                          grow to sell and make money. This led to large areas                                                                                    and extensive trade networks. They had art, history, and protection for   in their everyday lives. They used horses for transportation and work.
                          of land being used to grow only one kind of cash crop.                                                                                  their communities. They had government and religion. They fed their   Horses became a valuable trade resource. The horses quickly multiplied.
                          These large farms became known as plantations.                                                                                          families by farming and going to markets. Europeans domesticated   Descendants of these horses are still found on the East Coast and in the
                             It took hard work to grow and harvest sugarcane.                                                                                     animals to keep on their farms. This meant they didn’t have to hunt   western lands of the United States.
                          Sugarcane doesn’t produce seeds. Someone had to                                                                                         for food. They had horses to help with the work on the farms and at   The most deadly exchange was unintentional. The Europeans brought
                          cut hard stalks into pieces by hand and then plant                                                                                      the markets. They cultivated grain crops of wheat, oats, and barley.   disease with them. They had developed immunity to many bacteria
                          them. It was also difficult to get soft sugar out of                                                                                    Europeans developed different modes of transportation. They used   and viruses over the centuries. The people of the Americas, however,
                          the tough stalks. As plantation owners earned more                                                                                      wagons and carts on land and ships on the sea. They manufactured   had never been exposed to such deadly germs. Smallpox, tuberculosis,
                          money from sugar, they looked for ways to get cheap                                                                                     goods out of metal and wood. They used many of their resources to help   influenza, and other strains of disease were easily transported by
                          labor to plant, harvest, and process the sugar. They                                                                                    them explore new places across the ocean.                        unsuspecting people. Historians estimate that disease killed 90 percent
                          began enslaving Native Peoples of the Caribbean,                                                                                           When these two societies met, there were intentional and      of the native population within 150 years.
                          taking away their freedom and forcing them to do                                                                                        unintentional consequences. The two groups traded ideas for the design   However, the Maya, Inca, Aztec, and Native Peoples of North America
                          the work. When many died from European diseases                  Cutting the Sugar Cane, Antigua                                        of tools and transportation. The Europeans brought domesticated   survived. Descendants of the American Indians, Maya, Inca, and Aztec
                          or risked punishment to escape, plantation owners                       William Clark, 1823                                             animals, such as pigs, chickens, and horses, with them on their ships. The  still live in and near the places where their ancient civilizations and tribes
                          turned to the slave trade from Africa. Men, women, and                                                                                  people of the Western Hemisphere gave the Europeans plants, food, and   began. Today, nearly 10 million Maya live in Central America, and there
                                                                                                                                                                  precious metals. Sign language and gestures were used to help the two   are many small villages in Peru where only Quechua (the Inca language)
                                                                                                                                                                  cultures communicate with each other.                            is still spoken. Tens of thousands of Mexican people can trace their family
                                                                                                                                                                     Tolerance of differences between the two cultures could have   lines back to the ancient Aztec people. The conquests of the Western
                                                                                                                                                                  expanded the positive exchanges. However, the Europeans were not   Hemisphere did not completely destroy the culture or the spirit of these
                                                                                                                                                                  tolerant of the differences they encountered. They believed the peoples   ancient civilizations.
              African Enslavement
               Prince Henry the Navigator was a              The early voyages sent Perestrello to
               Portuguese duke. Although he was called  the mid-Atlantic islands, such as Madeira
               the Navigator, he never actually went      and the Azores. These explorations were
               to sea. Prince Henry did control a large   followed by routes along the west coast
               amount of money for an organization        of Africa.
               called the “Order of Christ.” This            As a result of their exploration, the
               organization brought navigators and        Portuguese began to colonize new areas.
               geographers together. They planned         Beginning in 1445, the Azores rapidly
               expeditions to unexplored regions along    filled with colonists. They developed a
               the Atlantic coast south of Portugal.      rich, sugar-producing colony. The sugar
               They hired a sea captain named             was exported to European markets. The                                                                    Vasco Núñez de Balboa                              Landing of Columbus
               Bartolomeu Perestrello and his ship        Portuguese also established trading                                                                       claims the South Sea,                                 John Vanderlyn                            Coronado sets out to the north,
               for their expeditions.                     posts along the west coast of Africa.                                                                    19th-century engraving                                                                              painting by Frederic Remington
                                                             These trading posts were used to                                                                          by unknown artist
                                                          trade Portuguese goods to traders in
                                                          Africa. The Africans traded something
                                                          that was in high demand by the
                                                          Portuguese. This “product” was people.
                                                          Men, women, and children were captured
                                                          by the African traders and sold to the
                                                          Portuguese as enslaved people. The
                                                          enslaved captives were taken to sugar
                                                          plantations on the Portuguese islands of
                                                          Madeira and the Azores. Many enslaved      carrying 200 enslaved African people                                                                                                                            Background: La Salles Expedition
                                                          people were also taken to Spain and        sailed to the Caribbean in 1525. Sold into                                                                                                                                to Louisiana
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 in 1684
                                                          Portugal. By the mid-1550s, 10 percent     a lifetime of enslavement, these people                                                                                                                                Théodore Gudin, 1844
                                                          of Portugal’s population was enslaved      worked on sugar plantations. This early
                                                          men, women, and children from Africa.
                                                             Exploration of the Americas created     trade by Portuguese ships began the
                                                          a new market where traders could sell      long, tragic system of bringing enslaved                       ESSENTIAL QUESTION
                     Prince Henry the Navigator           enslaved Africans. The first recorded ship   people across the Atlantic.

                                                                                                                                                                     What lasting effects of exploration and colonization do we see today?
   1   2   3   4