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Chapter 1 New World Encounters

Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

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Page 1: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

Chapter 1

New World Encounters

Page 2: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

The Arrival

People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 mapBeringia later covered by water as polar ice cap meltedThose who came were hunters looking for mammoths, mastadons, bison, and caribouFirst peoples were of Clovis Culture

Page 3: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

Beringia

Page 4: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

Clovis Culture

They later became known as Native AmericansWithin 1,000 years they had spread throughout the Western HemisphereLanguage changed as they encountered new objects and animalsEventually 2,000 distinct languages developed belonging to 12 language groups or families

Page 5: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

Cultures changed as well as languages

Arawaks Encountered Columbus

Peaceful, gentle people

Refined basketweaver

Page 6: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

Mayans-Found in southern Mexico and in

Guatemala-Created cities-Were religious-Created solar calendar of 365 days-Had system of writing-Had stadiums and sports- Had astronomers

Page 7: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

Mayan

Page 8: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

Mayan Calendar

Page 9: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

Aztecs

- Highly structured society

- division of labor

-farmers

-artisans

-construction workers

Page 10: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

Aztec Calendar

Page 11: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

Aztec Empire

Page 12: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

Aztecs

Conquered Mayans around 1500 CE

They adopted and adapted Mayan culture

had religious ceremonies and sacrifices

had gold and silver mines

had laws and rulers

Page 13: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

Others

Nomadic hunters and gatherersruled by a central authority

women had respect and powerGrew the food and raised the children - -fertility

Page 14: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

Misconceptions

Western Europeans were not the first to encounter Native Americans

contact with Japanese and Chinese fishermen around 200 BCE

contact with West Africans around 1,000-500 BCE

Contact with Europeans around the 1480s, if not earlier

Page 15: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

Europeans settled a sparsely inhabited land.

now believed that there were 4 – 10 million Native Americans in the AmericasInitial contact with Europeans occurred before anyone estimated the size of population; estimates came laterEuropeans were carriers of diseases for which Native Americans had no immunities; millions died as a result

Page 16: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

FoodNative Americans were only hunters and gatherers

many practiced agriculture

used slash and burn method

they altered the land

they grew squash, beans, tomatoes, maize, peppers, potatoes, etc.

they set up fish traps called weirs

Page 17: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

Villages

Some were walled for protection; some were open

Some were patriarchal; some had female leaders

Sachem or Werowance (leader) only carried out wishes of the group

Leaders chosen for their wisdom

Leader could be removed for cause

Page 18: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

Religion

Practiced animismbelieved there were spirits in the things of nature

polytheistic with a main god

Page 19: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

Concept of Ownership

Was a foreign concept to Native Americans

Shared what they had – crops, landOften Europeans who were used to the concept of ownership would just take the land and establish ownership; the Native Americans did not understand this

Page 20: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

Hostile Tribes?

On the whole, tribal villages coexisted peacefullyThey forged alliances

Iroquois ConfederacyMohawkOneidaOnondagaCayugaSenacaTuscarora

Page 21: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

Villages traded with one another

Europeans helped de-stabilize the harmony that once existed among tribes

they pitted one tribe against another to get the goods they wanted

they paid tribes with firearms altering warfare

Page 22: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

European Exploration

Irish monk, St. Brendan is said to have come to North America in 5th century

Vikings came in 10th century to establish settlements, p. 16 photo

Eric the Red

Leif, his son

Page 23: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

European exploration began in earnest in 15th century

Spain: began colonizing by taking Canary Islands where they set up a harsh labor system they would later use in the Americas

Christopher Columbus – 4 trips, the first in 1492 landing in the BahamasConquistadors: Hernan Cortes in Mexico and Francisco Pizarro in the Andes in South America were quite successful

Page 24: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

Columbus and Cortes

Page 25: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

Pizarro

Page 26: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

Samuel de Champlain settled Quebec for France1497, an Italian, John Cabot, working for Henry VII of England, claimed Newfoundland for EnglandSir Walter Raleigh was the first English adventurer to found a New World colony, Virginia

His colonists, however, landed on Roanoke Island in North Carolina; this colony failed twice – the Lost Colony

Page 27: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

Roanoke Colony

Page 28: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

In 1607, the London Virginia Company established Jamestown, the first permanent British settlement in the New World

Became successful by following the plantation model of settlement and because Native Americans helped them

Page 29: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

Jamestown Colony

Page 30: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

Reasons for Colonization

Wished to be self-sufficientusing products found in New World, countries could reduce their dependence on one another

Wanted to reduce populations by sending people to New World colonies

God, Gold, and Glory

Page 31: Chapter 1 New World Encounters. The Arrival People arrived on North American continent 35,000 years ago via land bridge called Beringia -- p.5 map Beringia

Labor

English tried to enslave Native Americans like the Spanish, Natives knew the land and kept running awaySo like the Spanish and the Portuguese before them , the English became involved in the African slave tradeAfrican slave trade began for Europeans in the 15th century and didn’t end until 1925; the Portuguese were the first ones in and the last to abandon it