1.5 Other European discoveries

The Time of Discoverers and Reformers
Lesson 1.5. Other European discoveries

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This lesson contains 47 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 5 videos.

time-iconLesson duration is: 50 min

Items in this lesson

The Time of Discoverers and Reformers
Lesson 1.5. Other European discoveries

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Slide 2 - Slide

Word Duty





WORD DUTY




Trade posts: settlement that is built so merchants can trade with natives 
Fortresses: strongholds that were built to defend trade routes 
Nouvelle France: the name of the French colonies in North America 
Buccaneer: pirate that is hired by the government to attack enemies ships 
Compagnie van Verre: Dutch trade company founded for trading in Asia 
The Indies: the name Europeans gave to East Asia
Columbian Exchange: the mutual exchange of products between Europe and America during the Age of Discovery
Melting pot: when different cultures and races in a country mix into one common culture


Slide 3 - Slide

people in this lesson
Jacques Cartier
Cornelis de Houtman
Sir Francis Drake
Willem Barentsz
Ferdinand Magellan

Slide 4 - Slide

Important dates in this lesson:

1519 - 22: Ferdinand Magellan is the first to travel around the world
1534: Jacques Cartier establishes the French colony "New France" in Canada
1579: Sir Frances Drake establishes the British colony "Nova Albion" in California
1596: Willem Barentsz spends a winter on Nova Zembla
1597: Cornelis de Houtman returns from the first Dutch expedition to the East Indies
1606: The Dutch ship Duyfken discovers the north coast of Australia

Slide 5 - Slide

Main Questions

  1. How did the Portuguese defend their trade routes?
  2. How and where did the French, British and Dutch try to establish their own colonies?
  3. How did the Europeans change the lives of the Native Americans?

Slide 6 - Slide

Defending the sea route

In order to keep their riches, it was necessary for the Portuguese to protect their trade posts, harbours and the ships on their way to Asia. 
For this reason they built fortresses. From Fort Elmina they controlled the Gold Coast (Ghana) from which they shipped ivory and gold to Portugal and slaves to their plantations in Brazil. 

At the same time, the Spaniards took riches from America. The wealth of the Portuguese and Spaniards made other European countries jealous. They started to send their own ships and explorers.







Above: Fort Elmina today. It was built by the Portuguese in 1482 to protect the gold trade. In 1637 it was conquered by the Dutch who used Elmina for the slave trade
         impression of Fort Elmina, 2 min.

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Slide 8 - Video

1a. Why did the Portuguese build fortresses along
their trade routes?
A
so nobody could steal their riches and to protect the trade routes
B
so nobody could travel along the Portuguese routes
C
so they had a stronghold from where to conquer new lands
D
so they had a place to store all spices for further transportation to Portugal

Slide 9 - Quiz

1b. In your own words, explain the difference
between a trade post and a fortress.

Slide 10 - Open question

Circumnavigating the world

At the Treaty of Tordesillas, Spain had promised that the southern route to Asia was only for Portugal. The Spaniards still wanted to be involved in the spice trade and thus started expeditions to sail west to get to Asia. The Portuguese Ferdinand Magellan was hired by Spain. He left in 1519 and passed Cape Horn, the southernmost point of South America in 1520. From there he crossed the Pacific Ocean. He believed that it would take him a few days, but the journey lasted months. Eventually he reached the Philippines, which he named after his King Philip II, but got in a fight with native warriors and was killed. His shipmaster Elcano continued the trip and he and the remaining crew reached Spain in 1522. They were more dead than alive and their ship was almost destroyed but they had been the first to sail around the world.








Ferdinand Magellan

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2a. Magellan passed Cape Horn.
That is the most southern point of
A
Africa
B
South America
C
North America
D
Australia

Slide 12 - Quiz

2b. Look at the map of the world.
Sailing around Cape Horn took Magellan months.
What shortcut would you take, that is available now, but was not there yet in the 16th century?

Slide 13 - Open question

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Other Europeans discover the New World
The founding of Nouvelle France 

In 1534, the discoverer Jacques Cartier was sent by Frances I, the king of France, to explore the coast of North America. He was ordered to search for riches and a northwest passage to China. During his travels, he sailed past Newfoundland and onto the Saint Lawrence river, which he believed could be a passage to the west. It turned out it was not and Cartier returned home. On his second and third voyages he built fortresses to secure the colony of Nouvelle France ('New France'). It became a strategic location for the French to control the prosperous fur trade in North America. When Cartier asked the native Iroquois people what their country was called they told him their word for settlement: Kannata, which became Canada.







Jacques Cartier

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3A. Of the following 5 questions, decide if they are true or false.
A. The French also wanted to find a trade route to Asia
A
true
B
false

Slide 17 - Quiz

3B. In some parts of Canada, the official language is still French.
A
true
B
false

Slide 18 - Quiz

3C. Cartier was succesful in completing parts of his mission.
A
true
B
false

Slide 19 - Quiz

3D. Fur trade was not really a lucrative business
A
true
B
false

Slide 20 - Quiz

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3E. The French copied the Portuguese and built defenses to secure their trade posts and routes
A
true
B
false

Slide 22 - Quiz

Sir Francis Drake 

In 1577, the English queen Elizabeth I was in need of a skilled sailor to explore the seas and to disrupt the Spanish. She was so impressed by Francis Drake, a slave trader and buccaneer, that she sent him on a secret mission to harass the Spaniards at the coast of America. 
Drake was able to take over ships filled with silver and destroy Spanish ports. 
He also sailed up the western coast of America and became the first European to set foot in California. From there he crossed the Pacific towards the Portuguese spice island, where he filled his ship with spices and sailed back to England around Africa. 









Sir Francis Drake

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4A. Of the following 4 statements, say whether they
are a fact or an opinion
A. Sir Francis Drake was a decorated war hero for England
A
fact
B
opinion

Slide 24 - Quiz

4B. Drake was able to circumnavigate the world
A
fact
B
opinion

Slide 25 - Quiz

4C. The Spanish king's dislike for Sir Francis Drake
A
fact
B
opinion

Slide 26 - Quiz

4D. Francis Drake lay the foundations for the British Empire
A
fact
B
opinion

Slide 27 - Quiz

Slide 28 - Video

The first Dutch voyage to the Indies 

Dutch merchants also became interested in the riches of the east, but for decades the Portuguese had been able to keep their route to the Indies a secret. The sailor Jan Huygen van Linschoten was able to copy the Portuguese maps secretly. He published them in the Netherlands, and because of this, nine Dutch merchants founded the Compagnie van Verre in 1594. This was a trade union in which multiple investors contributed money to pay for an expedition. 

Cornelis de Houtman was appointed as the leading merchant on the first Dutch trade mission to the east. It would become a terrible experience and the Dutch were not able to trade successfully. In 1597, de Houtman returned with a few spices, but he had lost 190 crew members and a ship. The profit was too small to pay for the trip, but it did not prevent the Dutch from sailing to the Indies again. More and more trade missions were sent; gradually they were able to defeat the Portuguese and to become the new dominant power in Asia.





a very young Mr. Sanders joining the crew of the replica of Duyfken, Australia 2000
de Houtman's 4 ships including "Duyfken" (left)

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5. What is the relation between the keywords "Nouvelle France"and "Companie van Verre"?
A
They were both supported by the king or queen of their country
B
they both had only economic interests at stake
C
Both were unsuccessful at first, but succeeded in the long run
D
Both discovered new worlds that were not known in Europe before

Slide 30 - Quiz

Take a good look at this picture about the battle of the trade post bantam in 1596.

1. ship with spices set on fire by the Portuguese
2. Javanese ship that flees the battle scene
3. Dutch ships firing at the city Bantam
4. Three Javanese ships captured by the Dutch explorers
5. The trading post at Bantam
6. Dutch ships in trouble after attacks by local inhabitants

In the next slide you must link the numbers (1-6) to the letters (B-H) in the picture.










Slide 31 - Slide

6. write down the numbers 1 - 6 and and write the corresponding letter behind it.
Mind you, there are more letters than numbers...

Slide 32 - Open question

7a. In the text you can click the name Cornelis de Houtman.
It links to a wikipedia page.
Go to the page and read the text: The voyage, from line 7 onwards.
Now list the problems that his expedition encountered.

Slide 33 - Open question

7b. The same wikipedia page also mentions that Houtman's trip
was a "symbolic victory". Can you explain that?

Slide 34 - Open question

Slide 35 - Video

Slide 36 - Video

Spending the winter on Nova Zembla 

The Dutch were at war with Spain and Portugal at the end of the 16th century, so it was not safe to send ships south. For this reason they started exploring a Northeast passage, around Russia, to China. Captain Willem Barentsz thought this was shorter and he led three attempts to the North. On his third voyage in 1596, his ship got stuck in the ice at Nova Zembla. He and his crew had to stay there for the winter. 
They used wood of the ship to build a house to survive the cold and polar bears. After a long and hard winter the crew used two of the small boats to start on a seven week trip back to safety. Barentsz died along the way and only 12 crew members survived. 
After this, the Dutch stopped looking for a northern route. The sea around Nova Zembla is now called the Barents Sea. 






The death of Willem Barentsz, painted in 1836)

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8. What was the result of Barentsz' expedition for the Netherlands?

Slide 38 - Open question

How did the Spaniards change 
South and Central America? 

After the conquistadores had defeated the Aztecs and the Incas, they brought many changes to the lives of the Native Americans. They forced the survivors to work on plantations and in silver mines. It was hard work, especially for the already weakened Indians, but they were threatened with severe punishment. 
The Indians were forced to become Catholics, their old temples were destroyed and churches were built. Their offerings were seen as worshipping the devil. The Spaniards also brought the Latin alphabet, their language and their governing institutions, to control their vast empire.



The Spanish committed numerous atrocities against the indigenous people of the Americas at first contact
The Aztec writing system consisted of pictures.

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9. The Spanish had a bigger impact on
the local population than the Portuguese.
You see 4 reasons why that was the case.
Put these reasons in the order from
least important to most important
1. installed their own government in the Americas. 
2. converted the local inhabitants to Christianity. 
3. turned the Indians into slaves that had to work on the plantations. 
4. killed many Indians with infectious diseases.

Slide 40 - Open question

The Columbian exchange
 
After the voyage of Columbus, the contact between Europeans and the Native Americans grew and led to an exchange of goods, animals and plants, but also the outbreak of diseases. This mutual exchange of products between Europe and America is called the Columbian exchange. Horses were especially in demand by the Native Americans, once they got accustomed to them. Cows, goats, pigs and sheep were also brought by the Spaniards and supplemented the American livestock. The indigenous inhabitants of America did not have many domesticated animals. They used llamas, alpacas, dogs, turkeys and guinea pigs.






the llama is a typical indigenous animal to South America
The Spaniards also brought horses to America. Can you imagine Indians without horses?

Slide 41 - Slide

The Europeans also discovered that the Native Americans grew crops such as tomatoes, peanuts, pumpkins, maize and potatoes. Products such as cacao and tobacco also became very popular in Europe. 
At the same time, Europeans brought crops to America, such as wheat and barley. They even transported crops from Asia to America, such as oranges, bananas, rice and sugar. They successfully planted these crops in order to make them flourish. The profit went directly to the colonists. The products were grown on huge plantations where slaves had to do the hard labour. In 1542, Bartolomé de Las Casas wrote a letter to the Spanish King Charles V, in which he asked for the protection of Native Americans. After this, slaves were instead taken from Africa. 
Europeans, Africans and native Americans had children together and because of this a melting pot of people developed in America.





Just some of the products that we would never know of, if America had not been discovered.

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10a. What positive effects did the Europeans have on
the Native Americans through the Columbia Exchange?

Slide 43 - Open question

10b. Why were these positive effects very limited?

Slide 44 - Open question

Make your own summary using the main questions:


  1. How did the Portuguese defend their trade routes?
  2. How and where did the French, British and Dutch try to establish their own colonies?
  3. How did the Europeans change the lives of the Native Americans?

Slide 45 - Slide

Which question(s) would you like to be discussed in class when we check this lesson?

Slide 46 - Open question

congratulations
congratulations

Slide 47 - Slide