§1.4: The Spanish conquest of America (P.1)

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This lesson contains 54 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 5 videos.

time-iconLesson duration is: 50 min

Items in this lesson

What? Create a summary of §1.3.

Homework of §1.3!

Slide 1 - Slide

§1.4: the Spanish conquest of America (P.1)



Slide 2 - Slide

Previous learning goals
What was contact like between the Indians and the Spanish?
What was the New World?

Slide 3 - Slide

Describe what first contact was like between the 'Indians' and Europeans.

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Today's learning goals
What was the Treaty of Tordesillas?
ALWAYS write these down in your notebook!
What was the goal of the conquistadores?

Slide 5 - Slide

Slide 6 - Slide

First to circumnavigate the world: Magellan 
(hired by Spain). #TopSecret 🤐

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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

Slide 8 - Slide

Rising tensions
Cause:
Spain and Portugal wanted to conquer the undiscovered world.

                       Effect:
              The Treaty of Tordesillas (1494)          divided their spheres of                             influence.
Pope Alexander VI

Slide 9 - Slide

First Americans
12000 BC: people crossed the Bering Strait.

- North: most people lived as 
   hunter-gatherers. 
- South: advanced civilisations 
   like the Incas and Aztecs.

Slide 10 - Slide

Conquistadores
= Spanish for 'conquerors'.

- Conquered the American
   inland.
- Wanted to find fame and          fortune.
- Had better weapons.

Well-known: Cortés + Pizarro.


Hernan Cortés

Slide 11 - Slide

What? Ex. 1, 2, 3 and 4 page 21 and 22.
How? Individually or in pairs.
Duration? End of the lesson.

Done? Read
 ''Attack on the Aztecs'' and 
              ''Pizarro and the Incas'' from §1.4.
Homework of §1.4!

Slide 12 - Slide

Slide 13 - Video

Conquistadores 

Columbus never found much gold on his voyages, but nevertheless, stories about gold and other riches from the New World spread through Europe after the discovery of America. Many Spanish soldiers had fought during the Reconquista and were now thrilled to set sail to America in search of fame and fortune. These explorers and adventurers were called conquistadores ('conquerors'). 

Hernan Cortés was one of the Spaniards that tried their luck in America. In 1504, he arrived at the island Hispaniola. He lived there and later became governor of Cuba. In 1519 he was ordered to explore the mainland of North America, which was discovered on earlier expeditions. When Cortés landed on the mainland he heard about the riches of the powerful Aztecs who lived in the heartland of Mexico.




Conquistadores fighting the Aztecs
Hernan Cortés

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The first Americans 

Around 12000 BC, people crossed the Bering strait from Asia to North America. 
By the sixteenth century, millions of Native Americans lived on the continent. There were Inuit in the north, bison hunters on prairies and jungle tribes in Amazonia. Most Indians lived as hunter-gatherers, but some were farmers. There were some people who lived in agricultural-urban societies such as the Aztecs and the Incas. They both had a highly developed civilisation and ruled large areas and cities with hundreds of thousands of inhabitants; some of these cities were bigger than those found in 
Europe at the time. They had their own culture: a language, a religion, amazing temples and palaces decorated with elaborate artwork and gold. They commanded strong armies and maintained roads and elaborate trade routes.





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5. The Time of Discoverers and Reformers
Lesson 2. Discovery and Conquest (1)


What is this lesson about?
After the discoveries of Columbus, the Spaniards started to conquer and colonise Central and South America. Cortés defeated the Aztecs with just a small force of soldiers. Pizarro ended the Inca empire. After the conquests the indigenous population suffered severely from European diseases and the slave work that they were forced to do for the Spaniards.

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Main Questions

  1. What was the Treaty of Tordesillas?
  2. What was life like in the Americas before the Europeans came?
  3. What was the goal of the conquistadores?
  4. How did Cortes conquer the Aztec empire?
  5. How did Pizarro conquer the Inca empire?
  6. How were the conquistadores able to defeat an enemy that had 10,000 times more men? 
  7. How were the indiginous people of America treated by the Europeans?

Slide 18 - Slide

people in this lesson
Hernan Cortés
Francisco Pizarro
Moctezuma
Atahualpa

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Important dates in this lesson:


1494: Treaty of Tordesillas
1504: Cortés arrives in the New World
1521: Cortés conquers Tenochtitlan
1532: Pizarro conquers Peru

Slide 20 - Slide

Word Duty





KEY WORDS




Treaty of Tordesillas: treaty in which Spain and Portugal divided the world 
Aztecs: a people in Mexico with a highly developed civilisation 
Incas: a people in Peru, Bolivia and Chili with a highly developed civilisation 
Conquistadores: Spanish explorers and conquerors during the age of discovery 
Indigenous people: the native inhabitants of a country 
Viceroy: official who rules a country or colony ip the name of the king
Hacienda: pieces of land on which Spanish settlers could build a farm or plantation
Encomienda: a right a Spanish settler had to let Indians work on his land



Slide 21 - Slide

3a. 'The native Americans were primitive peoples.'
Do you agree with this statement? Explain your answer.

Slide 22 - Open question

3b. Which of these four definitions fits the term
"agricultural urban society"
best?
A
people are nomads and live as hunter-gatherers
B
all people are farmers
C
most people are farmers but there are also cities
D
all people live in cities

Slide 23 - Quiz

4. What was the main reason for many conquistadors
to travel to America?
A
to conquer land
B
to see touristic sites
C
to get gold
D
to convert Indians into Christians

Slide 24 - Quiz

5. The Aztecs live in present day
A
Mexico
B
Texas
C
Brazil
D
Peru

Slide 25 - Quiz

Attack on the Aztecs 

The Aztecs were impressed when they saw Cortes and his small conquistador army. They had never seen such light skins, strange clothes and different hair colours. 
The horses and war dogs were also new to them. Their iron armour, which reflected sunlight, made the Spaniards look as if they were from another world. 
According to Spanish manuscripts, some Aztecs even believed that Cortes was their god Quetzalcoatl. He used this to his advantage but he also knew that it was not enough to defeat the Aztecs. 

 






Cortés meets Aztec emperor Montezuma
The route that Cortés travelled

Slide 26 - Slide

Tenochtitlan, capital of the Aztec empire

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Slide 28 - Video

Reading Task:

  • Open paragraph 3.3 (page 68 and 69)

  • Grab two pens with a different colour

  • Read the goals on the board

  • Start reading. Write with one pen the words you do not understand in your notebook, and with the other pen the answers to the questions on the board.

  • Compare your textbook with the person next to you and find the correct answers + the meaning of the words.




Goals paragraph 3.2:

  • Why the regenten of the Dutch Republic were divided in Orangists and Anti-Orangists? 

  • What was the disaster that struck the Republic? 

Slide 29 - Slide

Previous lesson

Slide 30 - Mind map

Cortés was able to make allies 
among other tribes and together 
they marched on Tenochtitlan, the largest Aztec city. Its ruler, Moctezuma, invited the Spaniards into his city and brought them many gifts. 
This fuelled their hunger for riches even more and Cortés decided to take over Tenochtitlan using brute force. The Aztec warriors fought bravely, but the technological differences were too great. Their wooden and stone weapons were no match against iron swords, guns and cannons. 
Cortés burned Tenochtitlan and on its remains he built Mexico-City. 
The lands of the Aztecs had been conquered in the name of Spain. 



Cortés' soldiers conquer Tenochtitlan

Slide 31 - Slide

Attack on the Aztecs
  1. Even though the Aztecs were an advanced civilisation, their weapons were inferiour to those of Europe
  2. Cortes manages to conquer the Aztecs with less than 600 men

Slide 32 - Slide

Slide 33 - Video

Pizarro and the Incas 

Inspired by the successes of Cortes, Francisco Pizarro started his third expedition to defeat the Incas. His first two attempts had failed, but in 1531 he tried again. He travelled to South America with just 106 foot-soldiers, 
62 cavalrymen and a few cannons. The Incan emperor, Atahualpa, had just defeated his brother in a bloody civil war and still had more than 50,000 men under his command. He did not see the Spaniards as a threat. 
Pizarro knew that he could only defeat Atahualpa by using a trap and so he invited the emperor at the city of Cajamarca. There Pizarro hid his conquistador army around a central square. When the emperor arrived with his entourage he was suddenly attacked. The fight turned into a massacre in which thousands of unarmed Incas died. Atahualpa was taken hostage and in despair he promised Pizarro a room fitted with gold and two with silver. In the following weeks his followers brought treasures, but it was not enough to save him. Pizarro ordered that Atahualpa had to be killed and a year later he marched on Cusco, the Inca capital. Spain now also ruled large parts of South America.





Death of Inca ruler Atahualpa. 16th-century artwork of the Inca Emperor Atahualpa (seated at right, c.1502-1533) being killed on 29 August 1533 by Spanish conquistadors led by Francisco Pizarro. Atahualpa is being strangled to death using a garotte.

Slide 34 - Slide

Pizarro and the Incas
  1. -Francisco Pizarro used a trap to capture the Inca emperor Atahualpa
  2. -Without a leader the Incas were soon defeated by Pizarro
  3. -Spain now ruled large parts of central and south America

Slide 35 - Slide

Slide 36 - Slide

12. There were very few Spanish soldiers and thousands of Inca soldiers.
How do you think the conquistadores' succes affected their view of the Inca? Explain your answer.

Slide 37 - Open question

Slide 38 - Video

Terrible diseases and hard work 

The conquistadores had killed thousands of Indians during the wars, but this was nothing compared to deaths that were caused by the viruses they brought. Diseases such as typhus, the flu, smallpox and measles were new to the indigenous people, the people who naturally existed in that place, so their bodies did not have immunity. Millions of people were contaminated and died horrible deaths. In some places the population dropped by a staggering 90%. 

The Indians that survived were subjugated as slaves for the Spaniards. After the wars, the Spaniards divided their American territories into the Viceroyalty of Peru and New Spain. Viceroys were representatives of the Spanish king and ruled the colonies on his behalf. The viceroy awarded the conquistadores with a hacienda. These were pieces of land on which they could build plantations, cattle farms or mines. The viceroy also gave them encomienda, the right to have the Indians do the hard work on their land.




the Indians were badly treated by the Spanish

Slide 39 - Slide

Terrible diseases and hard work
  1. Viceroy: Representative of the spanish king, ruled the colonies in the kings name
  2. Hacienda: Pieces of land with plantations, cattle or mines
  3. Ecomienda: the right to let the Indians do the hard work on these lands

Slide 40 - Slide

Slide 41 - Video

The Spanish conquistadores made it sound like the Ecomienda system was fair. What arguments did they use?

Slide 42 - Open question

Give 2 arguments why the system was in fact not fair at all

Slide 43 - Open question

13. Why were European diseases lethal to the Indians?

Slide 44 - Open question

Slaves 

Most Spaniards believed that the death of the Indians was a punishment from God. The Indians were not seen as equals to the Europeans because they were not Catholic, so they were not protected against abuse. 

The Spanish priest De Las Casas opposed this mistreatment by writing a letter to emperor Charles V in which he explained about the hard work the Indians had to do and the harsh punishments they received. He was successful. From that moment the Indians had to be treated better. But the misery did not end because the hacienda owners shipped in slaves from Africa instead to do the hard labour.






Slide 45 - Slide

Source 2; the True History of the Conquest of New Spain, written by Bernal Diaz del Castillo, a conquistador.

'On his side Cuauhtémoc, ... took measures for the defence of his country with unequalled courage; he had obtained from his subjects a promise 'that they would never make peace, but either would die fighting or take our lives. ' The battle was remarkably long and bloody. When the greater number of them had already perished, the few who still remained stoically* resisted thirst, hunger, weariness and pestilence* in the defence of their country, and even refused the proposals of peace that Cortés repeatedly made to them. In this manner only did they die' 

(*stoically = calm, pestilence = diseases) 









Source 1; A Short Account of the Destruction of the Indies, written by Fray Bartolomé de las Casas, a Spanish monk.  

'The cause for which the Christians have slain and destroyed so many, such infinite numbers of souls, has been simply to get, as their ultimate end, the Indians' gold for themselves. They have stuffed themselves with riches in a very few days, owing to the insatiable greed and ambition that they have had, which has been greater than any the world has ever seen before.' 








Read the text "slaves". Then read the sources 1 and 2. In the next 5 questions you must choose which source supports which statement. Keep in mind who wrote the source and to what end.

Slide 46 - Slide

14a. It is un-Christian to treat other human beings that way
A
source B
B
source C

Slide 47 - Quiz

14b. The Spanish only killed the Aztecs when they had to.
A
source B
B
source C

Slide 48 - Quiz

14c. These savages only knew how to fight; there was no reasoning with them.
A
source B
B
source C

Slide 49 - Quiz

14d. The only reason the Spanish conquered these lands was for gold, not to spread Christianity.
A
source B
B
source C

Slide 50 - Quiz

14e. To defend their very lives, Spanish soldiers did
what they had to.
A
source B
B
source C

Slide 51 - Quiz

Add the following information to your world map:
  • treaty of Tordesillas line
  • Aztec and Inca empires (with names)

Slide 52 - Slide

congratulations
congratulations

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Hw:
Page: 22
3/4/5/7/8/10/

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