 
Traditions and Encounters, 4th Edition (Bentley)Chapter 23:
TRANSOCEANIC ENCOUNTERS AND GLOBAL CONNECTIONSChapter Outline- The European reconnaissance of the world's oceans
- Motives for exploration
- Resource-poor Portugal searched for fresh resources
- From the thirteenth to the fifteenth century they ventured out onto Atlantic
- Established sugar plantations in the Atlantic islands
- The lure of direct trade without Muslim intermediaries
- Asian spice trade
- African gold, ivory, and slaves
- Missionary efforts of European Christians
- New Testament urged Christians to spread the faith throughout the world
- Crusades and holy wars against Muslims in early centuries
- Reconquista of Spain inspired Iberian crusaders
- Various motives combined and reinforced each other
- The technology of exploration enabled European mariners to travel offshore
- Sternpost rudder and two types of sails enabled ships to advance against wind
- Navigational instruments
- Magnetic compass
- Astrolabe (and cross and back staffs)
- Knowledge of winds and currents enabled Europeans to travel reliably
- Trade winds north and south of the equator
- Regular monsoons in Indian Ocean basin
- The volta do mar
- Voyages of exploration: From the Mediterranean to the Atlantic
- Dom Henrique, king of Portugal, encouraged exploration of west Africa
- Portuguese conquered Ceuta in north Africa in 1415
- Soon after, established trading posts at Sao Jorge da Mina, west Africa
- Dias rounded the Cape of Good Hope and entered the Indian Ocean, 1488
- Vasco da Gama of Portugal
- Crossed Indian Ocean; reached India, 1497; brought back huge profit
- Portuguese merchants built a trading post at Calicut, 1500
- Christopher Columbus, Genoese mariner
- Proposed sailing to Asian markets by a western route
- Sponsored by Catholic kings of Spain; sailed to Bahamas in 1492
- Columbus's voyage enabled other mariners to link east and west hemispheres.
- Voyages of exploration: from the Atlantic to the Pacific
- Ferdinand Magellan, Portuguese navigator, in service of Spain
- Crossed both the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans 1519-1522
- One ship out of five completed the circumnavigation of the world
- Magellan died in conflict in a Philippine island on the way home
- Exploration of the Pacific took three centuries to complete
- Trade route between the Philippines and Mexico, by Spanish merchants
- English mariners searched for a northwest passage from Europe to Asia
- Captain James Cook (1728-1779), British explorer
- Led three expeditions to the Pacific, the Arctic, Australia; died in Hawaii
- By late eighteenth century, Europeans had reasonably accurate geographical knowledge of the world
- Trade and conflict in early modern Asia
- Trading-post empires
- Portuguese built more than fifty trading posts between west Africa and east Asia
- Alfonso d'Alboquerque, sixteenth-century Portuguese commander in Indian Ocean
- Seized Hormuz in 1508, Goa in 1510, and Melaka in 1511
- Forced all merchant ships to purchase safe-conduct passes
- Portuguese hegemony grew weak by the late sixteenth century
- English and Dutch established parallel trading posts in Asian coasts
- English in India, the Dutch at Cape Town and Indonesia
- Sailed faster, cheaper, and more powerful ships than Portuguese
- Created an efficient commercial organization--the joint-stock company
- Formation of powerful, profitable joint-stock companies
- The English East India Company, founded in 1600
- The United East India Company (VOC), Dutch company founded in 1602
- Both were private enterprises, enjoyed government support, little oversight
- European conquests in southeast Asia
- Spanish conquest of the Philippines led by Legazpi, 1565
- Manila, the bustling port city, became the Spanish capital
- Spanish and Filipino residents massacred Chinese merchants by thousands
- Christianity throughout the archipelago
- Muslim resistance on southern island of Mindanao
- Conquest of Java by the Dutch
- Began with VOC trading city of Batavia in 1619
- Policy: secure VOC monopoly over spice production and trade
- Enormous monopoly profit led to prosperity of Netherlands, seventeenth century
- Commercial rivalries and the Seven Years' War
- Global competition and conflict
- Dutch forces expelled most Portuguese merchants from southeast Asia
- Conflict between English and French merchants over control of Indian cotton and tea from Ceylon, early eighteenth century
- Competition in the Americas among English, French, and Spanish forces
- The Seven Years' War (1756-1763)
- In Europe: British and Prussia against France, Austria, and Russia
- In India: fighting between British and French forces, each with local allies
- In the Caribbean: Spanish and French united to limit British expansion
- In North America: fights between British and French forces
- Outcome: British hegemony
- British gained control of India, Canada, Florida
- In Europe, Prussian armies held off massive armies of the enemies
- War paved the way for the British empire in the nineteenth century
- Global exchanges
- The Columbian Exchange
- Biological exchanges between Old and New Worlds
- Columbian Exchange--global diffusion of plants, food crops, animals, human populations, and disease pathogens after Columbus's voyages
- Permanently altered the earth's environment
- Epidemic diseases--smallpox, measles, diphtheria, whooping cough, and influenza--led to staggering population losses
- Smallpox reduced Aztec population by 95 percent in one century after 1519
- Contagious diseases had same horrifying effects in the Pacific islands
- Between 1500 and 1800, one hundred million people died of imported diseases
- New foods and domestic animals
- Wheat, horses, cattle, sheep, goats, and chickens went to Americas
- American crops included maize, potatoes, beans, tomatoes, peppers, peanuts
- Growth of world population: from 425 million in 1500 to 900 million in 1800
- Migration of human populations
- Enslaved Africans were largest group of migrants from 1500 to 1800
- Sizable migration from Europe to the Americas
- Nineteenth century, European migration to South Africa, Australia, and Pacific Islands
- The origins of global trade
- Transoceanic trade: European merchants created a genuinely global trading system of supply and demand, linking the ports of the world
- The Manila galleons
- Sleek, fast, heavily armed ships that sailed between Manila and Mexico
- Asian luxury goods to Mexico, silver from Mexico to China
 |  |
|