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* Columbian Exchange impacts | * Columbian Exchange impacts | ||
'''DETAILS''' | '''DETAILS''' | ||
* * | * Christopher Columbus (Spanish expedition) | ||
* Spain finally agreed to sponsor Columbus only after the Portuguese discovered a viable route to India circumnavigating Africa | ** Columbus was convinced he could reach China and India via a westward trajectory across the Atlantic Ocean | ||
* | ** Spain finally agreed to sponsor Columbus only after the Portuguese discovered a viable route to India circumnavigating Africa | ||
* | ** Portuguese had figured out the Atlantic route after developing the “volta da mar” | ||
* Spanish discovery of the Americas was ultimately | *** = circular route following winds and currents to and from Portugal | ||
* | *** = led Portuguese boats further west, leading to their discoveries of the Canary Islands, the Azores, and, eventually, Brazil | ||
* | **** ex. Brazil became a Portuguese colony and today Portuguese is the national language | ||
* Cabot sailed from Bristol, so he used the knowledge of Bristol mariners for his attempt to by-pass the Americas and find a western route to Asia | ** while Columbus never admitted he had not found route to East Asia, | ||
* Cabot’s explorations laid the basis for subsequent British and French competition for control of modern Canada, especially Newfoundland, Quebec and the Great Lakes regions. | ** the Spanish "discovery" of the Americas was ultimately understood by America Vespucci for whom the “Americas” is named | ||
* In 1523, the Florentine (Italy) navigator, | *** = Florentine explorer who recognized that Columbus had not reached the islands east of India and China (the “the Indies”) and had instead discovered a new continent | ||
* In 1534, Jacques Cartier led the first French expedition to the Gulf of St. Lawrence and the St. Lawrence River | **** thus “West Indies” for Caribbean islands and the term “Indian” for the indigenous peoples of the Americas | ||
* John Cabot (British expedition) | |||
** after news of Columbus’ expeditions, the British organized an exploration headed by John Cabot | |||
*** = Venetian, Italy, navigator | |||
*** in 1497 became the first European to explore the North American coast | |||
** it is possible that Columbus had, prior to his 1492 expedition, visited Iceland, Greenland or, possibly, Canada in 1477, as he is thought to have visited Bristol, England, which maintained trade with Iceland. | |||
** Cabot sailed from Bristol, so he used the knowledge of Bristol mariners for his attempt to by-pass the Americas and find a western route to Asia | |||
** Cabot’s explorations laid the basis for subsequent British and French competition for control of modern Canada, especially Newfoundland, Quebec and the Great Lakes regions. | |||
* Giovanni de Verrazzano (French expedition) | |||
** In 1523, the Florentine (Italy) navigator, Verrazzano, led an expedition on behalf of France to find a westward Atlantic route to India. Verrazzano explored the North American coast from the Carolines to modern-day New York. | |||
*** the “Verrazzano Bridge” in New York City is named in his honor. | |||
* Jacques Cartier (French expedition) | |||
** In 1534, Jacques Cartier led the first French expedition to the Gulf of St. Lawrence and the St. Lawrence River | |||
** subsequent French expeditions further explored the St. Lawrence River waterways | |||
*** and established trade relations with Native Americans, especially the Iroquois | |||
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