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Essential Question: What are the similarities & differences among the Spanish, French, & British patterns of colonization in America? Lesson plan for August.

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Presentation on theme: "Essential Question: What are the similarities & differences among the Spanish, French, & British patterns of colonization in America? Lesson plan for August."— Presentation transcript:

1 Essential Question: What are the similarities & differences among the Spanish, French, & British patterns of colonization in America? Lesson plan for August 14, 2007: warm-up questions, mental mapping of European exploration, notes via ppt

2 America Prior to the Arrival of Europeans

3

4 Aztecs (In Present-Day Mexico)

5 Trade—Pottery, tools, jewelry, figurines, baskets, and cloth were produced for the ruler or sold in the local markets. Prized luxury items (lake salt, gold ornaments, and rich garments) were traded to distant peoples along the Gulf coast and south toward what is now Guatemala. They received: luxury items such as tropical-bird feathers, jaguar skins, cotton, rubber, and cacao beans for chocolate. The Aztec had no wheeled vehicles or draft animals, so trading goods were carried by canoe or on the backs of porters, who marched in long caravans led by merchants. In dangerous areas, Aztec warriors would protect the caravans. Merchants would often act as spies for the empire when trading in towns that had not been conquered by the Aztec. "Aztec Empire," Microsoft® Encarta® Encyclopedia © Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

6 Eastern Woodland Cultures
04/06/98 Along the Atlantic Coast of North America, Native Americans lived in smaller, mobile bands: Farming was supplemented by hunting and gathering Eastern woodland Indians were likely the first natives to be encountered by English settlers Linguistic differences & societies based on kinship; egalitarian methods of resolving differences (impressed Europeans with “democratic” styles of diplomacy) 4 4 4 4

7 Locations of Major Indian Groups and Culture Areas in the 1600s
04/06/98 4 4 4 4

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9 When Worlds Collide On the map provided, label and shade trade patterns & the regions of the world colonized by (a) Spain, (b) France, (c) England, & (d) Dutch during the Age of Exploration

10 Voyages of European Exploration
04/06/98 16 17 17 17

11 The Columbian Exchange

12 The Spanish Colonies in America

13 A World Transformed 04/06/98 Native Americans were eager for European trade; they were not initially victims of Spanish exploration They became dependent on and indebted to Europeans Disease decimated perhaps 95% of Native American population 7 7 7 7

14 Spanish Conquests & Colonies
The Spanish used the encomienda system to create large cash crop plantations using Native American & African slave labor Spanish missionaries focused heavily on converting Native Americans & establishing missions

15 From Plunder to Settlement
04/06/98 By 1650, 1/2 million Spaniards immigrated to the New World Mostly unmarried males came to New World; intermarriage led to mixed-blood mestizos & mulattos Distinguished between social classes: peninsulares & creoles The Spanish gov’t operated strict control over the colonies Whites from Spain Whites born in America 17 18 18 18

16

17 The French Colonies in America

18 The French Claim Canada
04/06/98 In 1608, Samuel de Champlain founded Quebec; French Empire eventually included St. Lawrence River, Great Lakes, Mississippi The French gov’t strictly controlled the colonies but made little effort to encourage settlement Because the fur trade was the basis of the colonial economy, Indians became valued trading partners (not exploitive like Spain) 18 19 19 19

19 Like Spain, the French gov’t encouraged converting Native Americans & establishing missions

20 The English Colonies in America

21 The English Colonies In the 1600s, English settlers arrived in North America English colonization differed from Spanish & French because the English gov’t had no desire to create a centralized empire in the New World Different motivations by English settlers led to different types of colonies

22 Migrating to the English Colonies
17th century England faced major social changes: The most significantly was a boom in population; Competition for land, food, jobs led to a large mobile population (vagrants?) People had choices: could move to cities, Ireland, Netherlands, or America (but this was most expensive & dangerous)

23 Migrating to the English Colonies
Motives for migration to America: Religious: purer form of worship Economic: Escape poverty or the threat of lifelong poverty Personal: to escape bad marriages or jail terms Migration to America was facilitated by the English Civil War & Glorious Revolution

24 The Stuart Monarchs

25 Four Colonial Subcultures
The values of the migrants dictated the “personality” of the newly created colonies; led to distinct (not unified) colonies The Chesapeake New England Middle Colonies The Carolinas & Georgia

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27 By the early 1600s, Spain, England, & France had large territorial claims in North America (but these colonies were not heavily populated, especially in Spanish & French claims) These colonial claims came largely at the expense of the Native Americans already living there

28 Spanish, French, & English Colonial Patterns?
In your teams, address the following essential question: What were the advantages & disadvantages of Spanish, French, & English colonial patterns in terms of long-term colonization in America? Create a chart with your ideas

29 Advantages for long-term colonization
Disadvantages for long-term colonization Spain France England


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