The Atlantic World 1450 – 1750: How far did the Atlantic World change?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Review. The Big Thematic picture Theme 1- Interaction between humans and the environment Theme 2 Development and interaction of cultures Theme.
Advertisements

Triangular Trade & Slavery. Review What was the Columbian Exchange? What was the Triangular Trade?
Historical Themes Historical themes teach students to think conceptually about the American past and focus on historical change over time.
Key Comparisons AP World History.
The Age of Exploration The First Global Economic Systems
Age of Exploration Jeopardy
COLUMBIAN EXCHANGE Columbian Exchange = Global transfer of food, plants, animals, people, and disease during colonization of the Americas.
The Columbian Exchange
The Global Age A Global Trade Network enormous extension of networks of communication and exchange Every region of the world became connected.
Review. The Big Thematic picture Theme 1: Patterns and effects of interaction Theme 2: Dynamics of changes and continuity Theme 3: Effects of.
Chapter 1, Section 2 An Age of Exploration p
SPATIAL DIFFUSION: How do ideas, products, technology, and culture spread? WG.1.B Trace the spatial diffusion of phenomena SUCH AS the Columbian Exchange.
Atlantic Slave Trade, Commercial Revolution, and Exploration: Big Picture Age of Exploration.
E. Napp The Transatlantic Slave Trade In this lesson, students will be able to define the following terms: The Transatlantic Slave Trade Reasons for the.
European Exploration and the Discovery of America Unit 1, Lesson 1.
Silk, Sea, and Sand Roads AP World Mr. Colden Fall 2013.
EXPLORER Teacher Definition a person who investigates unknown regions.
The Age of Exploration Chapter 1.2. The Age of Exploration Muslims dominate trade routes between Africa and China, including The Silk Road.
Chapter 20: Science and Exploration. What is the Scientific Revolution? What is the Age of Exploration?
THE COLUMBIAN EXCHANGE AND MERCANTILISM THE AGE OF EXPLORATION.
1. Silk Road across Asia to the Mediterranean Sea 2. Maritime (sea) routes across the Indian Ocean 3. Trans-Saharan routes across North Africa 4. Northern.
Columbian Exchange The exchange of plants, animals, and diseases between Europe, Africa, and the Americas.
Essential Question: What were the global impacts of the European Age of Exploration? Warm-Up Question: What was the Columbian Exchange? What is mercantilism?
Impact of Exploration on Africa World History I. Slave Trade – Sugarcane Plantations were set up along the coast of Brazil and in the Caribbean. – The.
The Commercial Revolution New wealth from the Americas combined with a dramatic growth in overseas trade created the Commercial Revolution. The transfer.
PresentationExpress. Click a subsection to advance to that particular section. Advance through the slide show using your mouse or the space bar. Many.
The Beginnings: Colonial America. Age of Exploration Three powers create a struggle Portugal Spain England Collision of Worlds Columbus Europe, Africa,
Key Concept 4.1 Globalizing networks of communication and exchange
European Exploration: Immediate Effects
The Columbian Exchange and African Slavery In the New World.
THIRD WAVE CIVILIZATIONS 600 CE THE QUESTION OF PERIODIZATION ✕ How should we interpret the millennium that stretches from the end of the classical.
For many years, the Silk Road connected China to the Middle East and ultimately, Europe. A mostly overland journey until the Mediterranean Sea, the Silk.
Major Trade Routes of the 1500’s Silk Road across Asia to the Mediterranean Sea Maritime (sea) routes across the Indian Ocean Trans-Saharan routes across.
The Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade
Effects of European exploration
Columbian Exchange and Triangular Trade
CONSEQUENCES OF EUROPEAN EXPLORATION AND THE DISCOVERY OF THE AMERICAS
The Columbian Exchange
Setting the Stage for English Settlement in North America
Time Period IV: THE EARLY MODERN PERIOD, ( ) “THE WORLD SHRINKS”
THE COLUMBIAN EXCHANGE
Emergence of the Global Economy
The Columbian Exchange
The Commercial Revolution
Age of Exploration and Trade 1400 to 1700
Global Economic Systems
Lesson #12-Exploration Part 2
Period 1: KC 1.2.
AP Review: Unit 4.2 (Society and State)
PRACTICE TIME! QUICK FIRE THESIS STATEMENTS
Section 4 Africa and the Atlantic Slave trade
The Slave Trade.
Ways of the World: A Brief Global History First Edition
The Atlantic Slave Trade
U.S. History & Government Br. Siraj
The Columbian Exchange
Chapter 1 New World Beginnigs.
SPATIAL DIFFUSION: How do ideas, products, technology, and culture spread? WG.1.B Trace the spatial diffusion of phenomena SUCH AS the Columbian Exchange.
Warm-up 1. Which group suffered the greatest loss of authority as absolute monarchy took hold in the West at the beginning of the 17th century? A. Monarchs.
The Transatlantic Slave Trade
SPATIAL DIFFUSION: How do ideas, products, technology, and culture spread? WG.1.B Trace the spatial diffusion of phenomena SUCH AS the Columbian Exchange.
Global Economic Systems
Cause or Result Age of Exploration.
Old vs. New Imperialism.
Do Now: Turn in your Sugar, Potato, or Horse ad.
Columbian Exchange.
EXPLORER Teacher Definition a person who investigates unknown regions.
Many Native American Indians died from smallpox disease.
Imperialism the policy of extending the authority of an empire, through force or political systems, over foreign countries.
Presentation transcript:

The Atlantic World 1450 – 1750: How far did the Atlantic World change? AP World History Richard Smart Oakland Mills High School

Putting it into context… The Afro-Eurasian Network Silk Road Indian Ocean Trade Trans-Saharan Trade American Trade Regional Stone Age Meso-American hub Indian Ocean Hub Chinese goods Indian goods Roman/Chinese Arab/European traders

Trade – the great Catalyst… The Big Themes… Trade – the great Catalyst…

The Columbian Exchange Slide 17 The Columbian Exchange Americas: turkey, pumpkin, corn or maize, chocolate, tomato, tobacco, potato, chili pepper, peanut, pineapple, beans Afroeurasia: citrus, cotton (varieties) coffee, sugar, tea, wheat, yam, banana, rice, millet, sorghum. Plants, animals, and micro-organisms of Afroeurasia were exchanged with those of the Americas across the oceans.

The Middle Passage – Slavery Slide 16 Map by Robert Prom Adapted from maps in Philip D. Curtin, The Atlantic Slave Trade: A Census (Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press, 1969) The Middle Passage – Slavery

Europe Population growth Migrations – America Capitalism Technological development Agriculture Americas European migration Plantations Economic dependence Silver Native depopulation. Slavery Multi-racial societies Commercial Agriculture Africa Migration - Slavery Economic dependence Depopulation Gender imbalance Agriculture

Any continuities? Slavery had always been a part of the African economy and society. Europe remains ethnically homogenous. Traditional African culture, religion, society did continue. Traditional Native American culture, religion & society did continue.