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Columbus Day Hero Or Villain?.

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Presentation on theme: "Columbus Day Hero Or Villain?."— Presentation transcript:

1 Columbus Day Hero Or Villain?

2 CONS ( - ) His brutal actions toward Native-Americans were unnecessarily cruel and plainly immoral and are not worthy of any national holiday. Considering a holiday from the viewpoint of Native Americans, who were here far before Columbus, seems insensitive and inconsiderate. Columbus opened an era of genocide, cruelty, and slavery on a larger scale than ever seen before.

3 PROS ( + ) In sailing west to the Far East, he accidently “discovered” land previously unknown to contemporary Europeans. His achievement resulted in a permanent relationship between Europe and the America’s. His was 1st step in a long process that produced the United States, a new democratic society. The discovery was an essential factor in ushering in the modern age.

4 Impact of Columbus’ Voyage
Columbian Exchange: The exchange of plants, animals, and ideas between the New World (the Americas) and the Old World (Europe) As a result, European diseases kill millions of Native Americans

5 “Where is that food from?”
Decide where the plants and animals originated (the Americas, or Europe/Africa)

6 Columbian Exchange

7 Impact of Columbus’ Voyage
EUROPEANS Increase in wealth Encourages exploration Ethnocentrism – belief in racial, cultural, national superiority over others Columbian Exchange NATIVE AMERICANS European diseases Wipes out 90% of Native population Forced labor Rebellion-Suppression Smallpox, chicken pox, yellow fever, malaria, measles AFRICA Slave trade flourishes African societies devastated

8 The Atlantic Slave Trade (Triangular Trade)
Slavery in Africa • Slavery had existed in Africa for centuries, but been minor practice The Demand for Africans • Need for workers in Americas raises demand for enslaved Africans • Africans withstand diseases, have farming skills, unlikely to escape • Triangular slave trade—forced movement of many Africans to Americas

9 The Atlantic Slave Trade (Triangular Trade)

10 A Forced Journey The Triangular Trade • Triangular trade—trade network linking Europe, Africa, Americas • One trade route: - manufactured goods move from Europe to Africa - people move from Africa to Americas - sugar, coffee, tobacco move from Americas to Europe The Middle Passage • Voyage of enslaved Africans to Americas known as the middle passage • As many as 20 percent of Africans die on these journeys

11 Global Trade Changing Economies
• Wealth from Americas, growth of trade changes business in Europe The Rise of Capitalism • New economic system—capitalism—based on private property, profit Joint-Stock Companies • Joint-stock company lets investors share risk, profits of business • These companies help fund colonies in America EXT

12 JAMESTOWN

13 The Growth of Mercantilism
New Economic Policy • Policy of mercantilism emphasizes national wealth as source of power Balance of Trade • One way for nation to increase wealth: gather gold, silver • Favorable balance of trade when nation sells more goods than it buys • Colonies provide raw materials that home country uses to make goods NEXT


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