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6th - 8th , exploration test, christopher columbus, 3rd - 4th , european exploration, the age of exploration, 7th - 10th , europeans in the caribbean, 12th - university , european explorers.
The Voyages of Discovery
11 questions
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What was the pattern of trade that connected Europe, Africa, and the American continents called?
Slave Trade
Triangular Trade
Middle Passage
Where did Columbus first take foot in the New World?
Which two inventions had the necessary technology to make sea exploration possible in the 1400s?
The globe and the telescope
The astrolabe and the compass
The telegraph and better ships
The scientific method and maps
What was the effect of Vasco da Gama’s voyage to India in 1498?
Portugal was invaded by the Indian army.
Portugal began trading directly to India.
Portugal and Spain agreed to share ownership of overseas territories.
Portugal ended all sea voyages.
What was the significance of Ferdinand Magellan’s Voyages which began in 1519?
It was the first European Voyage to reach Australia and New Zealand.
It was the first voyage to circumnavigate or sail around the globe.
It was the first voyage to sail through the Northwest Passage.
It was the first European voyage to sail around the Cape of Good Hope in Africa.
_____ was a Portuguese prince who helped to start the Age of Exploration in the early 15 th century.
Bartholomeu Diaz
Ferdinand Magellan
Vasco da Gama
Prince Henry the navigator
True or False: The Age of Exploration took place at about the same time as the European Renaissance.
True or False: During this age of exploration, European countries wanted to spread Christianity beyond Europe, expand their empires and they wanted to become rich.
According to the map titled “The Slave Trade”, where were most slave forts located?
The Cape of Good Hope
The west coast of Africa
The Middle Passage
Which of the following is a good that was obtained from China during the Age of Exploration?
Precious gems
The New world was named after _____.
Amerigo Vespucci
Hernando Cortez
Francis Coronado
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This series contains 16 animated historical maps. For a preview, please consult the maps below:
▶ the circumference of the earth and the route towards the west, ▶ magellan’s voyage 1519-1522.
▶ Decolonization after 1945
▶ The United States: a territorial history
▶ The Portuguese and Spanish Empires
▶ European Colonies in North America
The Age of Discovery (Part I)
During the first half of the 15th century, the Portuguese were encouraged by Prince Henry the Navigator to explore the coasts of Africa. In 1492 Christopher Columbus sailed further west into the Atlantic Ocean and discovered islands that he thought were close to Asia. A few years later, Vasco de Gama reached India by sailing around Southern Africa. In 1522, one of the ships in Magellan’s fleet returned to Europe and brought proof that it was possible to circumnavigate the Earth. In a few decades, the way that Europeans saw the world had been completely transformed.
North Atlantic sailings prior to Christopher Columbus
Video extract
Before Christopher Columbus, other European sailors had reached the coasts of America, which we know since there are traces of their presence on these shores. However, this maritime exploit by a few hundred men did not lead to long-term settlement.
The travels of Marco Polo
Marco Polo left Venice with his father and uncle in 1271. Travelling to Ormuz, Central Asia and Mongolia, the three men reached Khanbalik, today’s Beijing, and were welcomed to the luxurious Mongol court. Marco Polo became an adviser to Emperor Khublai Khan and travelled extensively through China.
The voyages of Ibn Battuta 1325-1355
Ibn Battuta was born in Tangier half a century after Marco Polo. For more than thirty years, he travelled to the Middle East, Africa, Central Asia, India and China. Ibn Battuta dictated the story of his travels, known as the “Rihla”, to the secretary of the Sultan of Fez.
The maritime expeditions of Zheng He
In the early 15th century, China launched an exceptional venture: seven major maritime expeditions to explore the Indian Ocean. Unfortunately, the official archives, with plans of the ships and their logs, were destroyed several decades later, which explains why many aspects of this extraordinary adventure are unknown to us today.
Trade in the Indian Ocean in the 15th century
In the 15th century, trade in the Indian Ocean was centred on Southern ports on the Arabian peninsula, the Islamic trading posts on the African coast, and ports on the Indian coast. This triangle was then linked to Malacca by merchant ships travelling to Sri Lanka and the Bay of Bengal, thus making a huge semi-circle stretching from Japan and China to the Spice Islands and Java.
Portuguese Exploration of the African coastline
In order to circumvent the Muslim monopoly on trans-Saharan caravans, around the year 1420 the Portuguese sought access to rich African resources by ship. Encouraged by Henry the Navigator, they sailed out to Africa but had no knowledge of the coastal waters beyond Cape Bojador.
Vasco da Gama’s voyage 1497-1498
King Manuel I of Portugal chose Vasco da Gama to lead the first maritime expedition to India. The passage was opened up by Bartolomeu Diaz who had sailed around the Cape of Good Hope ten years earlier.
The voyage of Pêro da Covilha
During the 15th century, the Indian Ocean was still a great mystery to Europeans. In 1487, the King of Portugal gave Pêro da Covilha and Alfonso de Paiva a mission to report on sailing conditions between Africa and India and to make contact with the legendary Christian kingdom of Prester John.
Portuguese Volta (The ‘Loop’)
During the 15th century, the Portuguese did not know that the world turned on its own axis nor did they have the scientific knowledge to understand atmospheric circulation. It was thanks to their wide-ranging experience as navigators that they overcame the difficult sailing conditions encountered in the Atlantic Ocean.
Portuguese expansion in the Indian Ocean
Portuguese expansion in the Indian Ocean, after Vasco da Gama’s first voyage, was remarkable. The first two Viceroys, Francisco de Almeida and Afonso de Albuquerque, founded a network of trading posts and fortresses along the coast. The Treaty of Saragossa 1529 confirmed Portuguese dominance in the Indian Ocean.
The Treaties of Tordesillas (1494) and Saragossa (1529)
The first successful expeditions across the Atlantic Ocean raised the question of what to do with the archipelagos and new lands discovered by these navigators. In 1479, Portugal and Castile signed an initial treaty confirming Castile’s dominion over the Canaries, while recognizing Portugal’s monopoly on the African coast.
The circumference of the Earth and the Route towards the West
Complete video
In the 3rd century BCE, Eratosthenes calculated the circumference of the Earth with remarkable precision. In later centuries, other Greek geographers, including the most famous of them all, Ptolemy, suggested a much lower figure for the circumference for our planet. This under-estimation was adopted by 15th century map-makers.
Christopher Columbus’ first voyage 1492-1493
Christopher Columbus sailed under the Portuguese flag, but it was Isabella of Castile who provided the funds for his project to sail to Asia by a western route. His flotilla of three ships set sail from Southern Spain on 3 August 1492. He headed first for the Canary Islands, before setting off across the Atlantic Ocean and discovering islands near the American continent.
Christopher Columbus’ three subsequent voyages
In the years following his first voyage, Christopher Columbus carried out three more journeys, but with better resources than in the past. He explored the ring of Caribbean islands, founded the colony of La Isabella on the island of Hispaniola, discovered the huge delta of the Orinoco and sailed along the coast of today’s Honduras.
The first explorations in the New World
Following Christopher Columbus’ discovery of the New World, several expeditions tried to reach China and the Indies by sailing west. Gradually, the Europeans found themselves sailing along the coast of a new continent.
Magellan’s voyage 1519-1522
The expedition led by Magellan was expected to sail as far as the Spice Islands to the west by sailing around the American continent. It was financed by Spain, which hoped to gain access to these islands and their spices without crossing the Indian Ocean, then dominated by the Portuguese.
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COMMENTS
biological evolution, evolved. A ____ ____ is a well-established scientific explanation of events in the natural world. scientific theory. Scientific theories can be used to make ____ about events in the natural world that can be tested by ____ and _____. predictions, experience, observations.
The glyptodon fossils and living armadillos that Darwin observed during his voyage are related to which pattern of biodiversity? Diversity varies over time. Which scientist, at the same time, also had a theory of evolution that was identical to Darwin?
Study with Quizlet and memorize flashcards containing terms like Evolution, Fossil, Did Darwin discover evolution? and more.
The Voyages of Discovery quiz for 8th grade students. Find other quizzes for History and more on Quizizz for free!
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The Age of Discovery (c. 1418 – c. 1620), [1] also known as the Age of Exploration, was part of the early modern period and largely overlapped with the Age of Sail. It was a period from approximately the late 15th century to the 17th century, during which seafarers from a number of European countries explored, colonized, and conquered regions ...
Fossil evidence shows that life on earth was once different from life found today. Study with Quizlet and memorize flashcards containing terms like What was the purpose of the HMS beagle's voyage in 1831?, What was charles Darwin hired to do on this voyage?, At the time of Darwin's voyage, geologists were suggesting that Earth was ancient and ...
Learn about the Age of Discovery, the Voyages of Columbus and Magellan - Learning resource. The Age of Discovery (Part I) During the first half of the 15th century, the Portuguese were encouraged by Prince Henry the Navigator to explore the coasts of Africa.