Ch 01 Chapter Study Outline
Chapter 1 Study Outline
- The First Americans
- The Settling of North America by Native Americans
- Gradual settlement across Americas
- Environmental change and rise of agriculture
- Aztec and Inca empires
- North American Indians
- Wide-ranging and evolving societies
- Mississippi Valley
- Ohio River Valley
- Southwest
- West Coast
- Great Plains
- Southeast
- Northeast
- Interrelations among Indian societies
- Trade
- Diplomacy
- War
- Distinguishing factors among Indian societies
- Political organization
- Religious beliefs
- Language
- Absence of shared identity
- Common characteristics among Indian societies
- Native American Religion
- Place of ritual
- Views on natural and supernatural
- Views on secular and religious
- Land and property
- Relative lack of material inequality
- Gender relations
- European disdain for Indian customs and values
- Indian freedom; European freedom
- Indian conceptions of freedom
- Basis in collective belonging, self-determination, mutuality
- Absence of basis in individual autonomy, private property
- European incomprehension of
- European conceptions of freedom
- Christian liberty
- Freedom from sin
- No freedom of religious choice
- Freedom and inequality in early modern England
- Emphasis on ordered, hierarchical society
- Gender hierarchies
- Class hierarchies
- Unequal distribution of freedoms
- The expansion of Europe
- Initial aims
- Commercial sea route to Asia
- Circumvention of Islamic middlemen
- Eastward expansion
- Chinese exploration
- South Asia
- Eastern Africa
- Portugal's exploration, extension of trading empire
- West Africa
- Cape of Good Hope
- India
- Far East
- Portugal's colonization of Atlantic islands
- Sugar plantations
- Slaves from Africa
- Freedom and slavery in Africa
- Traditional patterns of African slavery
- Acceleration of slave trade following European arrival
- Contact
- Voyages of Christopher Columbus
- Quest for westward route to Asia
- Sponsorship of Spain
- First Spanish presence in New World
- Settlements at Hispaniola
- Explorations by Amerigo Vespucci
- First English and Portuguese presence in New World
- John Cabot (Newfoundland)
- Pedro Cabral (Brazil)
- Spanish conquest of New World
- Motivations
- Acquisition of wealth
- National glory
- Spread of Catholicism
- The Conquistadores
- Vasco Núñez de Balboa's expedition to Panama, the Pacific
- Ferdinand Magellan's expedition around the world
- Hernán Cortés's conquest of the Aztecs
- Background on Aztec empire
- Defeat, devastation, subjugation of the Aztecs
- Francisco Pizarro's conquest of the Incas
- Background on Inca empire
- Defeat, devastation, subjugation of the Incas
- Demographic consequences of European arrival in the Americas
- "Columbian Exchange" of goods and people
- Devastation of Indian population
- Breadth and magnitude
- Causes
- War
- Enslavement
- Disease
- The Spanish Empire (sixteenth century)
- Breadth
- Governing Spanish America
- Curbing of conquistador aggression
- Establishment of top-down royal governance
- Emergence of locally based governance
- Colonists in Spanish America
- Volume
- Social composition
- Colonists and Indians; Exploitation of Indian labor
- Gold and silver mines
- Large-scale farms (haciendas)
- Impact of native societies on empire's prospects
- Gestation of a hybrid culture; Mestizos
- Justifications for conquest
- Perception of cultural superiority
- Old World precedent for violent crusades
- Papal bull dividing New World between Spain and Portugal
- Imperative to spread Catholicism
- Versus heathenism
- Versus Protestantism
- Spain and the Indians
- Dual agenda of saving souls and exploiting labor
- External restraints on brutalization of Indians
- Pope Paul III's ban on Indian enslavement
- Bartolomé de Las Casas's Destruction of the Indies
- Spanish reforms of colonist–Indian relations
- Abolition of Indian enslavement
- Abolition of encomienda system
- Implementation of repartimiento system
- Continuing abuse of Indians
- Colonial labor system at end of sixteenth century
- Involuntary wage labor by Indians
- Slave labor by Africans
- Emergence of Black Legend image of Spanish colonizers
- Spanish explorations of North America
- Motivations
- Riches
- Strategic bases
- Religious conversion
- Exploratory expeditions
- Juan Ponce de León
- Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo
- Hernando de Soto
- Cabeza de Vaca
- Francisco Vásquez de Coronado
- Devastation of Indian communities
- Establishment of Spanish settlements
- In present-day Southeast
- In present-day Southwest
- Pueblo revolt
- Sources of Pueblo resentment of colonial authorities
- Labor exploitation
- Pressure to convert to Catholicism
- Assault on Pueblo religious traditions
- Failure to protect Pueblos from drought, external attacks
- The 1680 revolt
- Popé
- Background
- Leadership
- Unity of Pueblo rebels
- Defeat and ouster of Spanish colonizers
- Aftermath of revolt
- Eradication of Spanish cultural presence
- Collapse of Pueblo unity
- Return of Spanish colonial rule
- Easing of colonial practices toward Pueblos
- The French and Dutch empires
- Overall significance
- As part of Atlantic rivalry with Spain
- Modesty of, compared to Spanish empire
- French Colonization
- Initial aims
- Initial obstacles
- Establishment and scope of
- New France and the Indians
- Social and economic arrangements
- Limits of growth
- The Dutch empire
- Establishment and scope of
- Place within Dutch commercial empire
- Dutch freedom; conceptions of liberty and toleration
- Social and economic arrangements
- Limits of growth
- Relations with Indians
Last modified: Tuesday, March 1, 2011, 4:43 AM