Summary:
225
million years ago, Earth was one supercontinent (Pangaea) and ocean. About 10 million years ago, the
In
1000 AD, Vikings discovered
Complications
and dangers of this eastern sea route influenced Christopher Columbus to sail
west. In doing so, he inadvertently
discovered the
Important People:
Native Americans who that lived
in what is now Mexico and routinely offered their gods human sacrifices, these
people were violent, yet built amazing pyramids and built a great civilization
without having a wheel.
Indians of the
At
This was legendary leader who
inspired the Iroquois, a powerful group of Native Americans in the
northeaster woodlands of the
These Vikings discovered
Italian adventurer who supposedly
sailed to the
A Portuguese sailor, he was the
first to round the southernmost tip of
In 1498, he reached
Ferdinand of Aragon and Isabella
of
The wedded king and queen of
An Italian seafarer who persuaded
Discoverer of the
In 1519, his crew began a voyage
and eventually ended up becoming the first to circumnavigate the world, even
though he died in the
In 1513 and 1521, this Spanish
Explorer explored
From 1540 to 1542, he explored
the pueblos of
From 1539 to 1542, he explored
In 1532, he crushed the Incas of
Peru and got lots of bounty.
A Spanish missionary who was
appalled by the method of encomienda, calling it “a moral pestilence
invented by Satan.”
Annihilator of the Aztec in 1519.
A female Indian slave who knew
Mayan and Nahuatl, the language of the Aztec.
The leader of the Aztecs at the
time of Cortés’ invasion who believed that Cortés was the Aztec god
Quetzalcoatl.
AKA John Cabot, he explored the
northeastern coaster of
An Italian explorer dispatched by
the French king in 1524 to probe the eastern seaboard of
Leader of a Spanish group that
traversed parts of
Sent by the French, he went on an
expedition down the
He explored the
The Spanish missionary who
founded 21 missions in
Key Terms & Words, etc…:
maize - the Indian word for corn
Conquistadores - the Spanish word for “conqueror,” these
explorers claimed much of
encomienda - a
euphemism for slavery in which Indians were given to colonists to be
“Christianized.”
Día de la Raza - Spanish for Columbus Day.
Treaty of Tordesillas - treaty
that settled Spanish and Portuguese differences in the
Popé’s Rebellion - revolt in which
Indians took over
Places and Countries:
Capital of the West African
Areas where sugar plantations
were established by
A rich silver mine in
Timeline:
|
c. 33,000 – 8000 BC |
First humans come to |
|
c. 5000 BC |
Corn is developed as a stable
crop in highland |
|
c. 4000 BC |
First civilized societies
develop in the |
|
c. 1200 BC |
Corn planting reaches
present-day American Southwest. |
|
c. 1000 AD |
Norse voyagers discover and
briefly settle in Also, corn cultivation reaches |
|
c. 1100 AD |
Height of Mississippian
settlement at |
|
c. 1100 – 1300 |
Christian crusades arouse
European interest in the East. |
|
1295 |
Marco Polo returns to |
|
Late 1400s |
|
|
1488 |
Díaz rounds the southern tip of
|
|
1492 |
|
|
1494 |
Treaty of Tordesillas between |
|
1498 |
da Gama reaches Cabot explores northeastern
coast of |
|
1513 |
Balboa claims all lands touched
by the |
|
1513 & 1521 |
Ponce de León explores
|
|
1519 – 1521 |
Cortés conquers |
|
1522 |
Magellan’s crew completes
circumnavigation of the world. |
|
1524 |
Verrazano explores eastern
seaboard of Norh |
|
1532 |
Pizarro crushes the Incas. |
|
1534 |
Cartier journeys up the |
|
1539 – 1542 |
|
|
1540 – 1542 |
|
|
1542 |
Cabrillo explores |
|
1565 |
Spanish build fortress at
|
|
Late 1500s |
Iroquois Confederacy founded
(according to Iroquois legend) |
|
c. 1598 – 1609 |
Spanish under Oñate conquer
|
|
1609 |
Spanish found |
|
1680 |
Popé’s rebellion of |
|
1680s |
French expedition down |
|
1769 |
Father Junipero Serra founds
Mission San Diego, in |
Makers of
Conquistadores included Hernán
Cortes and Francisco Pizarro, who conquered the Aztecs and the Incas
respectively.
Within half a century of
They spread from
As the Spanish crown tightened its
grip on its colonies, though, the conquistadors lost more and more
power.
Most of them never achieved their
dreams of glory, though a few received royal titles.
Many of them married Indian women,
creating a new class of people called mestizos.
The mestizos formed a bridge
between