European Exploration Essay

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    The effect of European Exploration on Europe, Africa, and the Americas Whenever you hear about the European Exploration, or ‘The Age of Discovery’’ you hear a lot about what the Europeans gained from it, while they did learn a lot from this and gather a lot of new resources they were not the only ones affected. The Age of Discovery affected more areas that just Europe, it also affected the Americas and Africa. To prove this we must first know what European Exploration is. From the 15th century to

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    Evidence that European exploration had a positive impact: Evidence that European exploration had a NEGATIVE impact: 1. “Many countries began to mine for gold and silver” (page 326) 1. “Civilizations were ravages by smallpox, measles and typhus.” (page 328) 2. “The increase in gold made countries wealthier” (326) 2. “Entire communities of Native Americans died.” (page 328) 3. “Countries used their new wealth to improve the roads and bridges.” (page 326) 3. “However, the demand for enslaved Africans

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    African American Struggles The Afro Americans arrived with the first European exploration. The Spanish expeditions traveled with both slave and free blacks. They were navigators, soldiers, merchants, and draftsmen. The first known to set foot in Texas was in 1528 with the Navaez expedition. Esteban landed near Galveston Island and was enslaved by Indians. His rudimentary medical knowledge and gift for languages increased his influence over them. After eight years, he and three others went to Mexico

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    for the European nations. The consequences for the native people of the Americas were much worse with devastating death tolls, enslavement, new diseases and racist attitudes towards them. Though it would not be fair to say that the Europeans did not share in negative consequences or that the indigenous people did not gain any advantages. The greatest negative consequences for the Europeans due to the European expansion are a

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    motivation of European exploration; however, the major motivation for European exploration was due to their weak economic system that inspired them to commence exploring for riches and make Europe economically powerful. Religion was the secondary motivation to the European exploration as their main priority was to develop their weak economic system.The Europeans desires for exploration had formed due to the “image of Africa and Asia's riches that helped inspire the first european voyages

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    of European Exploration The European economic motivation was the main cause of European exploration in the 15th and 16th centuries. New trade, and the search for gold and spices were the three main motives behind Europe’s thirst for exploration and discovery. Trade with Asia and Africa was shrinking, Europe’s gold supply was drained, and spices were growing in demand, forcing Europe to send explorers in search of new resources and trade. Trade was the first motive for European exploration. During

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    Exploration European Exploration had few, if any, positive effects on the Indians. The Natives’ contact with the European settlers led to their displacement and death from disease and war. The negative effects outweighed the good intentions, which included attempting to Christianize and educate America’s original residents. It is estimated that the native population decreased by nearly 50 percent due to disease alone, beginning with the first contact between the Indians and explorers in the

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    Brian Benny 11/9/17 Professor Hoeflinger Early Modern Europe Printing Press Cause for Exploration The printing press advanced European exploration in the fifteenth century. The printing press was a form communication to the people that gave out information a lot quicker. This became a routine for people to read every day. Because of the printing press, individuals found out about the explorations that occurred. They knew about the advantages of exploring and of the dangers associated with exploring

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    during the European Age of Exploration. It is considered just a subsection of the Columbian Exchange (a term coined by Alfred Crosby as well), which denotes the exchange of a number of varied items between Europe and the New World after 1492, including infectious diseases like smallpox, chicken pox, the plague, yellow fever, and the flu (Marr, Cathey 2010), but it seems that it could be and vital aspect of understanding how Europe and America existed and developed during the Age of Exploration, how they

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    The reason for the Europeans voyage of exploration at the end of the Sixteenth Century was because in the past ages the Europeans thought that the earth was flat. In the exploration of the world they had known the world to be the “Age of Discovery”. They only knew about the land that was close to their home and country. They wanted to explore the world by sea so that could search for new trading partners, new goods, and new trading routes. The major differences among the colonists in the Chesapeake

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