Among Eastern Woodlands Indians, women didthe farming (except tobacco); much "slash and burn” agriculture
Europeans sought to turn men into farmers; Indianmen saw it as "women'swork"
Spoke of "reducing the Indian men tocivility"
Indian males enjoyed much leisure time (likethe Europeanaristocracy)
Most societies were matrilineal and matrilocal:women owned the property (Iroquois are a goodexample)
Men taught their children by persuasion andexample.
Few cared to acquire more property than could becarried from one site toanother.
Amerindian culture was the antithesis of European capitalism; Europeans saw them as poorconsumers.
No individual land ownership (even in sedentarysocieties)
Clans or families guarded their "use rights" to land allocated bychiefs.
Extensive trade in the Ohio and Mississippi Rivervalleys
Most important man in the tribe was the man who gavethe mostaway.
Trade was not like a contract in the Europeansense.
When trade stopped it was tantamount to declaringwar.
Civilized societies in North America (exceptions to the predominance of less-developed tribes on thecontinent)
Pueblo Indians: Rio Grande Valley in NewMexico,
Arizona, southwest Colorado
Corn planting was facilitated by large, elaborateirrigation systems that efficiently used water in a very dryclimate
Built multi-storied and terraced dwellings (e.g.Taos)
Developed large towns that became centers oftrade, crafts, and religiousrituals.
Some Pueblo villages are still among the oldest inNorth America.
Mound Builder civilizations in the Mississippi and Ohio Valleys
Mississippian culture (e.g. Cahokia near East St.Louis) perhaps rivaled Egyptian architecture; home to as many as 10,000 people at its peak in 1200CE.
Central mound, 100 ft. high, world’s largestearthen work.
Largest city north ofMexico
Iron tools, wore woven fabrics, buried dead incollective graves
Trade spanned from Appalachians to Rockies;Great Lakes to Gulf ofMexico.
By 1400, Cahokia was abandoned, due largely to the impact of the “Little Ice Age” which disrupted itssociety
SoutheastAmerindians
Direct descendants of Cahokia settled east of the Mississippi River and along the southernAppalachian Mountains.
Creeks(who practiced democratic-stylegovernment),
Choctaw, and Chickasaws Atlantic seaboard tribes who had begun growing maize, beans, and squash c.1000 CE had settled theregion.
Cherokeesand Tuscororas lived in parts of Georgia, Tennessee, and North Carolina where Cahokia hadonce dominated.
Eastern WoodlandsIndians Enjoyed the most abundant food resources in North America as the eastern half of the continent wasforested
Most peoples were semi-sedentary as a result:farming, hunting, gathering, andfishing
Iroquois in eastern woodlands built a strong military confederacy (led by Hiawatha, late 16thc.)
Mohawk Valley of what is today New YorkState
Consisted of Five Nations: Mohawks,Oneidas, Onondagas, Cayugas, and theSenecas.
Economy was a mix of agriculture andhunting- gathering
Algonquian peoples were located along the northern Atlantic coast, the Great Lakes, and St. Lawrence River- valley regionsand
Like the Iroquois, they developed permanent settlements based on a combination of agricultureand hunting-gathering andfishing.
Algonquin was the largest of all NorthAmerican
language groups
Lived in portable wigwams in the summer andlong houses inwinter
Religious differences between Amerindians andEuropeans
Christianview:
Bible: God gave Adam dominion over animals andplants.
Bible did not mention Amerindians. What werethey? From where did theycome?
Sacrificial temples, skull racks, cannibalism and snake motifs of Mesoamerica meant Aztecs worshipped Satanin the eyes ofEuropeans.
Yet, 100,000 "witches" were killed in Europebetween 1500-1700 inEurope.
Spanish Inquisition burned thousands of“heretics”
Amerindians saw these too as humansacrifices.
Amerindianview:
Amerindians had nothing in comparisonfor commodification of plants andanimals.
Christians ate their own god (Eucharist) but less outragedat lesser human sacrifice to please Indian god. (Very confusing.)
Amerindians had no concept of heaven (in the Christian sense); disliked Christian heaven because few souls there were Indian; preferred to be buried with the ownancestors.
Differences inWar
Amerindians were curious why Europeans soughtdecisive battles on an openbattlefield.
Saw it as tremendous waste of humans who could be used for replenishment orsacrifice
Used guerrilla-typewarfare.
Europeans made poor torture victims (exceptJesuits)
Europeans could not easily catch Amerindianwarriors.
Resorted often to killing women andchildren.
Pequot War in 1630s was the most gruesomeexample
By King Philip’s War (1670s), Amerindians had learned this lesson well and destroyed Puritan villages, killing non- combatants.
Amerindians often captured children of other tribesand assimilatedthem.
Adult warriors were often sacrificed in Mesoamerica; Iroquois had an all-night torture ritual from the "Mourning Wars"where Iroquois women sought retribution for death of a loved one (even if the tortured warrior was not from sametribe).
European weapons deeply intensified warfareamong
Amerindians.
Ohio region depopulated in late-17th century in a matter of decades when Iroquois defeated Hurons andAlgonquins.
1690s, French and Algonquins turn the tide and forcedthe Iroquois toneutrality.
EuropeanEmpires
The Age ofDiscovery Emerging nation-states sought power; competed againstrivals
Competition between Catholics and Protestants became a conflict of nationalpurposes.
New technology enabled Europeans to dominate fromabout 1500 on.
Gunpowder and mounted canon on ships protected expeditions from rivalforces
Portuguese and Spanish mapped prevailing windsand currents in oceans over most of theglobe.
Improved cartography enabled explorers to navigatemore efficiently.
A number of instruments were used to determine latitude by measuring the altitude of celestialbodies.
Geometric quadrant (ca. 1460): used to determine latitude by measuring the altitude of celestialbodies
Mariner’s astrolabe (ca. 1480): used to determine latitude by measuring the altitude of celestialbodies
Cross staff (ca. 1550): used to find the latitude by measuring the altitude of the Pole Star above thehorizon
The sextant became the major navigational tool after its invention in 1757.
Economics
Need for new markets especially from the East (e.g.,spices) provided the impulse for exploration around the southern tip of Africa and later across the AtlanticOcean
Mercantilism required new sources of precious metalsand furs that were discovered in the NewWorld.
Desire to Christianize newpeoples
Renaissance (late-14th to late-16thcenturies)
Atmosphere of rebirth, optimism,exploration
Secular Europe began to break away fromreligious domination
Portuguese exploration led theothers PedroCabral
In 1500, landed on east coast of Brazil (hoping to findIndia):
Brazil eventually became a Portuguesecolony
AmerigoVespucci
In 1501-02, he detailed his exploration inBrazil
A German geographer honored Vespucci’s false claimas The first to travel to Brazil, and named the new area "America."
Portugal eventually established trade stations in India,Africa, China and the EastIndies.
Portugal was the first to introduce African slavery in theNew World Cooperated with certain West African tribes in capturing people from other tribes and selling them intoslavery.
Eventually, Great Britain, Spain, and the Netherlandswould be heavily involved in the Atlantic slavetrade.
The Spanish Empire in the NewWorld
Christopher Columbus (Italianexplorer)
Spain was eager to compete with Portugal. Queen Isabella& King Ferdinand supported Columbus’svoyage.
Columbus’ motives:
Religious: believed in spreading the Gospel before the millennium (perhaps this might make him asaint).
Wealth
Columbus landed in the Bahamas on October 12,1492.
Believed he had reached the East Indies(Indonesia).
Moved on to Hispañola where the indigenousArawoks were friendly and possessed tobacco andgold.
Arawok Indians were virtually exterminated by Columbus and hisfollowers
On his third voyage in 1498, he realized in Venezuela that he had reached a new continent although he maintainedthat the East Indies must beclose.
Treaty of Tordesillas(1494)
Spain secured its claim to Columbus'sdiscoveries
New World divided: Portugal got Brazil and territory in Africa and Asia; Spain dominated North & SouthAmerica.
Spain did not gain access to the West African slavetrade.
Spanish motives for discovery: Lure of gold and conversionof pagan natives to Christianity (“God, Gold, andGlory”)
Conquistadores Hernan Cortésconquered the Aztecs in1519-1521.
Small pox dramatically weakened Aztec strengthmaking it possible for Cortés to prevail with the help of neighboringtribes.
Francisco Pizarrodefeated the Incas in 1532 who hadvast amounts of gold and silver inPeru.
The silver mines in Potosí, Peru and in Mexicoyielded vast quantities of preciousmetals.
Spanish invaders enslaved Amerindians and subjected them to forced labor digging for preciousmetals.
Forced labor of indigenous Indians in Mexicowas eventually replaced by Africanslaves.
Slavery was introduced to the Spanish empire afterPortugal had pioneered the use of African slaves in the NewWorld
Became the primary labor force for Portugal in the sugar cane fields of Brazil and theCaribbean.
Zambo: children of Africans and Amerindiansemerged from Mexico southward throughout much of South America.
Transplanted laws, religion and language and laid the foundations for a score of Spanish-speakingcountries.
St. Augustine fortress erected in 1565: oldestEuropean settlement in the modern-dayU.S.
Purpose: keep French out of Spanish southeast territoryand protect sea lanes in theCaribbean.
Contemporary views of Spanish domination in the NewWorld
Bartolome de las Casas,a Spanish Dominican friar, condemned early Spanish cruelty and murder ofAmerican Indians in his History of the Indies(1550)
Ironically, de las Casas supported Africanslavery.
"Black Legend": de las Casas’ writings led to an exaggerated view advanced by Protestant countries that only Spain "killed for Christ," enslaved Indians, stole their gold, infected them with diseases, and leftnothing but miserybehind.
Juan de Sepulveda, a Spanish humanist, justified the Spanish conquest of the West Indies and argued that Amerindians were “naturalslaves”
A complex Castasystem emerged in NewSpain:
Four major categories of raceemerged:
Spanish-born (peninsulares) or Europeanwhites
creoles: children of Spanish-born parents who wereborn in the NewWorld
Generally speaking, the lighter one’s skin, the higher upin
the social caste one became; the darker one’s skin, the lower on the social ladder one became.
Transplanted Europeans were at thetop
Gradations within the casta system becamecommon:
Children of Spanish fathers and Amerindianmothers:
mestizos
Children of Spanish fathers and African mothers:mulatto
Children of Amerindians and Africans:zambo
French exploration in NorthAmerica
French exploration was largely stimulated by the beavertrade
Samuel de Champlain, the “father of New France,”established Quebec in 1608 (a year after the English founded Jamestown in Virginia).
Antoine Cadillac: founded Detroit in1701
Aimed to keep English settlers out of the OhioValley
Robert de La Salle: sailed from Quebec, down through the Great Lakes, and down the Mississippi River in 1682 withthe help of Amerindianguides.
Goal: prevent Spanish expansion into Gulf of Mexicoregion
Coined the name "Louisiana" in honor of LouisXIV
The French established posts in the Mississippiregion (New Orleans was the mostimportant—1718)
Attempted to block Spanish expansion into the Gulf ofMexico
Forts and trading posts in Illinois country: Kaskaskia,Cahokia, andVincennes
Large amount of grain was sent down the Mississippi River for shipment to the West Indies andEurope.
England's search forEmpire
Major causes leading to British colonialimpulse
Eventual peace with Spain provided opportunitiesoverseas withoutharassment
Population growth created a surplus of workers, many ofwhom became potential colonists; highunemployment.
New World had economic opportunity, farm land, adventure, markets, politicalfreedom, religious freedom, socialchange.
Joint-stock companies provided financial means: investors pooled resources for seaexpeditions.
Spanish Armada (1588)
British Navy defeated the Spanish Armada when it triedto invade England (Queen Elizabeth vs. King PhillipII)
Helped ensure England's naval dominance in the North Atlantic and later the Atlantic sea routes to NorthAmerica.
1604, a peace treaty signed between England andSpain.
English attempts to colonize in the late-16thcentury
1583, Sir Humphrey Gilbert attempted to colonize Newfoundland but died while atsea.
Roanoke: 1585, Sir Walter Raleigh (Gilbert's half-brother) led 115 men, women and children to Roanoke Island offcoast of Virginia; mysteriouslyvanished.
Results of Contact between Native-Americans andEuropeans
For AmericanIndians
Mass death and genocide: By 1600, nearly 90% ofNative American populationperished.
European diseases (e.g., smallpox, yellow fever, malaria) were the mostdestructive.
Central American and Caribbean population in 1519was perhaps 25 million; only 1 million remaining in1605.
European impact on Amerindianculture:
Great Plains tribes—e.g. Apache, Blackfoot, and Sioux— were transformed viahorses.
Cattle and swine provided major new foodsources
Introduction of firearms intensified warfare among Amerindian tribes leading to depopulation in certainareas (Eastern WoodlandsIndians)
ForEuropeans
Global empires for the first time in humanhistory.
Explosion of capitalism (CommercialRevolution)
Wealth generated by mining of gold and silver resulted in a shift in Europe from feudalism to capitalism as a result of joint ventures to extract wealth from the New World (e.g. joint-stockcompanies)
Revolution indiet Corn, beans, tomatoes, and potatoes lead to improved diet= higher mortality = higher population = bigger push for emigration. Revolutionized the internationaleconomy.
Stimulants: coffee, cocoa, andtobacco
Contributions of Europeans to NorthAmerica England: Democratic forms of local gov’t; tradition ofhard- working, zealous individuals, Englishlanguage
France: Language, culture, and religion introduced to Canada and Louisiana and to many Amerindians west ofAppalachians; large-scale trade withAmerindians
Spain: Schools, hospitals, and printing presses established by missionaries; Spanish language in the Southwest; teaching of Christianity and handicrafts toAmerindians.
Relations between Europeans and Amerindians in NorthAmerica