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Exploration: Motives and Means

Age of Exploration: Motives and Means. Many people, including Christopher Columbus, were fascinated by Marco Polo’s account of his travels to the court

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Page 1: Age of Exploration: Motives and Means.  Many people, including Christopher Columbus, were fascinated by Marco Polo’s account of his travels to the court

Age of Exploration:Motives and Means

Page 2: Age of Exploration: Motives and Means.  Many people, including Christopher Columbus, were fascinated by Marco Polo’s account of his travels to the court

Many people, including Christopher Columbus, were fascinated by Marco Polo’s account of his travels to the court of Kublai Khan and the exotic East.

14th century conquests by the Ottoman Empire made traveling to the East by land difficult.

Europeans wanted a route to Asia by sea.

Motives

Europeans had long been attracted to Asia.

Page 3: Age of Exploration: Motives and Means.  Many people, including Christopher Columbus, were fascinated by Marco Polo’s account of his travels to the court

The desire for wealth was a large part of European expansion.

Merchants, adventurers, and government officials hoped to find precious metals and expand trade with the East, especially trade in spices.

Another motive was religious, the desire to spread the Catholic faith to native people.

God, Gold and….

Motive 1 - Gold

Motive 2 - God

Page 4: Age of Exploration: Motives and Means.  Many people, including Christopher Columbus, were fascinated by Marco Polo’s account of his travels to the court

Adventure and glory comprised another motive for European expansion.

“God, glory and gold,” then, were motives.

Glory

Page 5: Age of Exploration: Motives and Means.  Many people, including Christopher Columbus, were fascinated by Marco Polo’s account of his travels to the court

By the 15th century the European monarchies had expanded their power and resources to a point of being able to support ambitious exploration.

Europeans had also reached a level of technology that made a series of regular, long voyages possible.

The adventure begins

Page 6: Age of Exploration: Motives and Means.  Many people, including Christopher Columbus, were fascinated by Marco Polo’s account of his travels to the court

Arab navigators and mathematicians had drawn charts, called portolani (records) showing coastlines and distances between ports.

By 1500, cartography – the art and science of mapmaking – had developed to where Europeans had fairly accurate maps of where they wanted to explore.

Technology

Europeans acquired much of this technology from Arabs.

Page 7: Age of Exploration: Motives and Means.  Many people, including Christopher Columbus, were fascinated by Marco Polo’s account of his travels to the court

The compass showed the ship’s direction

The astrolabe (developed by Arabs) showed its latitude, information needed for such long voyages.

Europeans also were able to build ships that could sail against the wind.

Page 8: Age of Exploration: Motives and Means.  Many people, including Christopher Columbus, were fascinated by Marco Polo’s account of his travels to the court

What does the phrase “God, gold and glory” mean?

They were the 3 chief motives for European expansion: God - to convert the natives to Christianity, Gold - for the riches that could be obtained from

new lands, Glory - for adventure.

Question of the day…