21
Warm – Up August 30 Who were the first Europeans to come to the Americas? What year did they come?

Warm – Up August 30

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Warm – Up August 30. Who were the first Europeans to come to the Americas? What year did they come?. European Colonization. Competition between nations - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Warm – Up August 30

Warm – Up August 30

•Who were the first Europeans to come to the Americas?

•What year did they come?

Page 2: Warm – Up August 30

European Colonization

•Competition between nations

•Mercantilism: engage in colonization to secure raw materials to keep mother country independent, colonies also provide a market for your manufactured goods.

•desire for wealth

•social and religious turmoil

•Northwest Passage

Page 3: Warm – Up August 30

Columbian Exchange

•The transfer of plants, animals, and diseases between the Americas and Europe, Asia, and Africa (new world and the old world)

Page 4: Warm – Up August 30
Page 5: Warm – Up August 30

Colombian Exchange

Page 6: Warm – Up August 30

•In one clear sentence, state the main idea of each paragraph in your own words.

•After you have read the entire essay, in one clear sentence, state the main idea of the essay as a whole.

•Lastly, agree or disagree with the following statement. Use evidence from the readings to support your answer:

Columbian Exchange was a positive thing.

Page 7: Warm – Up August 30

Push: Conditions that drive people to leave their homes.

Pull: Conditions that attract people to a new area.

Push and Pull Factors

Page 8: Warm – Up August 30

Push and Pull Factors

Push Pull

climate better job

racial or ethnic pressure

closer to family

fire or flood damageless expensive

housinglack of employment

opportunitiescloser to school

climate

Page 9: Warm – Up August 30
Page 10: Warm – Up August 30
Page 11: Warm – Up August 30

Spanish French English

push factors

pull factors

what they did when they

arrived

interaction with Native American

groups

Page 12: Warm – Up August 30

Spanish French English

push factorsPolitical

persecution, militaristic society

pull factors influence, gold, riches, fame, glory

what they did when they

arrived

forced Native American groups to work as slaves on plantations, mined

silver

interaction with Native American

groups

brutal, forced labor, attacked native

culture

Page 13: Warm – Up August 30

Spanish French English

push factors militaristic society, second sons

lack of economic opportunity

pull factors influence, gold, riches, fame, glory

influence, new land, economic

opportunity (fur trade)

what they did when they

arrived

forced Native American groups to work as slaves on plantations, mined

silver

explored, fur trade

interaction with Native American

groups

brutal, forced labor, attacked native

culture

intermarried, adopted ways of life, treated with

more respect, business partners

Page 14: Warm – Up August 30

Spanish French English

push factors militaristic society, second sons

lack of economic opportunity

overpopulation, religious and social

conflict.

pull factors influence, gold, riches, fame, glory

influence, new land, economic

opportunity

influence, land, religious freedom,

social reform

what they did when they

arrived

forced Native American groups to work as slaves on plantations, mined

silver

explored, fur tradeexplored, built

colonies

interaction with Native American

groups

brutal, forced labor, attacked native

culture

intermarried, adopted ways of life, treated with

more respect, business partners

some trade but eventually conflict

over land

Page 15: Warm – Up August 30
Page 16: Warm – Up August 30

Warm – Up Sept. 8

•Please define the following words and come up with an example of each in relation to our class discussions so far:

•World View

•Migrate

Page 17: Warm – Up August 30

WORLD VIEWDefinition

World View: the perspective from which one sees and interprets the world or a collection of beliefs about life held by an individual or group..

Example from the unit

Native American groups first living on the land that would become the United States viewed the world differently than the European groups they would come into contact with.

Historical Significance

Because Native Americans and European cultures had different world views, these views often conflicted with each other leading to cultural conflict

General Significance

People or groups who view the world from different perspectives are often in conflict with one another, even today.

Page 18: Warm – Up August 30

MIGRATEDefinition

Migrate: to move from one area or country to another

Example from the unit

Spanish, French, and English settlers migrated from their home countries to the Americas

Historical Significance

European migration to the Americas caused a decline in the Native population, expanded slavery of Africans, and increased the influence of Europe in the Americas

General Significance

Overtime there has been groups of people migrating for different reasons. We still have people migrating to the U.S. today in search of opportunities.

Page 19: Warm – Up August 30

Spanish•Columbus arrived in 1492.

•1500s Spanish explored the Southwest United States in such of wealth.

•militaristic society

•Spanish society first sons inherited everything. What are the second sons suppose to do?

•brutal treatment of Native Americans.

Page 20: Warm – Up August 30

French•Arrive, explore

•Become heavily involved in the early fur trade.

•Native Americans were source of furs.

•used good relationships with Native Americans to get furs.

•Intermarried with Native Americans, adopted their ways of life.

Page 21: Warm – Up August 30

English

•England experiencing religious and social reform.

•Overpopulated.

•Claim land for England, build colonies.

•conflict with Native Americans over land.