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Which of these civilizations was most involved in the first wave of European overseas exploration?
Whilst all of these civilizations would eventually play a significant role in European overseas exploration and expansion the first to do so was Portugal. Portuguese exploration began in the second half of the fifteenth century. They were the first to explore around the Southern tip of Africa, the first to reach India via the ocean, and one of the first to reach the New World (after the Spanish).
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The Treaties of Tordesillas and Zaragoza __________.
The Treaty of Tordesillas was signed in 1494 by the Spanish and Portuguese kingdoms. It was intended to divide the American continent, newly discovered to Europeans, between the two burgeoning empires. The Treaty of Zaragoza was signed in 1529 and was intended to divide the other side of the world, the Far East in particular, between the same two empires. The treaties were generally respected by the two powers themselves, but were generally ignored by the rest of the European powers once they arrived on the scene.
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Which of these most directly affected the rapid rate of Spanish expansion in the New World?
Although it is true that Spain was a reasonably prosperous European nation at the time of expansion into the Americas, and it is also true that the Spanish possessed superior technology that helped them to subdue the native population, the primary reason why Spanish expansion was able to proceed so quickly was the devastating impact on the native population of diseases brought from Europe to the New World. Smallpox, in particular, was almost apocalyptic in nature, killing as many as ninety percent of the native population in some areas. Essentially, the Spanish would show up, make contact, and within a few months the native people would be dying by the millions, their administrative capabilities completely neutered by the impact of death and suffering.
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The British government decided to take direct control of the administration of British India following the __________.
Although Britain acquired the territory of India as part of the peace deal that ended the Seven Years’ War, India was for the next hundred years ruled under the direct administration of the British East India Company. In the 1857 Sepoy Rebellion, Hindu and Muslim troops in the colonial army revolted and had to be forcibly put down at great cost to the company. Following this rebellion, the British government decided to take direct control of the administration of India, a period of time referred to as the British Raj. This form of British rule lasted for another ninety years until India gained independence in 1947.
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Who commanded the first expedition to successfully circumnavigate the world?
The first successful circumnavigation of the world was completed by an expedition led by the famed Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan. Magellan died during the voyage in the South Pacific and so never personally completed the quest; however, he is still remembered in popular history as the first man to circumnavigate the world.
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Which of these reasons best explains why England and France were much slower to respond to the allures of overseas expansion than the Spanish and the Portuguese?
The Spanish and Portuguese were the primary nations involved in the first wave of European expansion in the sixteenth century. They were more politically unified than England and France and had much less religious diversity to contend with, whereas in France and England, the sixteenth century was a time of religious upheaval and civil wars. Both the English and French would start to get involved (along with the Dutch) in overseas expansion toward the end of the sixteenth century, and both had established colonies by the first couple of decades of the seventeenth century.
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The explorations of which of the following individuals led to Portugal controlling European trade with the Far East for most of the sixteenth century?
All of these individuals were notable Portuguese explorers except for Christopher Columbus, who was an Italian sailing under the patronage of the Spanish crown. While you might not have known that the answer to this question immediately, you could determine it through careful consideration of the accomplishments of each of these people. Vasco de Gama was the first person to sail around the Cape of Africa and reach India via the ocean, the longest recorded such voyage in human history at the time. This voyage allowed Portugal to control ocean trade with the Far East for much of the sixteenth century before their monopoly was broken by the excursions of the British, French, and Dutch.
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Why did the European colonial governments begin to export slaves to the New World from the African continent?
The primary reason why the European colonial governments, particularly the Spanish and Portuguese at first, decided to start exporting slaves to the New World was the scarcity of labor caused by the massive population decreases experienced by the native people. Essentially, the Spanish and Portuguese colonists caused the death of so many native people through disease, warfare, and harsh labor conditions that they had to bring people in to provide the raw labor they needed to keep running their plantations.
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The majority of the wealth mined by the Spanish in the New World ended up __________.
The Spanish brought more gold and silver to Europe in the space of a couple of centuries than had been mined in the rest of European history collectively. In theory, this would have made Spain immensely wealthy, but Spain was massively in debt to individual investors from England and the Netherlands, and much of the wealth mined in the New World ended up concentrated in the hands of the merchants and bankers of Northern Europe. Inflation obliterated the Spanish economy, and Spain would never again be a major world power that could compete with England, France, and the Netherlands.
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The rise of British naval supremacy began with __________.
The early years of European exploration were dominated by the Portuguese. Portugal was quickly supplanted by the Spanish, who held the largest empire and the biggest navy for much of the sixteenth century. When the Spanish tried to invade England in 1588, their navy was obliterated. England’s rise to global naval supremacy began with the failure of the Spanish Armada.
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__________ contributed to the rapid expansion of European society by providing a continuous supply of precious metals and giving economic impetus to widespread colonization.
Mercantilism was the prevailing economic theory of the first age of exploration and colonization. The primary goal of any country under the direction of mercantilism was to ensure a favorable balance of trade with overseas colonies and European trading partners. A country could achieve this by exporting more than it imported. This led to a frantic competition for colonies between the nations of Europe and exacerbated the desire to acquire new territories.
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Which war is sometimes called “the first truly global war” because it was fought between European combatants on multiple continents?
The Seven Years’ War was primarily waged between Britain and France in the middle of the eighteenth century. It was the culmination of more than a century of global competition between the British and the French to acquire more and more colonies. It was fought in Europe, North America, Asia, and on the seas. It ended in victory for the British and the loss of numerous French territories, including some in India and North America.
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Aside from England’s dominant navy, why did the British Empire grow so much larger than the other European empires?
The British Empire grew much larger than the other European empires in large part because Britain's colonies were permanently settled in much larger numbers. In America, Canada, Australia, South Africa, New Zealand, India, and several smaller nations, as well as on several smaller islands, the English arrived and established permanent settlements. The French, for example, were much more likely to establish temporary trading posts.
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In response to national humiliations or military defeats in the nineteenth century, these two countries modernized; in doing so, they assimilated Western European values and rules into their own societies.
The Russians were defeated by the French and the British in the Crimean War in the middle of the nineteenth century and subsequently underwent a massive project of modernization and industrialization. Likewise, the Japanese were routinely humiliated by the demands of the Western Europeans (and the United States) and developed an industrial economy with a military modeled on the Prussians in order to better be able to resist.
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During the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, the power in Europe shifted from __________ to __________.
In the thirteenth, fourteenth, and early fifteenth centuries, European economic power was concentrated in the Italian city-states. It quickly shifted to Spain and Portugal (the Iberian Peninsula) once the age of colonization began. In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, power shifted again to Northern Europe as the influx of precious metals into Europe enriched the French, the English, and the Dutch.
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Which Russian leader expanded his kingdom into the Baltic and Black Seas?
Peter the Great is one of the most famous rulers in Russian history. He westernized and “modernized” Russian society by implementing many features of the societies of Western and Central Europe. He also dramatically expanded Russian territory, gaining for his state a port city on the Baltic and the Black Seas. His port city on the Baltic would come to be called St. Petersburg, and was for a long time the Russian capital.
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Investment in these companies, which were precursors of later corporations, allowed Northern Europeans to undertake wildly expensive exploratory and trading ventures.
The innovation in joint-stock companies revolutionized infant capitalism and allowed the Dutch and the British in particular to undertake expensive trading ventures that would otherwise have been impossible or extremely risky to finance for an individual. Joint-stock companies worked much like modern corporations, where individuals could purchase a share of the risk for a share of the profit.
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The primary motivating factor behind the New Imperialism of the late nineteenth century was __________.
Although it is certainly true that the evangelical feeling of much of Europe and the United States in the nineteenth century played a role in the motivation behind the New Imperialism, it was much less significant of a factor than was the constant need for more raw materials and more markets. The industrial, consumer economies of Europe were growing at an unprecedented rate and burning through raw resources more quickly than they could be supplied. They needed new raw materials and new markets to keep the system growing at the same pace, and so conquered much of the known world. The intellectual arguments of Kipling and others were more like excuses for clearly amoral behavior than they were actual primary motivating factors.
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In 1519, Hernán Cortés landed on the Eastern coast of modern-day Mexico. Which civilization would he meet, and ultimately conquer by 1521?
Within two years of having landed Cortés and his force of allied tribes had alienated the Aztecs of Tenochtitlan. Cortés attempted to put king Moctezuma under house arrest, at which point the populace revolted. Cortés was ousted by the popular uprising. Cortes would, however, return with an even larger army and take the capital in 1521.
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Which European Explorer was the first to explore the North American Continent?
Leif Erickson explored what is today known as Newfoundland, a part of Canada, a full 500 years before Christopher Columbus began his journey in 1492.
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