the indians’ new world 1. native americans in 1492 (north of mexico) – 1 million? 7 million? 12...

Post on 14-Dec-2015

216 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

TRANSCRIPT

1

The Indians’ New World

2

Native Americans

• in 1492 (North of Mexico)– 1 million? 7 million? 12 million?

• in 1900– 250,000 in US (out of 76 million = 0.3%)

• In 2000– 4.1 million (out of 281 million = 1.5%)

• 2.5 million reporting only American Indian or Alaska native• 1.6 million reporting American Indian or Alaska native + other race(s)

3

The ‘Columbian Exchange’

4

Last week:

• ‘Indians’ and ‘Native Americans’• Diversity of native cultures• Pre-contact life in Southwest and Eastern

Woodlands

5

6

Taíno

Source: Yale University Libraries

7

Hispaniola

Source: Yale University Libraries

8Source: University of West Florida

Timucua Apalachee

Guale

Calusa

Cofitachequi

Coosa

Mabila

(St. Augustine)

Juan Ponce de Léon

Hernando de Soto

Rene de Goulaine de Laudonnière

Franciscan missionaries

9

Consequences of Spanish invasions

• Depopulation due to disease and war– Up to 75% of native population died

• Consolidation into new confederacies– Creeks, Chocktaw, Chickasaw, Cherokee, Catawba

10

11Source: U. Oregon Mapping History Project

From the 1500s, European fishermen interacted with Beothuks, Montagnais, Micmacs

Jacques Cartier 1534

12

The fur trade

• Deer, caribou, beaver

13

Iroquois

Samuel de Champlain->Québec (1608). Henry Hudson. Mohawk and Mahicans. « Mourning Wars »

Manhattan -> New Amsterdam -> New York

14

1585, 1587: Roanoke Island

1607: Jamestown, Virginia

1610-1614 & 1622-32: wars between the English and the Powhatans

15

Plymouth

1616: major epidemic destroyed90% of native population alongthe coast

1620: Puritans arrived in Plymouth, Massachusetts

1630: more Puritans arrived

1633: another epidemic

16

Colonial Expansion

17

Pequot massacre (1637)

18

John Eliot and the ‘praying towns’

19

Metacom’s War (1675-76)

20Source: Mapping History Project, U. Oregon.

21Source: Mapping History Project, U. Oregon.

22

Main transformations

• Disease -> population decline -> consolidation and formation of new groups

• Trade -> geographic relocation, new alliances, new tools, crops, and animals

• Colonization -> resistance and accommodation

23Source: Norton Anthology of American Literature, 8th ed.

top related