The Age of Exploration and the Commercial Revolution
II. Portugal: East by Sea to an Empire of Spices
- A. Prince Henry the Navigator (1394-1460)
- 1. Prince Henry organized voyages along the west coast of Africa.
- 2. By the time of Prince Henry's death in 1460, the Portuguese had established a series of trading posts along the West African coast. These posts did a thriving business in gold and slaves.
- B. The Portuguese Trading-Post Empire
- 1. Key explorers
- a. Bartholomew Diaz rounded the Cape of Good Hope and returned to Portugal in 1488.
- b. Vasco da Gama reached the Malabar coast of India in 1498 and returned to Portugal with a cargo of pepper and cinnamon worth 60 times the cost of the expedition.
- c. Pedro Cabral accidentally discovered Brazil in 1500 while sailing to India. He returned to Portugal with 300,000 pounds of spices.
- 2. Commercial trading posts
- a. The Portuguese did not attempt to conquer territories. Instead, they built fortified trading posts designed to control trade routes.
- b. The most important Portuguese trading posts were located at Goa on the Indian coast, at Malacca on the Malay peninsula, and at Macao on the southern coast of China.
- C. Consequences
- 1. The Portuguese ended the Venetian and Muslim monopoly of trade with Asia.
- 2. The center of European commerce shifted from the Mediterranean Sea to the Atlantic Ocean.
- 3. The new sea routes reduced the importance of the Baltic Sea thus leading to the decline of the Hanseatic League.
III. Spain: West by Sea to a New World
- A. Christopher Columbus (1451-1506)
- 1. Although he believed he had reached Asia, Columbus had in fact discovered Caribbean islands that were part of a vast New World.
- 2. Columbus's voyages helped to propel Spain into the forefront of European exploration, conquest, and settlement.
- B. The Spanish Conquests
- 1. Hernán Cortés conquered the Aztec empire in Mexico (1519-1521).
- 2. Francisco Pizarro conquered the Inca empire in Peru (1532-1533).
- C. Spanish America
- 1. By the end of the sixteenth century, Spain possessed an American empire twenty times its own size.
- 2. The Aztecs and other indigenous peoples were converted to Christianity and became subjects of the Spanish king.
- 3. The king of Spain governed his American empire through a Council of the Indies in Spain and through viceroys in Mexico City and Lima, Peru.