A | B |
Treaty of Tordesillas | Spain and Portugal agreed to divide the lands of the Western Hemisphere between them and moved the Line of Demarcation to the west |
missionary | a settlement created by the Church in order to convert Native Americans to Christianity |
mercantilism | an economic system in which nations increase their wealth and power by obtaining gold and silver and establishing a favorable balance of trade |
Amerigo Vespucci | Italian sailor who realized he did not find Asia and a German mapmaker named the continent after him |
conquistador | Spanish conquerors |
Hernando Cortes | Spanish conquistador who conquered ancient Aztecs |
Montezuma | Aztec emperor |
Francisco Pizarro | Spanish conquistador who conquered the Inca civilization in the Andes Mountains of Peru |
colony | a region or people that is politically and economically controlled by another country |
seige | surrounding of a city |
Henry Hudson | English explorer who sailed for the Dutch and arrived in present-day New York; he has a river and bay named after him |
John Cabot | Italian sailor who explored for the English and landed in the area of Newfoundland, Canada |
Giovanni da Verrazzano | Italian explorer who explored for the French to find the Northwest Passage |
Jacques Cartier | French explorer who traveled up the St. Lawrence River to present-day Montreal |
Spanish Armada | fleet of ships sent by Philip II to invade England and restore Roman Catholicism |
Samuel de Champlain | Frenchman who explorer the St. Lawrence and founded Quebec the first permanent French settlement in North America |
New France | a fur-trading post established in Canada that became the first permanent French settlement in North America |
armada | a fleet of warships |
viceroyalty | a province ruled by a a viceroy, who ruled in the king's name |
encomienda | a grant of Native American labor |
hacienda | a large farm or estate |
mission | a settlement created by the Church in order to convert Native Americans to Christianity |
Pope | led the Pueblo Americans in a rebellion against the Spanish |
plantation | a large farm that raises cash crops |
Bartolome de Las Casas | Spanish Catholic priest who spent much of his life fighting against the abuse of Native Americans; called the "Protector of the Indians" |
Columbian Exchange | movement of animals, plants, and diseases between the Eastern and Western Hemispheres |
slavery | the practice of holding a person in bondage for labor |
African Diaspora | the forced removal of Africans from their homelands to serve as slave labor in the Americas |
Middle Passage | the middle leg of the triangular trade route- the voyage from Africa to the Americas - that brought captured Africans into slavery |
slave codes | a law passed to regulate the treatment of slaves |
racism | the belief that some people are inferior because of their race |
depopulated | to lose population |
diaspora | the scattering of people outside their homeland |
Vasco Nunez de Balboa | Spaniard who first found the Pacific by traveling across Panama |
Ferdinand Megallan | Portuguese sailor who was the first to sail around the world |
Tenochtitlan | Aztec capital, place of current Mexico City |
Atahualpa | Incan emperor |
Francisco Vazquez de Coronado | Spanish explorer who traveled in present-day Arizona |
Hernando de Soto | Spanish explorer who explored Florida |
Juan Rodriquez Cabrillo | Spanish explorer who sailed up the California coast |
Francis Drake | first Englishman to sail around the world |
Huguenots | French Protestants |
Pedro Menendez de Aviles | Spanaird who built a fort in St. Augustine, Florida |
galleons | bulky Spanish ships |
sea dog | daring sailor |
metizos | people of mixed Spanish and Native American ancestry |
sugar | the most important crop that was in great demand in Europe |