Christopher Columbus Motivation

646 Words2 Pages

The motivation that Europeans had to explore a New World was the Columbus voyage of 1492, the purpose was to uncover a shorter all-water course to China and India than the course encompassing Africa that was being opened up by the Portuguese. The goal of both courses was to have the ability to pass the Muslim and Byzantine middle- men through where the spices of the East stretched to Western Europe. Though Columbus’ life cycle reach an end, he considered that he actually opened up the Indies to Spain. Due to this assumption this is why Europeans call Native Americans “Indians”, however majority were aware that a enormous land mass laid between them and the spices of the East, while also realizing that it has an abundance of gold and silver. The inhabitants had assembled a tremendous arrangement of golden treasure over the durations, and the first flow of "new" gold into Spain and Europe …show more content…

Yet, there’s a possibility that the raw material derived from the new lands were more relevant in the long term. The most meaningful individual industry in Medieval Europe was the production of cloth, furthermore they were looking for dyes that would last long, the ones that wouldn’t wash out; their wishes were granted in the new world. In the Near East their was a tree, the bark of this plant generates a great red dye, Brazil was named after it. Also the islands off the Carolina coast in North America were found to be a good source of a rich and relatively permanent blue dye called indigo. Europe was almost bleak and so they rushed to import American wood. Large tall pines and oak tress permitted Europeans to build bigger ships and they also obtained barrels of pitch and turpentine from pines and spruces from the New World. American fur was known for making felt and cloth. The new world gave American exactly what it needed in order harvest surplus, in order to trade with different sections of the

Open Document