Fifteenth Century European Exploration

717 Words2 Pages

Shennae Smith

Writing assignment 1A

It was during the early fifteenth century that the European states began to explore the new worlds. This was known as the Age of Discovery and lasted throughout the seventeenth century. According to Saylor.org, “The Spanish and Portuguese were some of the first European states to launch overseas voyages of exploration”. During the fifteenth century ninety percent of Europe’s people were in small villages and made their living from all the lands. Europeans expansions began with Africa. Some of Africans spices and gold entered the Eurasian market either through different ports on the Indian Ocean or through the Sahara Dessert and into the Meditterrean Sea according to chapter two. African Kingdoms controlled the routes, while Islamic made it more intense for the Africans. Around the fifteenth century, Portuguese started seeking new crops although they were producing sugar on plantations, according to stamfordhigh.org. According to the European History online, “Perhaps less dramatic but nonetheless of enormous economic significance, were the Portuguese voyages to India, which revitalized Western interaction with southern and eastern Asia. In the West and in the East, the Europeans …show more content…

As European exploration evolved and flourished, it saw the increasing oppression of native populations and the enslavement of Africans. During this period, Europeans increasingly dealt in African slaves and started the transatlantic slave trade. As a result of technological advancements, Europeans were able to forge into new and previously undiscovered territories. They understood this to be a “New

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