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Age of Exploration: 1000 AD - 1616 | America | United States history | Discovery Voyages | Columbus 

Jeffrey the Librarian
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Leif Erikson arrived in Newfoundland briefly around 1000AD, but the longer-lasting Norse outposts are in Greenland and Iceland. Thus, the first contact between Europeans and native North Americans occurs between the Norse and the Inuit in the middle ages.
As early as the 14th century, Spain and Portugal are connecting with islands out in the Atlantic Ocean. Spain is active in the Canary Islands.
Meanwhile, Portugal expands this early into the Madeira Islands. By 1440, Portugal has expanded to the Azores Islands. The Azores are a big step in exploration, because they are so far out in the Atlantic Ocean.
By 1482, Portugal has explored the west coast of Africa. Tragically, this will be the beginnings of the African slave trade.
In 1492, Columbus sails to the canary islands and then shoots straight west across the expanse of the Atlantic ocean, in an attempt to reach India. He lands on San Salvador in the Bahamas.
Columbus returns the next year in 1493, sailing near Hispaniola--modern Haiti and the Dominican Republic--and Cuba. There are about 1 million natives on the island of Hispaniola at this time.
In 1497, the English commission John Cabot to sail directly west from England. He sights Newfoundland in Canada.
Also in 1497, Vasco da Gama clears the Cape of Good Hope around Africa, and navigates the eastern coast of Africa, finding an alterative route to India.
Columbus returns for a third voyage in 1498, and he sights the northern coastline of the South American continent.
Amerigo Vespucci, whose name--Amerigo--will christen the newly discovered continents, sails along the northeastern coast of South America in 1499.
Spain continues to dominate exploration. Ponce de Leon explores the eastern coast of Florida in 1513, and Balboa reaches Panama in the same year for Spain. Balboa will be the first European to see the eastern edge of the Pacific Ocean.
Cortes passes north of the Yucatan peninsula and lands in Mexico. there he encounters the mighty Aztec Empire in 1519, a civilization of millions. The Spanish find cities in Mexico bigger than the cities in Europe.
France enters the American exploration theatre in 1524. Verrazano sails up the Atlantic coast, the homeland of many Algonquian nations.
Cabeza de Vaca of Spain travels along the Gulf region from western Florida to near Galveston, Texas. He then spends time in the Texas interior of North America in 1528, moving among the native peoples there.
Further south, Spain conquers another powerful Native American civilization, the Incas. Francisco Pizarro brings Peru into the Spanish Empire in 1533.
Spain has established sugar colonies in the Caribbean. African Slaves are imported from West Africa to the sugar plantations of the Caribbean.
1535: The Frenchman Cartier sails directly west from northwest France across the Atlantic. He explores the lower St. Lawrence River in the north.
Spain is now active on the Pacific side of the American continents. In 1539 de You Oh-A sights the Pacific coastline of Mexico and Baja California.
Spain's reach into the interior of North America spreads wider. Between 1539 and 1542, de Soto travels widely through the future southeastern united states. His long journey begins in Florida and goes westward across the Mississippi River.
On the other side of north America, Coronado is simultaneously exploring the southwest between 1540 and 1542, finding the great pueblo civilization of the southwest.
1565: The Spanish form the colony of St. Augustine in Florida, the first permanent European settlement in the future united states.
By this time, many native American populations are crashing from smallpox, even before any direct contact is made with Europeans.
Sir Walter Raleigh establishes the first English colony at Roanoke in North Carolina in 1585. In a few years, the colony will vanish with only the word "Croatoan" scratched on a tree, a reference to a local native nation.
In 1588 Spain loses much of its fleet--the armada--in a thwarted invasion of England, and Spain's sea power dominance is now in question. England and France begin to find new openings.
France is finding its niche in the northeast. Samuel de Champlain explores the north between 1603 and 1609, pressing further down the St. Lawrence. His journey takes him to the the lake in New York State that bears his name. On the New York side of the St. Lawrence is the powerful Iroquois Confederacy. On the Canadian side of the St. Lawrence is the Huron nation.
English Jamestown is established in 1607.
French Quebec is established in 1608.
The Englishman Henry Hudson sails up the river in New York State that bears his name in 1609. The following year, 1610, Hudson explores the great Canadian bay that also bears his name.
The French also advance further into the north. Between 1615 and 1616, Champlain continues further into Huron country in Canada, sighting Lake Huron and Lake Ontario.
Film by Jeffrey Meyer
Satellite images from Microsoft Bing

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28 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 538   
@mattschlegel1266
@mattschlegel1266 2 года назад
I hate this misconception. Columbus didn't think he was in India, he thought he was in "The Indies" which later was referred to as the "East Indies." Specifically he thought he was in some small islands that are now part of modern Japan.
@biggibbs4678
@biggibbs4678 2 года назад
"Indonesia"...
@mattschlegel1266
@mattschlegel1266 2 года назад
@@biggibbs4678 No!
@mattschlegel1266
@mattschlegel1266 2 года назад
@@biggibbs4678 Japan and Indonesia are about 5000km apart, Columbus did not think he was in Indonesia.
@rohancooray194
@rohancooray194 2 года назад
Your statement is not quite right either. Medieval Europeans did not have a conception of India as being limited to the exact territory of the modern nation of India. 'India' and the 'indies' were interchangeable, both names being used to identify south-east asia as a whole. This was because they did not really have much knowledge as to where the far side of India lay, and how far India extended. To say colombus thought he landed on the far eastern end of india, and was encountering natives of this area of india, is not wrong. Neither is it wrong to say that he thought he was landing on islands near japan. Europeans did not at this time have enough knowledge of the area to clearly delineate Japan from India.
@mattschlegel1266
@mattschlegel1266 2 года назад
@@rohancooray194 It's certainly wrong to say he thought he was in India. Learned Europeans going back before Alexander actually understood the concept of land east of or "beyond" India. Columbus' exploration was 200 years after Marco Polo, he had read Polos story and definitely knew the difference between India and the rest of the Indies. You couldn't get much more beyond India than Japan without crossing the ocean and it is well known that he thought he was in Japan.
@KC_FlightChief
@KC_FlightChief 2 года назад
Can you imagine a time where explorers were setting off to explore the unknown.. I feel like it’s comparable to us exploring the cosmos, it had to have felt the same way for them.
@JeffreytheLibrarian
@JeffreytheLibrarian 2 года назад
Yes, I think crossing the Atlantic in the 1500s was very similar to colonizing a different world.
@danielebrparish4271
@danielebrparish4271 Год назад
Except they did it with weapons and brought home tons of money. Literally tons in the form of Gold and Silver. Later sugar, cotton and tobacco were being traded.
@alstar70
@alstar70 2 года назад
Actually the slave trade had already been going on for centuries, to the east. The west Atlantic slave trade was small by comparison.
@taoliu3949
@taoliu3949 2 года назад
He's talking about the origins of the Atlantic Slave Trade. Slavery in general goes back to the dawn of history.
@Foxtrottangoabc
@Foxtrottangoabc 2 года назад
@@taoliu3949 yes but if you do not phrase the context correctly , everyone wrongly assumes the White Europeans invented Slavery in west Africa
@taoliu3949
@taoliu3949 2 года назад
@@Foxtrottangoabc Nowhere does he state that West African slavery was invented by Europeans. Anyone who thinks that has a very poor understanding of history. The video specifically says "importation" of slaves from Africa, that implies the existence of slavery prior to the fact.
@larmondoflairallen4705
@larmondoflairallen4705 2 года назад
@@taoliu3949 Regarding Portugal, he stated "Tragically, this would be the beginnings of the African slave trade" and he was speaking specifically about Portuguese exploration. You can refresh your memory at 1:37. You are nitipicking semantics.
@taoliu3949
@taoliu3949 2 года назад
@@larmondoflairallen4705 Yes, because prior to Portugal setting up trading posts in West Africa, trading West African slaves (or any commodities) isn't really a thing for the Portuguese. And lol, me nitpicking semantics? I'm not the one complaining about the wording, OP is. What I'm saying is to take in the context, which goes the opposite of nitpicking semantics.
@westtex3675
@westtex3675 2 года назад
Good to see to map clouded in unknown areas. If only 1 European nation was doing a lot of exploring in a given time, would knowledge of those new coastlines they found quickly propagate to other European nations, or would it be held secret by the exploring nation? Would the other nations still have a more clouded perspective until their own explorers reached it?
@amethystgamer852
@amethystgamer852 2 года назад
Well, it wouldn't be directly messaged to the other nations, but knowledge spreads over time
@PocketInfinite
@PocketInfinite 2 года назад
Apparently Portugal managed to keep its sea route to India secret for many decades until one Dutchman committed espionage.
@felipearenasbarr
@felipearenasbarr 2 года назад
With time, it would have been found out by any catholic nation with coastline at the time. Maybe random spanish soldiers told their families about their jobs in the Americas and then the rumor would start to spread out locally and then with a lot of time it would end up in other countries and end up in the hands of someone related to someone important, and then the government of that country knows. Though there are millions of ways they would have known. During the magallanes expedition (first trip around the globe), when coming back from Africa in a stop in the Azores, a spanish ship could have been captured by the portuguese with its crew, then after tortures the portuguese would get some of the intel and would notify the portuguese government directly about the lands and unknown civilization in there. And would probably lead to portuguese expeditionary trips over the continent probably making the foundation of Brazil earlier
@thisthingsibelief4791
@thisthingsibelief4791 2 года назад
ship's captains would write their own 'rutter', a book detailing information such as navigation directions and ports, descriptions of coastlines, landmarks, and anything else needed for navigation. They would not have made maps as we know them today. sometimes a captain would share new discoveries with the king, sometimes with other ship's captains. The portugese kept sailing directions to south east asia secret for almost 100 years.
@elizabethstatom4456
@elizabethstatom4456 2 года назад
The graphics reminded me of the start of the computer game "Civilization". Great visual aid. I like your vids. More on topic: when looking at the great works left by ancient civilizations (Gobekli Tepe, Sumer, etc) I find it hard to believe the Europeans were the first to sail around the globe, especially with the similarities of symbols, monolithic structures, pyramids, and un-explainable high tech stone work found in so many places. No boats? No way.
@JeffreytheLibrarian
@JeffreytheLibrarian 2 года назад
Thanks, I am a fan of Civilization myself. Gobekli Tepe and other ancient sites are very interesting, and I suspect in the eastern Mediterranean--from Turkey down the Levant to Egypt--agriculture is possibly older than the current chronologies show. It's been a well-agreed upon fact that Jericho had walls 10,000 years ago. I think Gobekli Tepe was the product of a farming society, and agriculture in that region is older there.
@elizabethstatom4456
@elizabethstatom4456 2 года назад
@@JeffreytheLibrarian I had an anthropology prof who pushed agriculture back 100,000 yrs. I asked why. He gave a one word reply: tools!
@Foxtrottangoabc
@Foxtrottangoabc 2 года назад
One of the best games ever back in the 90s civilization
@jxcksxnx6
@jxcksxnx6 2 года назад
@@elizabethstatom4456 nah it isn’t possible to be that back because tools were produced before 100,000 years ago. So agriculture could be even older, however it isn’t because the first tools were not made for agriculture. Agriculture and village life is like 20,000-15,000 years old. Highly doubt its any older.
@EdinburghFive
@EdinburghFive Год назад
​@@elizabethstatom4456 Some animals actually use 'tools' but they are not suddenly farmers. There is quite a cognitive leap to go from tools used for hunting and domestic use to understanding the reproductive nature of, and the process of planting and growing plants.
@automaticmattywhack1470
@automaticmattywhack1470 2 года назад
With his video of the early European colonies in North America and this one, it's a full semester of high school American History.
@JohnnyAngel8
@JohnnyAngel8 2 года назад
I beg to differ. The early explorations are introduced in elementary school. High school American History is more detailed and geared toward American government history.
@gk4539
@gk4539 Год назад
Can watch this channel for hours!
@JeffreytheLibrarian
@JeffreytheLibrarian Год назад
Thanks!
@dLimboStick
@dLimboStick 2 года назад
1:36 Correction: beginnings of European involvement in the African slave trade. Slavery was happening in Africa long before Europeans arrived, and it continues in Africa to this day.
@jaywinters2483
@jaywinters2483 2 года назад
You are right.
@georgejcking
@georgejcking 2 года назад
Funny how Lib-tards completely and conveniently overlook that basic FACT!!!!!!!!
@14yeartwitch14
@14yeartwitch14 2 года назад
Another potential correction: (as the arguments have been long established and have merit), Amerigo being the root name from which The Americas were "christened". I was taught the same thing in school only to find out that it is only theory, and that the idea of that came from mere speculation from Waldseemüller based on the similarity/coincidence. It is only one theory as to how The Americas were eventually labeled as such.
@taoliu3949
@taoliu3949 2 года назад
Correction: beginnings of the Atlantic Slave Trade Europeans have been involved in African slavery for millenia dating back to the Romans and earlier. The difference was the amount of slaves from Western Africa purchased by Europeans exploded when the America's were colonized.
@larmondoflairallen4705
@larmondoflairallen4705 2 года назад
@@taoliu3949 When you say "Europeans", do you mean Slavic, Germanic, Caucasian, Latin, Turkic, Celtic, Scandinavian? There are significant differences between them, and your earlier comment was complaining about people lumping all Asians together.
@EdinburghFive
@EdinburghFive 2 года назад
The first French settlement was at Port Royal (Acadia) in 1605. Champlain accompanied Pierre Dugua, Sieur de Mons and assisted in establishing the settlement.
@mcgiver6977
@mcgiver6977 Год назад
Tout à fait !
@rodia1973
@rodia1973 2 года назад
Nice. But you forgot about Magallanes, he discovered Tierra del Fuego, which is the southern edge of south America.
@billhyde3872
@billhyde3872 3 года назад
Excellent presentation. So much still unknown, the bits and pieces were slowly fit together…
@JeffreytheLibrarian
@JeffreytheLibrarian 3 года назад
Thank you so much!
@jessbawoke
@jessbawoke 7 месяцев назад
Awesome presentation of the timeline. Thank you, wish we could show this in ALL the schools.
@JeffreytheLibrarian
@JeffreytheLibrarian 7 месяцев назад
Thank you!
@gregorys6074
@gregorys6074 2 года назад
So many African tribes enslaved their enemy tribes
@London755
@London755 7 дней назад
What's the point of this comment. Are you trying to justify the European slave trade?
@jamesboekbinder3967
@jamesboekbinder3967 Год назад
Great - these videos really help to organize the events coherently while you learn about them. Thx!!!
@JeffreytheLibrarian
@JeffreytheLibrarian Год назад
I appreciate it!
@blackdahlia6540
@blackdahlia6540 3 месяца назад
Thank you ever so much, Jeffrey.
@JeffreytheLibrarian
@JeffreytheLibrarian 3 месяца назад
Thank you for watching!
@rosshoover6986
@rosshoover6986 2 года назад
I wish people would STOP saying Columbus called the people of Hispanola Indians because he thought he was in India. STOP. The word "India" did not exist. The country or whatever was known as Hindustan.
@danherrick5785
@danherrick5785 2 года назад
Where did the term "west indies" come from?
@JohnnyAngel8
@JohnnyAngel8 2 года назад
Didn't exist? Nonsense. It's from the word Indus, as in Indus River, and described the area to the east of it by the Greeks and Persians.
@rosshoover6986
@rosshoover6986 2 года назад
@@JohnnyAngel8 India, the word wasn't used till the middle of the 17th century.
@rosshoover6986
@rosshoover6986 2 года назад
@@danherrick5785 the 17th century map makers.
@taoliu3949
@taoliu3949 2 года назад
For those questioning the origin of the term "Indies". "Indies" during Columbus time did NOT refer to India, it was a huge geographical location that included today's India and Southeast Asia. It wasn't until later that "India" and "Indies" was split as understanding of the region grew. In other words, the term "Indies" did not only refer specifically to just India. In fact, the term "India" itself historically included territories as far as Ethiopia. "India" and "Indies" was a general geographical concept that included way more than just the Indian subcontinent.
@robertklein1497
@robertklein1497 2 года назад
Its a nice overview, but where are the Dutch and the Swedes?
@robertforrester578
@robertforrester578 2 года назад
How do they approximate the population of an island from 600 years ago?
@JeffreytheLibrarian
@JeffreytheLibrarian 2 года назад
Archaeology and primary documents would be the most likely sources. It's actually very hard to do, but some educated guesses can be made.
@slimpickens01
@slimpickens01 2 года назад
No mentions of the Polynesian navigators or the voyages of Munsa Abu Bhakiri from the Mali Empire?
@Fenixion88ZX
@Fenixion88ZX 2 года назад
Francisco Pizarro is from my hometown in Spain, proud seeing him here :)
@nickphillips2125
@nickphillips2125 Год назад
Interesting video. I especially liked having parts of the map 'blacked-out' until those regions are explored. Thank you
@JeffreytheLibrarian
@JeffreytheLibrarian Год назад
Thanks for watching!
@patrickcarey393
@patrickcarey393 2 года назад
I remember reading many years ago that when John Cabot arrived at what is now St. Johns Nfld. he encountered a number of Portuguese fisherman. Is there any evidence of that.
@taoliu3949
@taoliu3949 2 года назад
There are theories that some European sailors/fishermen had knowledge of the New World prior to Columbus, but there's no archeological nor historical evidence to back it up. Historical records does show Basque fishermen were present in Newfoundland from at least 1517 which predates all European Settlements in the region, however.
@joeltell8484
@joeltell8484 2 года назад
@@taoliu3949 there is a viking settlement in newfoundland that goes back a 1000 years
@taoliu3949
@taoliu3949 2 года назад
@@joeltell8484 Yes, but that settlement did not last.
@zantlozantlom4752
@zantlozantlom4752 2 года назад
Champlain was actually Sir Francis Bacon, as discovered when Jacob Roberts, decrypting the Shakespeare Funerary plaque in Stratford-upon-Avon, realizes it was Bacon's Autobiography. The information Bacon reveals changes history as we know it.
@MorganCunningham-w6d
@MorganCunningham-w6d Год назад
It is worth mentioning that we have discovered a genetically Celtic man in a cave in New England, with a knife covered in Ogham inscriptions. This means whoever he was, and however he got there, he and whoever else he was with were likely the first Europeans to set foot on North America, so Irish people deserve a mention for this.
@TK0_23_
@TK0_23_ Год назад
The Irish were not sailors. This is my first hearing of this discovery, but it would have been a Norse voyage. The knife could easily have been a spoil of battle in Ireland, or he could have been a slave. Either way, the Irish cannot be consideted here. Note: My 2nd great grandfather, thru my patriarcal line, was born in Ireland in 1815.
@MorganCunningham-w6d
@MorganCunningham-w6d Год назад
@@TK0_23_ New England "stonehenge" (almost certainly not actually a Celtic site) is probably around 20,000 years old, and is indisputably made by people from the Old World. The idea that people could not sail to America with older ships is erroneous, so there is no reason it "would have been Norse", when the most parsimonious explanation from the archaeological and genetic data is that the man was Irish.
@jcadams8232
@jcadams8232 2 года назад
The old canard about small pox should be abandoned by serious historians. Why? For one, because mentioning the fable of the use of disease to depopulate Indians helps to achieve a political goal of wrongly demonizing Americans and, for another, mentioning only small pox hardly scratches the surface of major disease processes that already existed world wide, such as Cholera carried by migratory water fowl to all waterways of the world before antibiotics were discovered in the 1800s. I'm given to understand that one venereal disease, was it Gonorrhea, was a livestock disease in South America before explorers took it back to Europe. Those are the natural consequences of inevitable exploration by curious humans world wide. A complete history of all diseases of humans world wide would give context, but would be so great a subject to cover that it would detract from this interesting presentation of travel, so mentioning only one disease really does not serve the audience, in my opinion.
@14yeartwitch14
@14yeartwitch14 2 года назад
I like you.
@JohnnyAngel8
@JohnnyAngel8 2 года назад
You can't rewrite history ... and you certainly can't rewrite the dialogue in the video, i.e., small pox was described as decimating Indians as a NATURAL OCCURRENCE, not purposeful (though there are incidents of that actually happening).
@VaxlandMapping101
@VaxlandMapping101 2 года назад
Dnag your voice is incredibly calming
@JeffreytheLibrarian
@JeffreytheLibrarian 2 года назад
Thank you!
@VaxlandMapping101
@VaxlandMapping101 2 года назад
No problem.
@bsims6275
@bsims6275 2 года назад
My money says the Phoenicians beat them all to the New World by 2000 years.
@eiriksinclair5986
@eiriksinclair5986 Год назад
A Brief History of Atlantis: Religion of Thor - Ring of Dragons c.1200BC: Greek Vikingar from Crete discover America, Mjolnir Erochson returns via Greenland 1186BC: Vikingar move to Carthage shipping portage, the vacancy of Crete incites the Trojan Wars 908BC: King Aegeus unites Troi with Athens, and relocates to England to oversee America 850BC: Voyages to America take place, the ‘Isle of the Blessed’ by Homer, 10000 furlongs 754BC: Roman God Mar begins the Latin colonization of Mesoamerica from Equador 404BC: Plato’s Hermocrates Dialogue orated the founding Sagas of America, Peloponnesian War 250BC: Phoenician colonization of America (Zeus’ Deluge), Mayan and Skraelingar occupation 133BC: Religion of Thor begins with Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus and ‘300’ men, Tiber River 1BC: American Vikingr relocate the Tree of Life (Mississippi) from Mesopotamia to Mesoamerica 1AD: Liefr Eirikson, Son of Eirik the Red, Vineland coastal cycle of the Ouroboros (Ring of Dragons) 600AD: Cahokia Indians populate America’s Tree of Life, winter campsite at Teotihuacan 791AD: Vikings lose the Battle of Uppsala Sound, thought to be a land battle, were taken by sea 986AD: Lief Erikson, Son of Erik the Red, attacked along east coast, pulls men from Mississippi 1040AD: Federated States of America, militarized Indian tribes to finish off European Vikings 1068AD: Skraelingr and Stave Uprising brings end to Viking Era, Roanoke Island (NY) abandoned 1255AD: Confederate States of America formed by Orion Armistice in Iceland, Heads & Tails Accord 1307AD: Templar are purged from Europe, African trafficking from Gold Coast to populate America 1459AD: Byzantine Empire invites father of Christopher Columbus to Bimini Island with him at age 10 Podcast ‘Voyage of the Thundergods’: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-xVxTmN322w8.html Evolution of Time Loops: Enoch, Eroch, Erich… Odin’s Cobblestone Court, Washington DC (The Hill) Cycles of Ygododdin, in Europe: Visigoth Theodoeric (7) Gothic tribes, Camelot Spain, 200 AD - 500 AD Vikingr Erik the Red (7) Nordic tribes, Irish Derry, 500 AD - 700 AD King Arthur Knights (7) Templar tribes, French, 700 AD - 1300 AD Cycles of the Ouroboros Dragon, in America: Leafar Eiriksson (7) Gothic tribes (Vikingar Greek), 133 AD - 200 AD Liefr Eriksson (7) Swedish tribes (Vikingr American), 200 AD - 791 AD Lief Ericsson (7) English tribes (Viking Danish-Norwegian), 986 AD - 1309 AD
@henrygreenwood3927
@henrygreenwood3927 2 года назад
No mention of the dutch explorers? That's kind of weird. They were one of the great super powers of the time.
@JeffreytheLibrarian
@JeffreytheLibrarian 2 года назад
Hudson is in there, he's a big one. He worked for the Dutch even though he was English.
@redbuki
@redbuki 2 года назад
Comparing the Dutch explorers with the Spanish is sheer stupidity. Un saludo.
@andyanderson5326
@andyanderson5326 2 года назад
Meanwhile Polynesians have discovered every island in the Pacific Ocean by 1300
@koggyb
@koggyb 2 года назад
Shucks, no mention of Vinland!
@chrisframpton7681
@chrisframpton7681 17 дней назад
Omg! Thank you. I am about to binge the #$@% out of this. ‘Jeffrey….a G & a librarian’
@JeffreytheLibrarian
@JeffreytheLibrarian 17 дней назад
I appreciate the enthusiasm!
@WillyTheComposerOfficial
@WillyTheComposerOfficial 2 года назад
I’m not sure why the video says 1,000,000 natives on Hispaniola twice. Wikipedia says there were between a few tens of thousands and 750,000. A wide range but definitely not a million
@nmarbletoe8210
@nmarbletoe8210 Год назад
if the range of uncertainty is 30k to 750k, then 750k is pretty much the same as a million.
@Abrahamgreenbodybuildinglifest
@Abrahamgreenbodybuildinglifest 11 месяцев назад
This is interesting and I do believe that these exploration was the coz of how Spain found the Philippine and this was why they banned people from exploring the world.
@phoenix21studios
@phoenix21studios 2 года назад
great idea to hide the map until they explored it! it really puts things into perspective.
@JeffreytheLibrarian
@JeffreytheLibrarian 2 года назад
Thank you!
@CarlosGonzalez-bo4fl
@CarlosGonzalez-bo4fl 2 года назад
Where are the dutch routes.
@EdinburghFive
@EdinburghFive 2 года назад
The Corte-Real family voyages are missing. They explored the coast from Greenland to at least as far south as Nova Scotia in 1500 and after.
@danielebrparish4271
@danielebrparish4271 Год назад
It doesn't count if they don't leave a record of their discoveries or share it with the rest of the world. They explored it and decided it was a vast useless ice covered rock with nothing worth taking or exploiting.
@EdinburghFive
@EdinburghFive Год назад
Hey @@danielebrparish4271 Good to hear from you. The Corte-Reals did leave records and if you look at the northeast coast of North America you will find many place names that are of Portuguese origins. There were also records indicating a settlement was established, in the area of present day Nova Scotia. Although Greenland was not particularly inviting, Newfoundland, the Gulf of St Lawrence region, Nova Scotia, and Maine are much more habitable.
@spanishmasterpieces5203
@spanishmasterpieces5203 2 года назад
1 million natives on Espanola? Thats not true.
@Titus921
@Titus921 Год назад
An interesting video but a few lines didn't sit well like the population of Hispaniola been over a million is debated and the Natives dying of small pox before European contact is not accurate as they didn't have immunity against these illness before contact.
@geniusfa7717
@geniusfa7717 2 года назад
I have to write this not because I did not like this video, but the incoherence bothered me. First, no, the "African Slave Trade" did not start with the Portuguese exploring the west coast of Africa. It started centuries before by Muslims, and it lasted way after Europe ended Slavery in their own domains. Secondly, if you are going to name Vespucci by his Italian name, then name Giovanni Caboto as well by his real, non anglicized name.
@dannyarcher6370
@dannyarcher6370 2 года назад
1:37 - This will be the beginning of the Atlantic Slave Trade. Fixed it for ya.
@JeffreytheLibrarian
@JeffreytheLibrarian 2 года назад
Thank you!
@HeavyMetalRuinedMyLife1971a
Earth is observably level contained and motionless AND space doesn't exist 😎
@celebrityrog
@celebrityrog 2 года назад
Azores is pronounced A-ZOHRZ not A-Zor-EEz
@twbishop
@twbishop 2 года назад
@6:00 smallpox is transmitted among humans only, not other animals.
@gwickle1685
@gwickle1685 2 года назад
Very good!
@JeffreytheLibrarian
@JeffreytheLibrarian 2 года назад
Thank you!
@kenburroughs4410
@kenburroughs4410 2 года назад
No mention of St. Johns in 1497 otherwise very well done video
@oskarsaristie9495
@oskarsaristie9495 2 года назад
The discovery of the African west coast by the Portuguese is not "the beginning of the African slave trade" [1:40]. From ancient times, Africans were traded as slaves, especially by Islam and especially also by African kingdoms. Europeans later appeared only as buyers, at least in Africa not as traders.
@travishylton6976
@travishylton6976 2 года назад
europeans traded in their own countries
@jaywinters2483
@jaywinters2483 2 года назад
The Mauritanians crossed the Atlantic in the 9th Century and went up the Mississippi.
@georgejcking
@georgejcking 2 года назад
Impossible!!!! Didn't have the technology!!!!!!!! That's like saying the Egyptians actually made it to the moon thousands of years ago, but mysteriously lost all the necessary tech????????
@14yeartwitch14
@14yeartwitch14 2 года назад
@@georgejcking uuhuh!! They did!!! And then a couple of millennia later, WE did it!! But then we lost all of the technology too. Even carelessly just threw some of it in the shredder bin, recorded episodes of Emergency and TAXI over the tapes of oodles of recorded data and video. Now we don't dare to even discuss how to get through the Van Allen Radiation Belts. Damned shame we were smarter 50 years ago as humans.🤔
@georgejcking
@georgejcking 2 года назад
@@14yeartwitch14 It might be a good idea to lay off of the crack....just a bit?????
@rickintexas1584
@rickintexas1584 2 года назад
I’ve heard that fable as well. But I don’t give it much credence. It sounds a little far fetched and wishful thinking.
@richardvelasquez4996
@richardvelasquez4996 2 года назад
you mean martians?
@brianperry4754
@brianperry4754 2 года назад
It was Dias who cleared the Cape of Good Hope.
@luissolano9675
@luissolano9675 2 года назад
Porque los anglosajones nombran a Cristobal Colón como Christopher Columbus?
@jjs4050
@jjs4050 2 года назад
Vikings: 😐
@kenburroughs4410
@kenburroughs4410 2 года назад
The first colony in North America was not Roanoke It was the first colony in the future United States not the first in North America. That was St. John's in Newfoundland in 1497
@dominict9418
@dominict9418 2 года назад
FINALLY! Someone has the facts right.
@garypulliam3740
@garypulliam3740 2 года назад
I like how you say "sighting" and not "discovering" as it was already discovered and settled by indigenous peoples.
@williambrandondavis6897
@williambrandondavis6897 2 года назад
All humans are indigenous to Africa not any other place. Native Americans had only been there longer, originally immigrating from Asia an estimated 20,000 years ago.
@garypulliam3740
@garypulliam3740 2 года назад
@@williambrandondavis6897 🤣 Okay
@mikespearwood3914
@mikespearwood3914 2 года назад
@@garypulliam3740 What's so funny?
@garypulliam3740
@garypulliam3740 2 года назад
@@dolphinsfann1991 Yes. That was my point. He is cognizant enough to say "sights" rather tha "discovers" since it had already been discovered thousands of years early (by my people, by the way .... the first nations).
@hughdevlin4913
@hughdevlin4913 2 года назад
like looking at the corony virus,strange disese never went the other way new world to old world
@adamlane6453
@adamlane6453 2 года назад
Wrong. Syphilis.
@hughdevlin4913
@hughdevlin4913 2 года назад
@@adamlane6453 know that but only the one ,and not as deadly as smallpox, flu,the only other thing was tobacco that killed a lot of western people.
@javierruiz9774
@javierruiz9774 2 года назад
The English also tried to invade Spain and failed miserably
@hansaroos203
@hansaroos203 2 года назад
maaan the norse wasnt just norway and denmark. You are deacribing false history
@JeffreytheLibrarian
@JeffreytheLibrarian 2 года назад
The Swedes went east to Russia. The Danes and Norwegians went west to Greenland and Iceland.
@tonymazz9912
@tonymazz9912 2 года назад
Thanks for exposing the truth about Slavery. We are Always to blame for it , Yet it's Portugal who started it.
@Cokeastur
@Cokeastur 2 года назад
In Spanish Empire the slavery was forbidden. It was the british, french and dutch who used slaves
@juangdo9220
@juangdo9220 2 года назад
Indigenous slavery was forbidden, black slaves were widely used
@nmarbletoe8210
@nmarbletoe8210 Год назад
@@juangdo9220 In the 1700s, the New Mexico governor was buying Indian slaves from the Comanche to send to mines in Mexico. I would like some evidence that the Spanish Empire forbade slavery of any type. I have never heard this concept. Perhaps there is a grain of truth to it?
@juangdo9220
@juangdo9220 Год назад
@@nmarbletoe8210 Leyes de Indias 1504, Leyes de Burgos 1512, Leyes Nuevas 1542
@nmarbletoe8210
@nmarbletoe8210 Год назад
@@juangdo9220 Thank you! Looking it up... Leyes de Indias -- I find nothing about slavery Leyes de Burgos -- applied only to some islands in the Caribbean Leyes Nuevas -- promulgated to end the slavery that was happening. Slave owners such as Pizarro rebelled en mass. King repealed the laws in 1552. Nice try. No cigar.
@jeffreywickens3379
@jeffreywickens3379 2 года назад
I am 100% White, of European descent, but I find this video hard to watch, because the idea of conquering, robbing and killing native Americans sickens me.
@sandroribeiro7644
@sandroribeiro7644 2 года назад
Conquering, robbing and killing is just human history overall.
@nmarbletoe8210
@nmarbletoe8210 Год назад
​@@sandroribeiro7644 it is not normal, which is why we don't like it. Has it been around since Cain and Abel? Yes, but it is despicable. Most of history is trade and peace, but of course the wars are very important and make all the headlines.
@rockyjforay
@rockyjforay 3 года назад
So it was Spain that started the slave trade. Do we still have to cast blame on the former confederacy of states in the civil war for its use of slave labor?
@MXB2001
@MXB2001 3 года назад
Yes.
@pivotas4406
@pivotas4406 3 года назад
Cain killed Able. Do we still have to blame murderers for continuing what someone else started?
@rockyjforay
@rockyjforay 3 года назад
@@pivotas4406 Blame Eve for eating the forbidden fruit.
@RobertTapia
@RobertTapia 3 года назад
Yes you bigot, of course. The confederacy was a hostile power AGAINST the United States! Cast ALL the blame and don't defend them.. wtf?
@rockyjforay
@rockyjforay 3 года назад
@@RobertTapia No. The United States, or actually the Northern Union of States, was hostile to the new confederacy, who sought independence from federal government overreach. Let’s not forget that every president prior to the Civil War was a slave owner. The abolitionist movement was consolidated in the newly formed Radical Republican Party of 1856, of which Abraham Lincoln was a member. The Southern States sought to preserve their way of life that had gone on since at least 1619. It was the new radical movement that was hostile and hungry for blood, not the South. Because you live in a modern era doesn’t give you the right to judge how people lived back then. And you might want to brush up on the history of the Atlantic Slave Trade. It was Portugal, and then Spain, that exploited it, and there were far more Sub Saharan Africans enslaved in the Spanish and Portuguese colonies than in the United States, Roberto Tapia!
@jerrycallender9927
@jerrycallender9927 2 года назад
More aptly titled "The age of INVASION'!
@2Chickaboom2
@2Chickaboom2 2 года назад
If Spain and Portugal “discovered” the Canaries and Azores, was their a population already there? If so, who were they?
@concretecat
@concretecat 2 года назад
I know for the Azores there was no one there until the Spanish. Idk about the canaries rhi
@taoliu3949
@taoliu3949 2 года назад
Those islands were uninhabited.
@larmondoflairallen4705
@larmondoflairallen4705 2 года назад
@@taoliu3949 The Canary Islands were inhabited by the aboriginal Guanches people prior to the arrival of the Spanish.
@2Chickaboom2
@2Chickaboom2 2 года назад
Replying to note that Wiki has a good overview of pre-Spanish inhabitants of the Canaries. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guanches Now I've learned even MORE from this vid!
@mikespearwood3914
@mikespearwood3914 2 года назад
@@taoliu3949 Actually a Caucasoid peoples were on the Canary Islands apparently.
@nilsb.8559
@nilsb.8559 2 года назад
Sure, Hudson was english but I'm still a bit bummed that the Dutch weren't mentioned. It was them after all, he sailed for. That's also why our favourite city on the Hudson was once called New Amsterdam.
@MS-jz2pq
@MS-jz2pq 9 месяцев назад
Why would you be bummed about that? Do you think colonization, genocide and slavery are things to be proud of?
@csaba1434
@csaba1434 2 месяца назад
​@@MS-jz2pq Yes.
@theskycavedin
@theskycavedin 2 года назад
It's actually a misconception that Columbus thought he was going to "India" like the modern country. He was trying to get to "the Indies" which is what Europe called India, Indochina, Indonesia, and almost every other place in the east except for maybe China. So Columbus thought he was in "the Indies" and the name "Indian" referred to a broad range of people at the time, and he thought these people were in that range. So it wasn't really a misnomer when it was introduced as a term.
@danherrick5785
@danherrick5785 2 года назад
Didn't they use the term "West Indies"?
@TurboManiacal
@TurboManiacal 2 года назад
Yup exactly. Columbus knew he wanted to get to “the indies” but wasn’t sure exactly where he landed in regard to that. He knew he was somewhere west and south of modern day Japan. Japan had been grossly mis-mapped at the time so he thought he might be somewhere off of Japan in the “West Indies”.
@JohnnyAngel8
@JohnnyAngel8 2 года назад
It's a misnomer in that Native Americans were "mislabelled".
@williambrandondavis6897
@williambrandondavis6897 2 года назад
@@JohnnyAngel8 no, your wrong. Indian was the term used by Europeans for any native culture. Just because it’s not descriptive enough for your liking doesn’t change the original intent and usage.
@JohnnyAngel8
@JohnnyAngel8 2 года назад
@@williambrandondavis6897 And your smugness doesn't make you right, either. Name me another culture where Europeans used the term "Indian". Regarding my response to theskycavedin, I stand by it. Today, we know it was a misnomer when Europeans called Native Americans "Indian" because they had, in fact, not reached the "Indies", despite what they believed.
@EdinburghFive
@EdinburghFive 2 года назад
The Norse voyages to Newfoundland should be shown despite the fact they did not settle there for very long. Over the nest nearly five centuries of Norse occupation in Greenland, the Norse certainly sailed westward for various resources and to trade with the Dorset. They likely sailed into the Gulf of St Lawrence and maybe a bit farther south. The Norse did sail into the eastern arctic Baffin Island and Labrador and thus the map should reveal this within the first minute of the video.
@mrbaab5932
@mrbaab5932 Год назад
I agree 👍 with that.
@rocksandforestquiver959
@rocksandforestquiver959 5 месяцев назад
Why? They didn't really manage to document most of it in a terribly useful way, that's why outside of Greenland we're not even really sure where they went and their presence in North America was pretty darn minimal and not permanent. It's a topic everyone feels like they need to bring up as a precursor to talking about the actual age of exploration but it's never more than an asterix point because we basically know nothing for sure about those voyages. Interesting topic, not terribly relevant when you're talking about how the Americas were explored and settled.
@Omerath9
@Omerath9 2 года назад
I think you should rename this video to the age of exploration in the Americas, since you leave out the other dozens of maritime explorations done by the Portuguese in the rest of the world. The Spanish might have been the main explorers of America, but the Portuguese were the main explorers of the World at that time; West Africa, Southern Atlantic, East Africa, Indian Ocean, SE Asia, Japan, etc, and you hardly mention them. You also fail to address the beginning of the age of exploration which began with Portugal in Africa. No offense, but your knowledge reflects a very limited, American-centric knowledge of the History of your own nation and the nations around you. I will add some more information to here, as a lot is missing. In 1415, date which kickstarted the Portuguese expansion, the most up to date map of the world done in Europe was the Italian de Virga world map, which looked something like this: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_Virga_world_map#/media/File:DeVirgaDetail.jpg As you can see, the Atlantic Ocean, Africa, India and the Indian Ocean, as well as Asia, are practically unrecognizable. Despite Marco Polo's voyages to the far East, it was still a rather unknown continent. Africa was believed to end in Western Sahara, and they still believed that the garden of Eden was somewhere hidden in it, and Asia was believed to be a continent with a completely different shape and size. As for the Atlantic and Indian Oceans, they were both considered to be unsalaible from one another, since Europeans believed that the lands below the Equator were too hot because of the sun. Fast forward to 1502, and the world now looked like this: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cantino_planisphere#/media/File:Cantino_planisphere_(1502).jpg This is called the Cantino map, which is the name of the Italian spy who stole the official map from Lisbon. This is considered to be the first precursor map of the modern world, done by the Portuguese explorations and navigations. Almost everything to the east of the Tordesillas map was cartographed by the Portuguese, which for the first time in human history started to show Africa, Asia, the Atlantic and Indian Ocean closer to the size and shape that we now know of them today, except for eastern Asia which the Portuguese would arrive in 1509. This is yet another important piece of information that is widely unknown in the world. Up until that point, it was believed that inter-oceanic travel was virtually impossible. When Vasco da Gama arrived at the Indian Ocean, the Arabs, who had been sailing in that Ocean for hundreds of years before the Portuguese arrived there, were surprised to see them entering from the Atlantic. This massive feat of navigation changed the view of the world, and it proved that oceans could be sailed from one another. This allowed the Portuguese to be the first people to establish global maritime trade routes. By 1514, the Portuguese had managed to establish sea routes between Europe, West Africa, Canada, Brazil, East Africa, around to the Persian Gulf, the Red Sea, China and SE Asia, whilst the Spanish and Italian navigators for instance, only knew how to navigate between Europe and America. It was thanks to this voyage, that other future European voyages were made possible; for instance, the Spanish were only able to sail to Asia thanks to Magellan, who showed how to do inter-oceanic travel via the Pacific. Without the expertise of a Portuguese navigator (who were the only ones qualified for inter-oceanic travel), they would have never participated in the first circumnavigation of the world, and the same goes for the Dutch and English, who were only able to sail to Asia 100 years later thanks to maps they got from the Portuguese. It’s a shame that the Portuguese contribution to the exploration of the world is widely unknown or ignored today. The Portuguese accomplished roughly 50 major voyages of maritime exploration (when the Spanish did around 10), and established the vast majority of the oceanic trade routes, maps and brought the most knowledge of the outside world into Europe. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_maritime_explorers
@M0utles
@M0utles 2 года назад
Brazilian here, I also felt the lack of information in the video
@cseijifja
@cseijifja 2 года назад
@@M0utles he called the united states "america", its very clear where the idea comes here.
@lco2073
@lco2073 2 года назад
7:35 The ''Grande y Felicisma Armada'' its real name, not the ''Invincible Armada'', nickname given by the English was defeated mainly by the weather and was a disaster for the Hispanic Monarchy, but the Contra Armada, is considered a greater disaster for England than the disaster that was the "Invincible" for the Hispanic Monarchy.
@williamthompson2941
@williamthompson2941 2 года назад
😞slave trade centauries old before Portuguese got involved
@frankrosati6403
@frankrosati6403 2 года назад
Columbus never wrote in his journals that he was in India. He referred to the inhabitants as "indiginos" (indigenous) which was shortened to "Indios" and that was Anglicized into Indians. If Columbus thought that he was in India, he would have referred to the inhabitants as Jindus (The Spanish "J" being pronounced as an English "H").
@laylacastel
@laylacastel 2 года назад
I don't think that's completely true. In spanish (and even old Spanish) Hindus has always been written with an H, the word has a persian origin, and in old Spanish J is pronounced as an "i", what later derived into the H sound was the F (like in "fierro" - "hierro" p.e). He did believe he reached India, or the Indian Archipelago (current Indonesia), it wasn't until the travels of Amerigo Vespucci that it was "revealed" they reached a new continent (and that's why it's called America and not Columbica or something). In fact, that territori was known in Spain for several years as "Western Indias" or "Castilian Kingdoms of the Indias", so yes, the term "indians" exist because Columbus (and all the Castilian Empire) thought they discovered a part of the "Indian Archipelago" for a while.
@jazjaz2364
@jazjaz2364 2 года назад
Indigenous means literally "born in India".
@CamoflaugeDinosaue
@CamoflaugeDinosaue 2 года назад
Indios was actually "en dios" or "people in god". This is how Columbus described the native Americans since they seemed to be innocent people living an eden-like life. This is why native American scholars find the term Indian to be a complement.
@laylacastel
@laylacastel 2 года назад
@@CamoflaugeDinosaue That has been already debunked, it's just a myth.
@jazjaz2364
@jazjaz2364 2 года назад
@@CamoflaugeDinosaue "Indios" =/= "en dios" Thats is pretty clear !
@teleamor
@teleamor 2 года назад
How on earth does ANYONE know there were "about 1 million natives" on Hispaniola when Columbus arrived???
@JeffreytheLibrarian
@JeffreytheLibrarian 2 года назад
It would be a combination of primary documents and archaeology.
@teleamor
@teleamor 2 года назад
@@JeffreytheLibrarian - The natives of Hispaniola had no written language. The Spanish didn't even explore the entire island, and just guessed at the population size.
@Julsran
@Julsran 2 года назад
I remember learning all this in the late 60's and early 70's in middle and high school.
@paltomori4625
@paltomori4625 2 года назад
1:40 "The African slave trade" started thousands of years before even Portugal became a country.
@paltomori4625
@paltomori4625 2 года назад
@Valentin J. Suarez Slavery is probably almost as old as hunting. Hunting was started by the Homo erectus, about 1.7 million years ago or at least it is the earliest time we have the evidence for. So slavery is older than our human race. As soon as we were able to capture other animals, we were able to capture humans as well, and we forced them to do whatever we wanted. But then at the late 18th and at the beginning of the 19th century some white people declared that slavery is inhuman, and they started to force everyone to end slavery.
@JazzBuff23
@JazzBuff23 2 года назад
I realize your subject is exploring the America's, but you did say the African slave trade started in 1482. Africa and the Muslims were engaged in slave trading almost a thousand years before that. To me that counts as the beginning of African slave trading.
@mikeburke7053
@mikeburke7053 2 года назад
The cross-Atlantic African slave trade. But throughout human history slavery existed in every society and civilization the americas, asia, europe within africa and throughout the middle east. By 1492 the only place it did not exist was western Europe, it had been replaced with serfdom and serfdom was slowly being replaced by capitalism. This was because a pope declared in 973 that Christians could no longer be enslaved because the Christian was God's image on earth. Originally, the Portuguese, Spanish, English and French enslaved the natives of the new world (who were often slavers themselves). An example would be the Spanish conquering the Incas and enslaving them, but the Incas had already enslaved whoever they conquered first. But the natives died, or ran off. Thats when the Portuguese and Spanish decided to use Africans as slaves. They did not die as easy, were less stoic to punishment if they did not work, and they had no clue were they were and where the could run to. The Europeans did not begin "slavery", it was everywhere all the time throughout history. Slavery lasted throughout much of the world until WWII. What the europeans did was "racialize" slavery in the new world. Initially, white criminals, prisoners of war and indentured servants were enslaved equally with the Africans. (And I should say Western Europeans, in Eastern Europe slavery was still common from the Balkans to Moscow to Istanbul). They word slave is related to Slav, and when the pope banned enslaving Christians, Venetian slavers began enslaving Slavic people who were not Christian, and the word Slav became slave in Western Europe. What the europeans also did was end slavery throughout the world starting in the late 1700's. Some Europeans would bring an African (or native American) slave back to Europe and by the 1700's most Western European countries were banning that practice, then they began to ban the practice in their colonies by the 1800's. England launched a worldwide ban on the slave trade and built a fleet to enforce it as they built the British Empire. What happened in the US was not "unique", it happened everywhere in the America's. And everybody else was enslaving each other around the world.
@JazzBuff23
@JazzBuff23 2 года назад
@@mikeburke7053 Couldn't have said it better myself, Mike. I was just pointing out one huge error in his presentation within hiw subject. Considering all that you pointed out makes a person wonder why the USA, TODAY, is thought of as the nation that created slavery and must pay.
@taoliu3949
@taoliu3949 2 года назад
The Atlantic Slave Trade started in 1482. Slave Trade in Africa has been a thing since the dawn of history long before the rise of Islam.
@zairatulumierah9436
@zairatulumierah9436 Год назад
It happened before Islam in Africa
@JazzBuff23
@JazzBuff23 Год назад
@@zairatulumierah9436 Agreed, it happened around the world forever in humans past and America gets blamed.
@ChrisVincelli
@ChrisVincelli 2 года назад
Way to butcher names like "Newfoundland", "Vasca Da Gama" and "Madeira".
@JeffreytheLibrarian
@JeffreytheLibrarian 2 года назад
I think they sound exactly the way that someone who grew up in Pennsylvania might say them :)
@mbern4530
@mbern4530 2 года назад
you misspelled Vasco da Gama lol
@Adsper2000
@Adsper2000 2 года назад
He said Newfoundland correctly.
@jamesfields2916
@jamesfields2916 2 года назад
No mention of Magellan!
@shuaige3360
@shuaige3360 2 года назад
The African slave trade did not start with European. There was already intra Africa slavery where African put other African to slavery. And there was already Arabic Muslim slavery which was putting African and European into slavery.
@hossamakarkach4429
@hossamakarkach4429 2 года назад
You missed a point in where the Arabs and the Persians knew a faraway land which they described more or less as: 'From Arabia to Andalus (Spain) is the same distance as Spain to a unknown land.' This was around 900 or 1000 CE.
@Krusty-kl5ej
@Krusty-kl5ej 2 года назад
There’s a consistent implication in these presentations that European countries in these times “initiated” slave trading of African people. This practice not only began thousands of years before European colonization of North America, slavery was conducted by many different countries including Africa, but also slavery OF Europeans and people of many other regions - including pre-European colonization of North America, by initial colonizing cultures. This continued theme seems to be an attempt that the long held history of slavery begat with European nations.
@JeffreytheLibrarian
@JeffreytheLibrarian 2 года назад
From the American history perspective, the slave trade begins during this period. The Norse didn't do it in Greenland. Many folks know that Rome and other ancient civilizations had massive slave economies.
@virginwrists4960
@virginwrists4960 2 года назад
It is absolutely insane how history videos are filled with salty pedantic right wingers
@Krusty-kl5ej
@Krusty-kl5ej 2 года назад
@@JeffreytheLibrarian Slavery arrived from many global cultural practices to North America long before the concept of America was ever borne. To endorse slavery as an American ideal is just historically incorrect. If anything, it was the American ideal that demonstrably started the eradication of systemic practices of slavery.
@jaywinters2483
@jaywinters2483 2 года назад
There is a lot of misinformation and missing information in this presentation as this man takes on the orthodox view. The truth is the Mauritanians from the ninth century A.D. came over into Mississippi River area to flee Rome. There was a lot going across here even in the northwest native Americans told Lewis and Clark in ATL for people from Japan were coming over twice a year from the sandwich islands which were what they used to call the Hawaiian islands.
@EdinburghFive
@EdinburghFive 2 года назад
What about Sir Humphrey Gilbert's voyages to Newfoundland? Although he did not establish a settlement, St. John's had been continuously occupied by the fishing fleets for decades. Small numbers of fishers were thought to have overwintered to help prepare the fishing centers for the following season.
@hughdevlin4913
@hughdevlin4913 2 года назад
crazy to think russia is so close to the usa alaska its a wonder the russians never discovered america first.
@alanhajek8453
@alanhajek8453 2 года назад
I like your video. There is one false statement that should be addressed. The African slave trade had been going on for thousands of years before the 1500's. One tribe would conquer another and enslave the captives. Your video should point out that Europeans began purchasing these slaves from African tribes at that time. Europeans didn't invent slavery, they did propagate it, which is horrible. You should strive for accuracy.
@a11osaurus
@a11osaurus 2 года назад
He means the Atlantic slave trade specifically, not slavery in Africa in general
@trevorbinkowski3676
@trevorbinkowski3676 Год назад
African slave trade existed before the Portuguese. Get your facts checked. Stop spreading that narrative.
@spanishmasterpieces5203
@spanishmasterpieces5203 2 года назад
A video with times wrong information. Cabot or Giovanni Caboto was a Neapolitan (Kingdom of Napels) sailor working for England.
@Tusiriakest
@Tusiriakest 2 года назад
The exploration of North America seems to be a better title. Diogo cão and bartolomeu dias for Portugal in subsaharan africa are omitted, Pedro Alvares Cabral finding of Brasil is also forgotten, the Portuguese Magellan, working for Spain, travel around the world is also forgotten...and even in North America.. Portugal’s canadian colony is also omitted. Dutch, danish and prussian colonies are also forgotten... much is lacking=\
@SouthernGentleman
@SouthernGentleman 2 года назад
He wanted to reach the indies to establish a trade route. The Indians ate 3 of his men. Starting a armed conflict between Stone Age and modern civilizations
@nmarbletoe8210
@nmarbletoe8210 Год назад
stone age lol
@SouthernGentleman
@SouthernGentleman Год назад
@@nmarbletoe8210 yes they had Stone Age technology
@nmarbletoe8210
@nmarbletoe8210 Год назад
@@SouthernGentleman Yes, but also gold silver and bronze and large scale agriculture including a city larger than Madrid at the time. Not to take anything away from the Spanish, they were far ahead with the ships guns and horses.
@kyles5513
@kyles5513 2 года назад
I learned more in 9 minutes than I did in my entire school year on this subject.
@hogan4670
@hogan4670 2 года назад
You didn’t study enough
@richardengelhardt582
@richardengelhardt582 2 года назад
You've missed the Basque and Portuguese codfish fishermen operating off the Canadian Grand Banks.
@redbuki
@redbuki 2 года назад
The Basques were and are Spanish too, I don't know if you know much about European geography
@jimstewart9395
@jimstewart9395 2 года назад
I really enjoyed hearing this. You explained it well. Thank you
@brianmathews2926
@brianmathews2926 2 года назад
Newfoundland was settled at l'Anse aux Meadows. It was the first ever UNESCO World Heritage Site in recognition of the completion of the circle of human migration to the Americas from both sides. They more than likely ventured further, but only conclusively settled at l'Anse aux Meadows. Your map should reflect what UNESCO very rightly acknowledged.
@biggibbs4678
@biggibbs4678 2 года назад
Greenland is part of the Americas and was colonized long before newfoundland
@UncleTravelingMatty
@UncleTravelingMatty Год назад
Your presentation is nice and informative but missing a whole 600 years of historical evidence. Mound builders in the America's? What about the Chinese in the west in 460s. I find it interesting to follow the templars and free Masons history. The Vikings new of Concord grapes and called the area Vineland. This was around 1100 and yet no one traveled there for over 300 years. Think about it. Airburst meteors happened, and separation of people from the U.K. area was said to have happened in the early 400s. Hence the next questions about oak island. You seem to be following a preset old school program. Did deeper into the secrets and you will be able to see. There were more people in NA and SA then you state as well. More than Europe at one time. Talk directly to the native peoples of these areas. Books are written about a lot of miss information for religious or genocide reasons. There is so much evidence of world wide travel before, why are we locked in this narrative? The French just happened to hit the Saint Lawrence perfectly too lol. What Norseman married a French woman first? Think about it! Everyone murdered the natives and took their land then told a wonderful story of a free new world to settle in. You're just repeating the programming they want. St. Patrick, Troy, Mardoc, and mound builders, what connects them and you will see, if you did. Welsh history too.
@splitman1129
@splitman1129 Год назад
I never understood why we must change the name of military bases and remove statues, yet we still have all these cities and whatever still named after these Europeans. Same Europeans who not only started the slave trade of Africans, but also destroyed the Native Americans.
@brianmalexander
@brianmalexander Год назад
It wasn't the beginning of the African Slave trade. It was the beginning of the transatlantic slave trade. African slave trading had been going on for almost all of recorded history.
@christianstainazfischer
@christianstainazfischer 2 года назад
You need to watch knowing better’s video about Columbus, he did not think he was in India
@isaac_aren
@isaac_aren 2 года назад
Leif Erikson is the earliest contact with concrete evidence, but there is stories about an Irish priest travelling to North America in the 900's
@nmarbletoe8210
@nmarbletoe8210 Год назад
The Brendan Voyage is a good book about re-creating that journey
@Imsuper656
@Imsuper656 2 года назад
Columbus didn't discover the Americas......he had a map made by some one else, called "Americk"....
@shinebassist
@shinebassist Год назад
You missed basque and british fishermen before columbus. The grand banks were being fished decades before columbus
@EmisoraRadioPatio
@EmisoraRadioPatio 2 года назад
Beginnings of the Transatlantic African Slave Trade*. The Transaharan African Slave Trade had been going on for centuries before.
@Urlocallordandsavior
@Urlocallordandsavior 2 года назад
I also think that the Arabs/Swahilis/Indians have long known about the Gulf of Aden. I mean even Zheng He sailed there in the 15th century.
@lillekenatnek195
@lillekenatnek195 2 года назад
What are we Dutch not included in this lol
@JeffreytheLibrarian
@JeffreytheLibrarian 2 года назад
Hudson is on there, an Englishman that sailed for the Dutch.
@robert9016
@robert9016 Год назад
It’s a funny coincidence how all of these guys found rivers and lakes with the same name as them!
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