| Names
& Terms in Fasttrack to America's Past Section 1: Discovery and Exploration |
Originating Page |
| This is a glossary of names and terms listed on topic summary pages in Section 1 of Fasttrack to America's Past. Limited reproduction rights are granted to teachers - see details below. |
| Aztec - a Native American group whose
capital, Tenochtitlan,
was built on an island in a lake located where Mexico City is
now.
By the time Europeans arrived, the Aztecs ruled an empire of about five
million people. They are famous for their high level of
civilization
and crop irrigation system. An elaborate calendar governed their
civic activities and religious rituals. The Aztec are also known for their oppressive treatment of neighboring tribes. Human sacrifice to their sun god was practiced on a staggering scale. A thousand or more captives a week were sacrificed in some periods. Priests cut the hearts from the living victims, who were captured from other Indian groups. The Aztecs and their leader, Montezuma, were overthrown by the Spanish under Hernando Cortes in 1521.
Columbian Exchange - the exchange of previously unknown plants and animals between the Old World and the New World after the voyage of Christopher Columbus in 1492. Corn and the potato came back to Europe, along with scores of other new plants and animals. The horse and the cow were introduced to the New World. Disease, especially smallpox from Europe, was also part of the exchange.
conquistadors - the Spanish word for the soldiers and their leaders who conquered the Native Americans of the New World in the early 1500s. With guns and horses, both unknown to the Indians, they had a tremendous military advantage. The writings of the Spanish priest Bartolome de Las Casas revealed the terrible cruelties committed by many of the conquistadors against the Native Americans.
exploitation - to take unfair advantage of a person or group for one’s own gain, especially in an organized or systematic way. Inca - the greatest of the New World empires, located
along the
west coast of South America in what is now Peru. Their capital
was
at Cuzco, high in the Andes mountain range. Lost Colony, The - a common name for the colony at
Roanoke Island
(now in North Carolina) that was started in 1587 by the English.
Sir Walter Raleigh was among the key promoters of the venture.
The
colony is famous because all its residents disappeared, including the
first
English child born in North America, Virginia Dare.
missions - religious “outposts” in a foreign land aimed at winning converts. In the centuries after 1492, Catholic priests from Spain established many mission settlements in the New World to convert Native Americans, and teach them Europeans ways of life and agriculture. They attempted to protect the native population from exploitation by Spanish conquistadors and landowners. But they have also been criticized in modern times for the role they played in forcing Europeans ways on Indians. Some of the Spanish missions built in what is now California are popular stops for tourists. plantation - a large farm that typically raises one or two large cash crops like sugar cane or tobacco. Often, the term is applied to farms using forced labor, although sometimes it is applied to any farm, or even a settlement, such as Plymouth Plantation.
smallpox - a disease common in Europe until modern times that caused disfiguring pustules on the skin, and sometimes death. It killed millions of Indians in the New World when it spread from ships’ crews to the natives after 1492, because the Indians had none of the resistance that Europeans had built up. Today vaccines have eliminated the disease, but there are fears it could re-emerge in germ warfare. Spice Islands - known today as the Molucca Islands,
they lie
off the coasts of Asia and Australia. This small group of islands
was the main source of valuable spices like pepper in ancient
times.
Trade routes carried small amounts of the spices to Europe, where they
were highly desired by the wealthy nobility and merchant classes.
One of the key goals of early explorers was to find a sea route from
Europe
to these islands and other lands of the Far East. Copyright 1999, 2004 by David Burns |
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