AP Euro 16th Century Society and Expansion
Prince Henry the Navigator
(1394-1460) Prince of Portugal who established an observatory and school of navigation at Sagres and directed voyages that spurred the growth of Portugal's colonial empire.
Long 16th Century
1450-1650 population boom
Tudor Dynasty
1485-1603 Henry VII gained power and ended wars of nobility/"livery and maintenence". Established Courty of Star Chamber that tortured nobles.
"Golden Age of Spain"
1500 - 1600. Newfound wealth from American explorations bring in high point of Spanish military might, art and culture.
Concordat of Bologna
1516 - Treaty under which the French Crown recognized the supremacy of the pope over a council and obtained the right to appoint all French bishops and abbots.
Mestizos
A person of mixed Native American and European ancestory
Middle Class
A social class made up of skilled workers, professionals, business people, and wealthy farmers
Joint-Stock Companies
Companies that financed the settlement of America.
Bartolome de las Casas
First bishop of Chiapas, in southern Mexico. He devoted most of his life to protecting Amerindian peoples from exploitation. His major achievement was the New Laws of 1542, which limited the ability of Spanish settlers to compel Amerindians to labor, (476
Amerigo Vespucci
Florentine navigator who explored the coast of South America
Valois
French royal house from 1328 to 1589, lasted until Henry IV
Dutch East India Company
Government-chartered joint-stock company that controlled the spice trade in the East Indies.
Charles V
Holy Roman emperor (1519-1558) and king of Spain as Charles I (1516-1556). He summoned the Diet of Worms (1521) and the Council of Trent (1545-1563).
Christopher Colombus
Italian explorer in service with Spain who arrived in the Americas in 1492.
Conversos
Jews who had converted to Christianity but were now suspected of backsliding into Judaism
Holy Roman Empire
Loose federation of mostly German states and principalities, headed by an emperor elected by the princes. It lasted from 962 to 1806, first emperor was Charlemagne
"god, glory, gold"
Motives for exploration in all European countries
Hermandades
Popular groups in Spanish towns given royal authority to serve as local police forces and as judicial tribunals with the goal of reducing aristocratic violence.
Vasco da Gama
Portuguese explorer. In 1497-1498 he led the first naval expedition from Europe to sail to India, opening an important commercial sea route.
Ferdinand Magellan
Portuguese navigator in the service of Spain
Bartholomew Dias
Sailed to Cape of Good hope
Treaty of Tordesillas
Set the Line of Demarcation which was a boundary established in 1493 to define Spanish and Portuguese possessions in the Americas.
Conquistadores
Spanish 'conqueror' or soldier in the New World. They were searching for the 3-G's: gold, God, and glory.
Hernan Cortes
Spanish conquistador who defeated the Aztecs and conquered Mexico (1485-1547)
Francisco Pizarro
Spanish explorer who conquered the Incas in what is now Peru and founded the city of Lima (1475-1541)
Vasco Nunez de Balboa
Spanish explorer who discovered the Pacific Ocean (1475-1519)
Maximilian I
The Holy Roman Emperor that attempted to centralize the administration by creating new institutions common to the entire empire, but he was successful in marriage alliances.
Asiento
The Slave Trade. First intruduced by Portugal in Brazil to farm sugar plantations where an estimated 50 million Africans died o became slaves during the 17th and 18th century
Reconquista
The effort by Christian leaders to drive the Muslims out of Spain, lasting from the 1100s until 1492.
Columbian Exchange
The exchange of goods and ideas between Native Americans and Europeans
New Monarchs
The term applied to Louis XI of France, Henry VII of England, and Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain, who strengthened their monarchical authority often by Machiavellian means.
Smallpox
a highly contagious viral disease characterized by fever and weakness and skin eruption with pustules that form scabs that slough off leaving scars
Antwerp
a port in northern Belgium on the Scheldt river where people gathered to trade goods
Encomienda System
priviledge given by Spain to Spanish settlers in the Americas which allowed to control the lands and people of a certain territory
witch hunts
spread by religious reformers' preachings about the Devil and severe economic hardships (1560-1660)
War of the Roses
struggle for the English throne (1455-1485) between the house of York (white rose) and the house of Lancaster (red rose) ending with the accession of the Tudor monarch Henry VII
Taille
tax on property and land, provided permanent income for French royal government
Spanish Inquisition
the Inquisition that guarded the orthodoxy of Catholicism in Spain (especially from the 15th to the 17th centuries)
Tomas de Torquemada
the Spaniard who as Grand Inquisitor was responsible for the death of thousands of Jews and suspected witches during the Spanish Inquisition (1420-1498)
Commercial Revolution
the expansion of the trade and buisness that transformed European economies during the 16th and 17th centuries.
Bourse
the stock exchange in Paris
Louis XI
This king of France contributed the most to the consolidation of France. He was often under-estimated as he didn't buy into flashy fashions, and as a result was greatly successful. As many men of the French nobility were killed fighting England and each other, and law dictated that estates without male heirs were inherited by the crown, Louis XI accumulated a great deal of land. He acquired Anjou, Maine, and Bourbon when they had no male heirs, and Brittany and Orleans by arranging marriages involving his children. "spider king"
Francis Xavier
This was a man who helped Ignatius of Loyola to start the Jesuits. He also was famous for his number of missionaries he went on to promote Christianity
Francis I
This was the French king who reached an agreement with Pope Leo X and allowed the French king to select French bishops and abbots
Ferdinand and Isabella
This was the king and queen of Spain who took over the Catholic Spain and started the Spanish Inquisition
Hapsburgs
This was the royal dynasty of Austria that ruled over a vast part of Central Europe while battling with the Turks over Hungary
Hanseatic League
a commercial and defensive confederation of free cities in northern Germany and surrounding areas
Price Revolution
a dramatic rise in prices (inflation). A major problem in europe in the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, causes economic collapse in Spain
Star Chamber
a former English court that became notorious for its arbitrary methods and severe punishments
Syphilis
an STD that attacks many parts of the body and is caused by a small bacterium called a spirochete
Mercantilism
an economic system (Europe in 18th C) to increase a nation's wealth by government regulation of all of the nation's commercial interests
Potato
an edible tuber native to South America
"Old Imperialism"
characterized by establishing posts and forts on coastal regions but not penetrating inland to conquer entire regions or subjugate their populations
Creoles
descendents of Spanish-born BUT born in Latin America; resented inferior social, political, economic status
Martin Behaim
german cartographer; earliest globe
Alphonse de Albuquerque
governor of england. laid foundation to portuguese imperialism
