Western Civilization.p

(Jacob Rumans) #1

CHAPTER OUTLINE


I. Introduction

II. The Portuguese Voyages to Africa, India, and
Brazil

III. Columbus and the Opening of America

IV. The First Colonial Empires: Portugal and Spain

V. A Clash of Empires: The Ottoman Challenge
and the Emperor Charles V

VI. The Crisis of the Early Modern State
A. The French Wars of Religion and the Revolt
of the Netherlands
B. The Thirty Years’ War
C. The English Civil War

VII. The Price of Conflict: Fiscal Crisis and
Administrative Devolution

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CHAPTER 15


OVERSEAS CONQUEST AND RELIGIOUS


WAR TO 1648


T


he age of the Renaissance and Reformation
marked the beginning of European conquests
overseas. Their purpose in the first instance
was to expand the resources available to the
emerging monarchies of western Europe. The con-
quests were therefore an extension of the state-building
process, but a religious motive was evident, too, which
at times recalled the Christian triumphalism of the Cru-
sades. To say that European expansion overseas
changed the world forever is an understatement.
Though it laid the foundations of a world market and
added much to Europe’s store of wealth and knowledge,
it did so at a terrible cost in human misery.
In Europe itself, the rivalries that encouraged over-
seas exploration fueled the imperial struggles of the
early sixteenth century and the so-called Religious
Wars of 1559–1648. The growing cost of warfare
stretched the resources of princes to the breaking point.
This led to massive unrest as subjects sought to recover
rights and privileges lost to rulers who were desperate
to pay for security. Both the subsequent revolts and the
international conflict that helped to sustain them were
complicated by religious issues that made them ex-
tremely difficult to resolve. In the end, the wars of what
has been called the Iron Age brought much of Europe
to the brink of political and economic disintegration.




The Portuguese Voyages to Africa,

India, and Brazil

The process of overseas exploration began appropri-
ately enough in Portugal, the first modern monarchy
and the center of the fourteenth-century revolution in
shipbuilding. The Portuguese state had been effectively
consolidated by John I in 1385. Like other medieval
rulers, he and his descendants hoped to maximize do-
main revenue by increasing taxable commerce. The
gold and ivory of Africa were a tempting goal, but that

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