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Attitudes Toward Native Americans In The Age Of Discovery

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There were many different policies and attitudes of European Americans toward Native Americans in the age of Discovery. The responses of the various nations of Native Americans to the arrival of Europeans after 1492, and the manner in which they dealt with their presence, varied differently from one group to another. Responses to encounters between both groups depended on cultural characteristics, or on the economic and political circumstances which they found themselves in. Just as there was no universal Indian response to the encounter there were also many significant differences in the ways the Europeans and others approached the natives whose land they were intent on occupying. Europeans having arrived in the New World were there in search for the path to riches and the latter not caring who was going to be harmed or whose property was destroyed in the process for their own selfish greed. A brief comparison of various encounters between several Native American nations and European settlers of various periods will demonstrate the series of fundamental factors that had an impact of the relationships between the various groups. There was however, one universal characteristic among the Europeans which was that "all Europeans of whatever social origin considered themselves superior to the Native Americans" and this was reflected in their …show more content…

After the Civil War the migration of Americans westward grew. For Americans they considered this the 'American Dream'. Far from the noise and nonsense of cities. Where your friends or neighbors couldn't be seen or heard from without a distant journey. What the Americans failed to consider was that our moving process upon other land was already occupied and sustained lives of others who were sacred to the land for unknown amounts of years. Americans viewed these natives as a small bug something to squash or

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