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What Was The Role Of Religion In The Age Of Exploration

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Following the discovery of the New World, many Europeans explorers set out to discover and establish new territory in the name of their countries. Explorers from countries including Spain, France, and Great Britain gathered bands of men in order to voyage to the New World. Although various incentives overlapped between these nations, governmental sponsors for these great voyages had differing motivations for settling the New World and did so through different colonization efforts. In this era of history, from mid-15th century to early-17th century, termed the Age of Exploration, European nations were driven by curiosity, fame, and national pride to explore the New World in search of wealth, novel trade routes, and foreign goods. However, amongst these motivations, religious expansion for the Catholic Church was the primary driving force for all European nations involved. …show more content…

Historical analysis of the Age of Exploration highlights distinguishable differences between the religious colonization efforts of these nations. Spain introduced Catholicism to the Indigenous population with the mentality that the Indigenous people needed to be accepted as Catholics by any means necessary before they can be accepted as humans, while France introduced Catholicism into the New World through the indigenist approach; that the Christian message must be translated as local idioms and customs in order to gain trust and acceptance by the Indigenous population so that they may come to accept Catholicism on their own terms (Massa & Osborne, 15). The indigenist approach, as introduced by French missionary Jean de Brebeuf in 1637, exemplifies the principal difference between Spanish and French Catholic expansion in the New

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