Entry 1: I’m so eager to arrive in the Americas. I hope to meet new life and explore this new place. I believe that the Americas will become a great place to trade. I have brought some glass beads and Hawks’ bells to trade just in case we do run into trade.
Entry 2: Stepping foot on this island has already given me great views of the Americas. The air is warm and since were on the island, I can smell the fresh saltwater from the sea. There is lots of life here. Birds, different animals, new plants, I even met and traded with Indians. They gave us some of their native ornaments in exchange for some of my trade items.
Entry 3: There are already colonies that have ben established by former visitors of Spain. I have learned about crops and
As I struggled to learn to kayak I pushed through the same water the Edisto’s paddles had touched. My experiences mirror those of Joseph Bruchac, in his work “At the End of Ridge Road.” Bruhac has a cabin in the country that is very close to “the homestead where [his] grandfather and his twelve brothers and sisters were born…Even closer to us are the unmarked burial places of Abenakis and Mohawks and Mohicans” (215-216). Bruhac’s modern home’s proximity to places of cultural importance for Native Americans shows that the way the land has been impacted and used by Native Americans should not be overlooked. The Native presence on the land is often overlooked since the Edisto people had all died from disease or war by the early 1700s. The Edisto people are often overlooked because of heavy focus on Civil War history in the area. The land that I’ve been walking for twenty years has an entire culture buried beneath it and I haven’t thought about it once. The Native Presence is not entirely gone. The Island’s infamous Captain Ron, a white man raised by the Cherokee, has had arrangements with my family for decades. Like the Edisto people before Ron uses the land to procure majority of the food his family eats. His children Rain, Tide, Marsh, and Wind learn these same skills and continue to grow up on Edisto Island.
The author John Smith, a pilgrim who arrived to the Americas, wrote a description of the new land in his book “ A Description of New England ”. In this book Smith shows a wonderful world of vast food and pleasure. Also, William Bradford another pilgrim who arrived to Plymouth on the coast of Massachusetts, wrote a book called “ Of Plymouth Plantation ” in which he describes what really happened, how the pilgrims actually lived. The purpose of this essay is to compare and contrast both authors and their books. John Smith wrote about the wonderful place the New World was, on the other hand, William Bradford wrote about the realities and difficulties of the New World.
In early 16th century, European countries send out sailors to explore the world to obtain more resources, such as gold, territories, and food. Christopher Columbus is probably the most famous person when the discovery of America is being brought out. He and Cabeza de Vaca both sail to America ─called Cathay or Indies in the documents because they think they were sailing to Asia─ and meet the local people, Indian, in person. According to their diary and letters, they have some different perspectives and some similar thoughts about Native American. These literatures hold drastic impact in learning about Native American for future generations. (specifics)
I am writing to you today in hopes of expanding Spain’s influence into the American territory of Mexico and Florida. I would like to sail to these new lands in hopes of finding resources such as: Cotton, Silk, Spices, Vegetables, Tobacco, Gold, Sugar, the list could go on and on. I know we will find these resources in these lands because of the Columbian Exchange which was created by fellow explorer Christopher Columbus. Exploring these new lands could strengthen Spain’s ties with the American colonies and could possibly be allies in trade and in war. We may face hardships like unpredictable weather and lack of territorial knowledge but I am prepared to take necessary precautions so that everything will go smoothly. This will also give Spain
“They… brought us parrots and balls of cotton and spears and many other things, which they exchanged for the glass beads and hawks’
This book talks about history and who first settled in the Americas and how the Colonists have shaped our country to be this way. Consequently, this tells us about all the long journeys a few brave, young men and women have made and how they are remarkably wonderful for doing that. This book also tells us how the Americas have gotten to be where we are today. Moreover, this book goes through how the first settlers came here to everything about the Revolutionary War to the Puritans learning from the Indians. In conclusion, this book is a very reliable source and it can be applied in our daily lives.
After Breakfast we collected Indians under an owning of our Main Sail, in presence of our party paraded and delivered a long speech to them expressive of our journey the wishes of our government, some advice to them and directions how they were to conduct themselves. As a gift we gave them a cannister of power and a bottle of whiskey. The air is pure and healthy so far as we can judge
The first letter was from Christopher Columbus, the way he spoke about the island Juana made whoever read that letter visualize it. He spoke on how the land was fertile, how a lot of different things could happen in that island, trying to sell that island to make the person reading it again, visualize it and in my opinion see them there. Columbus spoke with such delight and such love of
Bradford records, “And here be noted a special providence of God and a great mercy to this poor people.” Each of the cultures appreciated peace as represented in the peace agreement with the Chief Massasoit. Friendship was also a part of each of the cultures proved in the desire of the settlers to make friends with the Indians, particularly in the friendship with Squanto. In each of the passages there is a descriptive language expressing their culture’s high regard for nature and its beauty. Columbus wrote, “The songs of the birds were so pleasant that it seemed as if man could never wish to leave this place.”
Subject: Christopher Columbus was sent by King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella to explore west of Europe to potentially find a new trade route to India and the Spice Islands. What he found instead were a number of islands in the Caribbean Sea, which he thought then was an undiscovered part of India. He named the largest island Hispaniola, then the next after his king, and the next after his queen. Columbus was content to find that the soil of this land was very fertile, which was good news for potential investments in colonization and plantations. Columbus gave the native people dishes, glass, pots, and other insignificant items in order to try and bribe them into being amicable with himself and the other newcomers, and so that they may convert
In modern America, we often take for granted the natural world that surrounds us and the American culture which is built upon it. For many of us, we give little thought to the food sources that sustain and natural habitats that surround us because when viewed for what they are, most people assume that they have “simply existed” since the country was founded. However, the documentary ‘America Before Columbus’ provided this writer an extremely interesting record of how the America we know came to exist. In the documentary, one of the most interesting discussions centered on the fact that it was not merely the arrival of conquistadors and colonists that irrevocably changed the landscape of the Americas, but that it was also the coined term known as the “Columbian Exchange” that afforded these travelers the ability to proliferate so successfully. The basic definition of the Columbian exchange is one that defines the importation of European flora and fauna. It could also loosely represent other imports, both intended and unintended, such as tools, implements, and even disease. Armed with this definition, it takes little imagination to envision how differently the Americas might have developed had any significant amount of the native European flora, fauna, or other unintended import not been conveyed to the Americas through the Columbian Exchange. Beyond the arrival of explorers, settlers, and colonists to the New World, the breadth of what the Columbian Exchange represented to
The main ideas of chapter one was the conquest and exploration of the early America’s by the spaniards. Throughout the chapter, it explains the difficulties that the spanish explorers faced when attempting to conquer new lands. The primary problem the explorers faced was with the current inhabitants of the lands they wanted to conquer, especially with the cultural differences between populations. On article that exemplifies the cultural differences between the Native Americans and the Spanish Explorers is the third-person biographical narrative called “The Collision of Cultures.” The narrative gives the reader insight on what the indians and the explorers pre-judgement of one another, based off of what the parties believed with their religion and moral. This article’s reader would be
The long history between Native American and Europeans are a strained and bloody one. For the time of Columbus’s subsequent visits to the new world, native culture has
On September 4, 1999, I was born in Victoria Jubilee hospital in Kingston, Jamaica. My family comes from the inner city of a country that is poverty stricken, politically corrupt, with an excessive murder rate. Despite the many flaws, I was taught to love my culture and respect others. My family came to America to have a better opportunity in life.
The author John Smith, a pilgrim who arrived to the Americas, wrote a description of the new land in his book “ A Description of New England ”. In this book Smith shows a wonderful world of vast food and pleasure. Also, William Bradford another pilgrim who arrived to Plymouth on the coast of Massachusetts, wrote a book called “ Of Plymouth Plantation ” in which he describes what really happened, how the pilgrims actually lived. The purpose of this essay is to compare and contrast both authors and their books. John Smith wrote about the wonderful place the New World was, on the other hand, William Bradford wrote about the realities and difficulties of the New World.