People
Places
Events
Terms
Mixed Bag
100

Portuguese leader who opened a navigation school to help support expeditions around Africa, to Asia.

Prince Henry "the Navigator"

100

Name of the largest centralized center of trade in North America before Europeans arrived.

Cahokia

100

Holy War between Christians and Muslims that helped to increase the zeal for spreading Christianity during the Age of Exploration.

Crusades

100

Brutal part of the slave trade, transportation of human chattel across the Atlantic Ocean to be sold to planters.

Middle Passage

100
One example of a food product that was transferred from New World (Americas) to Old World (Europe/ Africa) and resulted in population growth in Europe.

Corn or Potato

200

Sponsored Christopher Columbus voyage in 1492.

Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand, Spain

200

Center of trade and culture in West Africa around 1492.  Home to extensive library too!

Timbuktu

200

The development of this meant that enslaved labor would be defined by race in America and it would be a permanent and perpetual system.

"New World" Slavery

200

Beginning with Columbus transfer of food, plants, animals, people, minerals, diseases etc. between Old and New Worlds.

Columbian Exchange

200

Term for the type of houses in the North American arid Southwest, built by the Pueblo people of clay/ sand/ vegetation materials.

Adobe

300

Example of Native American society who lived in the Pacific Northwest and subsisted using resources from the sea, lived in plank houses.

Kwakiutl

300

Name of the Aztec capital, largest city in the Americas before the arrival of Europeans.  It is located where Mexico city is today.

Tenochtitlan

300

This helps explains why the Native American population of the Caribbean, Central America, and South America was nearly decimated during the early 16th century.

Smallpox (Columbian Exchange)

300

Large sailing ship made for long ocean voyages, maritime improvement that supported the Age of Exploration.

Caravel

300

Term for the extended family networks that existed in Native American and African societies.

Kinship

400

Example of Native American society who lived in the Woodlands of Eastern North America and made their homes in longhouses.

Iroquois, Powhatan

400

The name of early Portuguese slave trading post in West Africa, modern Ghana.

Elmina Castle

400

This explains why Europe went from being dominated by the Roman Catholic Church, to having other Christian denominations (Anglican, Lutheran, Huguenots, Calvinists).

Protestant Reformation

400

Term for Native American societies where women had a lot of power and family descended through the female line.

Matrilineal

400

Complex civilization before the arrival of Europeans who built their empire in the Andes Mountains in South America.

Inca

500

African who was enslaved at the time of the trans-Atlantic slave trade and wrote account of it later to oppose slavery.

Olaudah Equiano

500

Where maize/ corn was first cultivated in the Americas, foundations of permanent complex societies.

Central Mexico.

500

This helps explain the increase in warfare among tribes, like the Sioux, living on the Great Plains after the arrival of Europeans.

Introduction the Spanish horse (Columbian Exchange)

500

Term for a Spanish system of enslaving Native Americans to work in the mines and sugar plantations of the Caribbean, Central America, and South America.

Encomienda System

500

Theory for how the first Americans arrived to the continent at the end of last Ice Age.

Beringia Land Bridge
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