Trade routes
Discovery of new world
European interactions with indigenous people
gold,God,and glory
Printing Press and the Spread of Knowledge
100

This ancient trade route connected China to Europe, famous for silk and spices.

silk road

100

This ocean separates Europe and Africa from the Americas, which explorers crossed to reach the New World.

Atlantic Ocean

100

When Europeans arrived in the Americas, they called the people already living there this name.

Native Americans or Indigenous people

100

This word represents the desire for wealth that motivated explorers to find new trade routes and riches like gold and spices.

gold

100

What was the first book printed by the printing press.

The Bible

200

This ocean was important for trade between Africa, India, and Asia before Europeans explored sea routes.

indian ocean

200

Before Europeans, this group of people were the original inhabitants of the Americas.

Native Americans 

200

European explorers brought these to the Americas, which caused many Indigenous people to get sick and die.

Diseases 

200

Explorers and missionaries wanted to spread this major world religion to new lands.

Christianity 

200

This was one major reason the printing press helped spread ideas so quickly.

It made books faster and cheaper.

300

European explorers searched for a sea route around this continent to reach Asia and its valuable goods.

africa

300

Europeans were searching for new routes to this continent to trade for spices and gold.


Asia

300

This animal, brought by Europeans, changed Indigenous peoples' ways of hunting and traveling in the Americas.

horse 

300

This motivation, meaning fame and national pride, made kings and countries want to claim new lands.

glory

300

Before the printing press only these types of people usually had access to books.

The wealthy,monks,and church leaders.

400

This route connected West Africa to North Africa and was famous for trading gold and salt.

Trans-Saharan Trade Route


400

This term describes the movement of plants, animals, people, and diseases between the Old World and the New World after contact.

columbian exchange 

400

Europeans often forced Indigenous people to work on farms, in mines, or convert to this religion.

Christianity 

400

Spanish explorers known as conquistadors came to the Americas mainly for these three reasons.

God,Gold,and Glory

400

This major historical movement was sparked in part by the printing of Martin Luther’s 95 Theses.

The splitting in the church also known as Protestant reformation.

500

The new ocean trade routes in the 1400s and 1500s led to the start of this global system of exchanging goods, cultures, and ideas.

Globalization 

500

This invention helped spread news and maps about the New World quickly across Europe.


printing press

500

This was one major long-term effect of European colonization on Indigenous cultures and populations.

loss of land,population decline, or destruction of culture.

500

Gold,God,and Glory were motivations that led to this global time of exploration and colonization between the 1400s and 1700s.

Age of Exploration

500

Because it allowed knowledge to travel across borders and cultures, the printing press is often seen as an early example of something we still do today.

Globalization