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Page 1: Overseas Empires

Overseas Empires

Chapter #17:ii

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Portugal quickly

moved to monopolize

the spice trade with India and other parts

of Asia.

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The Portuguese burned Arab dhows and wharves, and ransacked Muslim cities in East Africa.

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One of Portugal’s first colonies was Goa in India.

Goa

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Through the efforts of

Afonzo de Albuquerque, Goa quickly became the centre of a Portuguese

trading empire.

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Strait ofHormuz

Strait ofMalacca

The Portuguese were able to

control the trade of the Indian Ocean after seizing key straits.

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The Strait of Hormuz

controlled the trade passing between the Persian Gulf and the Indian Ocean.

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The Strait of Malacca

served as the major trade

route between the Indian Ocean and the South China Sea.

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Cargoes of Pepper came from India.

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Cinnamon was imported from Ceylon (present-day Sri Lanka).

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Cloves were brought from the East Indies.

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Nutmeg was shipped from the East Indies.

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Portugal faced stiff competition for the

spice trade from France, England,

and the Netherlands by the late-1500s.

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The Dutch displaced the Portuguese as the dominant power in the spice trade during the 1600s . . .

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while English and French merchants concentrated on India.

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The Ming dynasty of

China permitted

only limited trade with European

merchants.

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By the early-1500s, the Portuguese

had to confine their trading to Macau.

Macau

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In 1542, a newsource of trade was opened when a

Portuguese ship was blown off course and ended up in Japan.

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[Need picture of Jesuit missionaries.]

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The Dutch were the only foreigners (barbarians) allowed to trade with Japan from the early-1600s to the mid-1800s.

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The Dutch did not try to evangelize,

nor did they try to conquer, . . .

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they merely came to trade.

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Outside contact was limited to one ship per year at Nagasaki after 1635.

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Why Nagasaki?

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Resident barbarians lived on the man-made islet of Dejima in the harbour of Nagasaki.

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Dejima Island today.


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