The European battles for Indian ocean trade affected the peoples of Asia. Before the nineteenth century, The Europeans overtook most of the local regency and the British controlled the Chinese through opium.
Africa, especially central and southern Africa, was divided among European colonial powers in the late 19th century, and its native peoples conquered or controlled.
columbian exchange
European populations grew as a result of American foods being introduced to European diets.
It exposed them to new diseases.
to change the economic, political, and social forces of peoples lives.
The European battles for Indian ocean trade affected the peoples of Asia. Before the nineteenth century, The Europeans overtook most of the local regency and the British controlled the Chinese through opium.
The European battles in the Indian Ocean most likely did not affect Asia. They sold and bought things they wanted
The European battles in the Indian Ocean most likely did not affect Asia. They sold and bought things they wanted
The nineteenth century orientalism helped to potray lifesyle of Arab, Middle eastern and Asian community by the help of paintings and other artwork. Many famous painters travelled around these regions and captured day to day lifestyle sketches.
In the 19th century, European colonial powers expanded their empires through conquest and colonization in Africa, Asia, and the Americas. This period saw the rise of the British, French, Dutch, Spanish, Portuguese, and Belgian empires. Advances in technology, such as the steam engine and telegraph, facilitated the control and administration of distant territories. The scramble for colonies led to competition, conflicts, and exploitation of indigenous peoples and resources.
Nationalism became prominent in the latter two-thirds of the 19th century as the various peoples in European empires began to have national consciousnesses.
Fifteenth and sixteenth century European explorers found new lands, resources such as gold and silver, new cultures, and indigenous peoples in the Americas. They also encountered diverse wildlife and environments previously unknown to Europeans.
Africa, especially central and southern Africa, was divided among European colonial powers in the late 19th century, and its native peoples conquered or controlled.
By trading with them, indigenous peoples would be exposed to those who preached the European religion.
The first recorded European to see the Rocky Mountains was the Spanish explorer Francisco Coronado in the 16th century. However, indigenous peoples had inhabited and explored these mountains long before European arrival.
The Arctic Cordillera has been known to Indigenous peoples for centuries. In terms of European discovery, the area was likely first encountered by European explorers in the early 16th century, such as John Cabot or Martin Frobisher.
European explorers and settlers brought diseases such as smallpox to America and the Native peoples did not have an immunity to them and it dramatically reduced their populations.