-Spain- gold, silver, new goods (Columbian exchange), intense catholic missionaries, didn't heavily colonize (Gold, God, Glory); conquistadors
Pizarro- silver mines at Potosi became spain's wealth for next 100 years
Cortes
just wanted to maintain empire bc after 1588 spanish armada, fell into decline
-Britain wanted to expand royal government in colonies, not as focused on bullionism or conversion. Jamestown, joint stock company
North and South Carolina: charter by king charles
<span>France- expand the fur trade, native population, catholic missionaries. </span>
Cartier in canada
Marquette in MS river
Champlain had friendly relations w natives
<span>Courier dubois live among indians- have better relations w/ indians </span>
enchiladas describe enchiladas
653-$ dollars
Answer:
1. Avicenna
Avicenna was a Persian polymath who was one of the most significant physicians, atronomers, thinkers, and writers of the Islamic Golden Age. He wrote the medical materpiece, "The Canon of Medicine," which influenced European medicine. It become the standard in medical universities and was used until 1650.
2. Averroes
Ibn Rushd, also known as Averroes, was a Muslim Andalusian philosopher and thinker. He thought about many subjects, such as philosophy, theology, medicine, physics, law, and linguistics. In his philosophical work, he wrote about the ideas of Greek philosophers Plato and Aristotle. He attempted to restore the original thinkings of Aristotle.
3. Maimonides
Moses ben Maimod, commonly known as Maimonides, was a Sephatic Jewish philosopher. He specialized in the study of the Jewish Torah and was one of the most influencial Torah scholars of the Middle Ages.
It was the second of three stages of the so-called triangular trade, in which arms, textiles, and wine were shipped from Europe to Africa, enslaved people from Africa to the Americas, and sugar and coffee from the Americas to Europe.
Answer:
Guilds: they are medieval association of workers and craftsmen which ensure mutual aid and quality work in a particular production process in which they hold a monopoly acquired from the state.
During the mid-eighteenth century, they became the center of criticism by the followers of free trade who believed that restriction of work by the sate should be ended for a more competitive economic structure. By the mid-nineteenth century, the monopoly of guilds seemed to be disappeared.