Christopher Columbus to Raphael Sanchez |
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Christopher Columbus' letter to the treasurer to the Spanish king and queen describes his interactions with Taino and Arawak people. Early exploitation is evident from Columbus' focus on resource extraction.
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Defining Race & Lifelong Servitude in the Colonial Americas |
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This module links Spanish colonial documents from the turn of the sixteenth century to British colonial innovations in the seventeenth and early-eighteenth centuries, demonstrating how European colonists developed a racialized hierarchy that justified the widespread enslavement of Africans and their descendants.
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Magna Carta |
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The foundation for governments of former British colonies, the Magna Carta held the king accountable to the barons, and later, the people. It was born out of a misuse of resources and abuse of power on the part of the King of England.
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The Bull Inter Caetera |
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The Bull Inter Caetera legitimized European land claims in the Western Hemisphere by decree of the Catholic Church. Establishing the Doctrine of Discovery, this papal decree became the legal basis for land claims in the region.
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The Great Law of Peace of the Iroquois Confederacy |
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The Constitution of the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois), also known as the Six Nations, dates back to as early as 1142. The political system this oral constitution established was greatly admired by the Founding Fathers, who incorporated many of its democratic principles into the U.S. Constitution.
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The Letters of Amerigo Vespucci, the First Voyage |
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The account of Amerigo Vespucci's first voyage to the Americas features depictions of Indigenous people that created negative stereotypes.
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Treaty of Tordesillas |
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The Treaty of Tordesillas determined the colonization of the Americas for Spain and Portugal. It renegotiated boundaries of empire in the Western Hemisphere between Spain and Portugal.
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