A majority of the people in Central America and South America speak Spanish today
The negative outcomes were that many Natives in these lands were killed (either intentionally or unintentionally, most likely by foreign disease), brought into slavery, or displaced. The Europeans used an act of Social Darwinism on the Natives which is basically them acting superior over the others.
DIsease,slavery,massacres,forced assimilation,ethic cleansing,lies,and disorted history
If Spain wouldn't of colonized countries in South América,they would have no spanish language or cultures
There cultures and belifes
i dont kno dats why im askin u
The Arawak Indians
In Canada, the indigenous people are called First Nations' Peoples.
The MaoriThe Maori are New Zealand's first nation peoples.
It is a policy which was usually forced upon indigenous peoples to change them into their European or European-American counterparts. White people felt that natives needed to be civilized according to their values and they also felt that natives could not assimilate into white cultures unless they acted like they were white.
The compass effected exploration because without it, exploration would not have been possible to the early peoples. The compass was invented in China, and some of the earliest explorers were in Egypt. :)
Mestizos
Christopher Columbus is widely accepted to be the first European to meet North America's indigenous peoples. Native Americans are the indigenous peoples of North America. I don't know how to properly refer to the indigenous peoples of Australia.
Exploration by Europeans had a significant impact on indigenous peoples, leading to colonization, displacement, and the spread of diseases that decimated populations. Indigenous cultures were often disrupted or destroyed, and native peoples were subjected to violence, exploitation, and forced assimilation into European ways of life.
Huge numbers of indigenous peoples were wiped out by European diseases.
By trading with them, indigenous peoples would be exposed to those who preached the European religion.
Christopher Columbus's voyage in 1492, which landed in the Americas, can be considered an exploration crossing into territory belonging to European nations. This event led to the subsequent colonization and exploitation of the indigenous peoples and resources of the Americas by European powers.
Leif Erikson was an Icelandic explorer known for leading the first European expedition to set foot in North America around 1000 AD, about 500 years before Columbus. His exploration is significant as it established early contact between Europeans and Indigenous peoples in the region, paving the way for future exploration and trade between the continents.
Europeans sought to spread their religion to indigenous peoples in the Americas through preaching trade and taking over indigenous peoples lands
The class system in Spanish America was primarily made up of peninsulares (those born in Spain), criollos (those born in the Americas of Spanish descent), mestizos (mixed European and indigenous ancestry), mulattos (mixed European and African ancestry), indigenous peoples, and enslaved Africans. These groups were hierarchically structured with peninsulares at the top and indigenous peoples and enslaved Africans at the bottom.
Francisco Coronado, a Spanish explorer, led an expedition in the 1540s to the southwest region of North America, known for introducing European influence to the indigenous peoples and landscapes of the area. While he did not find the fabled Seven Cities of Gold as he hoped, his exploration led to further Spanish colonial expeditions and increased European knowledge of the Americas.
When the first Europeans arrived in North America their system of government differed from that of the indigenous peoples. The Europeans used a hierarchy of government. The indigenous people had a cultural government.
During his exploration, Jacques Cartier discovered the St. Lawrence River in North America and claimed the land for France. He also encountered the Iroquois and St. Lawrence Iroquoians indigenous peoples along the river.