It made it worse between both places and they got into a war
Yes, about 4,000 miles.
I'm assuming you are referring to the Dark Ages and not today. Western Europe was shut into isolationism after the fall of the Roman Empire. The Roman Empire ruled over Western Europe for 1,000 years and it collapsed, leaving Western Europe confused and disadvantaged. The fall of Rome was brought upon and succeeded by Barbarians, who were terrifying people. After the fall of Rome, Europe was shut into darkness, where Europeans were basically living and dying within a few miles of where they were born. It wouldn't be until the voyage of Marco Polo that Europe would flourish once again.
Captain Cooks first voyage was to Europe
No. The maps that were around didn't show North Western Hemisphere. They basically had Europe and Asia. No one had found the rest.
Portugal did not finance the voyage of Columbus because they knew America stood between Europe and Asia. They were visiting Brazil on a regular basis and knew it was not a part of Asia.
The western bank of the Mississippi river
dark, long , lot of trees , space
Ever since King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain commissioned Columbus's voyage to India and the navigator's mistaken geography led him astray to a continent virtually unknown to Europeans, the interaction between Western Europe, Africa, and the Americas has never been the same. From 1492 to 1750, the social and economic transformations between the three continents have been vast and varied, but it is these unique changes over time that account for the relations between the White Man, the Black Man, and the Brown Man in the modern age.
The Pilgrims started their voyage to the Plymouth Colony from Europe. The were living in the Holland region of the Netherlands.
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Abel Tasman was employed by the Dutch East India Company, which traded spices, silk and other exotic goods between various countries in Asia and Europe.
The goal for Ferdinand Magellan's voyage in 1519 was to find a way to get to the Indies from Europe. He succeeded by sailing around the tip of Africa.