Spain and Portugal
The Treaty of Tordesillas in 1494 divided the new world between Spain and Portugal.
spain
The Pope divided the new world into what he thought was half. Spain got west and Portugal got east. Portugal ended up with just Brazil and Spain got everything else.The pope divided the world in "half." The Line of Demarcation was created to divide the world. Portugal got the land on the east while Spain got the land on the west, which was a greater quantity.
He divided the extra-European world between Spain and Portugal in the bull Inter caetera (1493).
he divided the world with an imaginary line
The agreement was called the Treaty of Tordesillas. It did not divide wealth specifically, rather it was the first attempt to divide the spheres of influence in the New World between Portugal and Spain.
The Treaty of Tordesillas affected Spain and Portugal the most. It divided the unexplored world outside Europe between these two countries, with Spain gaining influence over territories to the west of the line and Portugal to the east.
The Treaty of Tordesillas divided the unexplored territories of the New World between Spain and Portugal. The treaty was intended to resolve disputes over newly discovered lands by establishing a line of demarcation in 1494. Spain was allotted territories to the west of the line, while Portugal was given lands to the east.
Spain and Portugal
The Americas. The Treaty of Tordesillas essentially divided the world between the two major imperial powers at the time, Spain and Portugal. Portugal received Africa, Asia, and what is modern-day eastern Brazil. Spain got the rest of the Americas.
That was Pope Alexander VI.