When Christopher Columbus’s three ships hit the sandy beaches of what is now known as the Bahamas the world had been changed forever. The new world changed many aspects of both the Natives as well as the Europeans that set on the new land. Things such as new foods, disease, and even labor systems changed both the new and the old world drastically. When the first Europeans first set foot on the land unknown to them at the time, they had no idea what was in store for them and neither did the natives. Little did they know that waiting for the natives were dangerous organisms not seen by the naked eye. Diseases such as Small pox were not as deadly in europe and the middle east as the Hosts or people living there were exposed to the disease creating
The diseases brought by the Europeans included smallpox, tuberculosis, influenza, measles, whooping cough and the common cold. The consequences of these diseases for the recipients were deadly and life threatening, especially since a common cold was extremely difficult for these people to overcome. A year after the First Fleet arrived, in 1789, a smallpox outbreak killed numbers of the Indigenous people that lived in the area that we know today as Sydney. (Carter, 2005.) The disease spread to surrounding communities and the number of victims increased rapidly.
Immediately following Columbus ' arrival in the New World in 1492, a mass exchange of people, animals, and microscopic life between the Eastern and Western Hemispheres began. This transition brought about extremely dramatic consequences because the Old and New Worlds had previously been completely isolated from each other. Although there were some insignificant results of this exchange, such as certain species of animals and plants taking over foreign ecosystems, there were also devastating ramifications; namely, perilous diseases. The Europeans were immune to the diseases which they introduced to the Natives. This created a virgin soil epidemic, which is an outbreak in which the afflicted had not been exposed to before.
Did you know that on October 12, 1492 Christopher Columbus came from Europe to the Bahamas and took over their land? In conclusion, the Native Americans suffered by Europeans in ways like bringing sickness, hunger, and human torture and abuse. First, many Native Americans suffered by Europeans, by sickness. Did you know that the Europeans brought sickness into the Americas?
On the other hand, some of the Old World diseases were: hepatitis,
Christopher Columbus and his men landed in the New World in search for a trade route Instead he found natives and land that, in his eyes, was unclaimed and could be taken over by Spain. Christopher Columbus originally landed on Guanahani island, an island in the Bahamas, near the native Arawak (Waldman, 4). Here he found natives who were kind and helpful for Christopher Columbus and his men. Christopher Columbus decided to take advantage of these natives in the new world, despite their kindness and generosity(Turnbull Kelley, 4). Christopher Columbus was a savage man with morals which were vulgar despite the time period where killing was more
For centuries after Columbus first landed in the New World, the arrival of European settlers impacted the lives of American Indians so immensely that their presence forever altered the landscape of the New World. The Europeans brought with them deadly germs and diseases—malaria, smallpox, and yellow fever—from which American Indians had no natural immunities, that decimated Indian populations. Additionally, they embarked on an aggressive quest for land—an encounter that led to many American Indian populations either being destroyed, dissolved or forced further and further west off of their ancestral lands. In response to such aggression, American Indians had limited choices: resist, submit, flee, or in rare cases, assimilate. The choices they
Diseases such as syphilis were introduced to the Europeans. These diseases were spread by sexual contact between sailors and setters with the Natives. After being exposed by the Natives, the sailors and setter would go back to Europe and exposing the diseases there. There were no cure to syphilis and Europeans who were exposed had to die a painful death before going insane.
When the Europeans began settling in the new land many cultural differences began to arise. Consequently, this left the English settlers and the natives with fear and confusion. The natives of the new land had never seen anything like the Europeans; they had white skin, huge ships, dressed differently, and they had many different weapons. Christopher Columbus in his narrative, Report of the First Voyage, described them as “timid beyond cure” (“Report of the First Voyage” 18). He also stated that when he would men ashore to contact the natives “people without number have come to them, and as soon as they saw them coming, they fled; even a father would not stay for his son” (“Report of the First Voyage” 18).
On the other hand, Europeans didn’t have the same effect when they came in contact with these diseases. Exposed to the diseases at an early age, Europeans were mostly to fully immune. With the devastating effects of disease, native culture was starting to change. Persuaded that their native gods have abandoned them, many natives converted to Christianity. Forced by disease, natives usually married relatives that survived the diseases since appropriate partners were scarce.
But now let's go more into the diseases the colonizers brought to the native people. There were many diseases that had come into the new world. Like one had to do with the pigs Columbus brought aboard his ship
Historians differ on what they think about the net result of the European arrival in the New World. Considering that the Columbian Exchange, which refers to “exchange of plants, animals, people, disease, and culture between Afro-Eurasia and the Americas after Columbus sailed to the Americas in 1492,” led to possibly tens of millions of deaths on the side of the American Indians, but also enabled agricultural and technological trade (Henretta et al. 42), I cannot help but reflect on whether the effects should be addressed as a historical or a moral question. The impact that European contact had on the indigenous populations of North America should be understood as a moral question because first, treating it as a historical question is difficult due to lack of reliable historical evidence; second, the meaning of compelling historical claims is contestable as the academic historian perspective tends to view the American Indian oral history as invalid; and finally, what happened to the native Indians is morally repulsive and must be discussed as such. The consequences of European contact should be answered as a moral question because historically, it is hard to be historically objective in the absence of valid and dependable historical evidence.
On October 12, 1492, an Italian merchant by the name of Christopher Columbus landed on an island in the New World. With him he brought three ships and a small crew of Spaniards. After exploring other islands, Columbus came one that he called Hispaniola; here, they found seemingly primitive and naϊve natives that they immediately began to take advantage of. However, little did they know that this first meeting would bring exploration of South and Central America that would wreak havok among the Natives. Throughout the period of European Expansion, Natives were ripped from their home and forced to work day in and day out.
As the Europeans found native along the coasts of the New World, they found them easily malleable and able to be used, so they enslaved them and those who fought back were wiped out. Europeans, as well as the Africans, had built up a resistance to many diseases such as smallpox and were therefore not really affected as much by the diseases if they became sick. However, the Native Americans had not had contact with the disease and it quickly spread rapidly and slowly helped the Spanish rid themselves of the natives so they could take control of the land. Geoffrey Cowley offers insight on just how profound the effect of smallpox was when he writes, “ ...When the newcomers arrived carrying mumps, measles, whooping cough, smallpox, cholera, gonorrhea and yellow fever, the Indians were immunologically
When Europeans found the indigenous people on the Indies the world changed. The New World, and The Old World. The main differences between the West Indies and Europe was the wildlife, climate, and way of life. The Native people of America were very different among themselves, and Europeans.
Christopher Columbus sailed the ocean blue in fourteen hundred ninety-two. When one hears the name Christopher Columbus, they tend to think about his discovery of America. What they don’t consider is how his discovery changed and affected America. First of all, Columbus’ discovery provided the start of a long term colonization, which created what we know today as America. People, who immigrated from another country, traveled all over the world to make it to America in hopes of getting land in “The New World”.