Wick Colonial

Wick Colonial

The Europeans’ so-called discovery of the so-called New World goes down in history as one of the most important and earth-shattering moments in human history, ranking right up there with the advent of agriculture, the domestication of animals, and the discovery of the use of fire. Although the Vikings made it to Newfoundland around the year 1000, they apparently decided that Greenland would make for a much better colony and scrammed, leaving the Spanish with all the glory almost five centuries later. The ensuing exchange of plants, animals, people, and diseases has since been named the “Columbian Exchange” after the charismatic Christopher Columbus, who bumped into the Bahamas thinking he’d made it to India.

Over the next few centuries, different groups of European explorers brought crops such as corn, potatoes, cassava, tomatoes, peppers, cocoa, peanuts, strawberries, and tobacco back to the Old World from the Americas – meaning that the potato is no more Irish than the tomato is Italian, the pepper is Spanish, or the cigarette is French. In particular, carb-rich corn and potatoes helped ease the killer food shortages that were all-too common in Europe; Ireland’s population alone swelled 800 percent in 200 years – only to be devastated by the potato blight in the mid-1840’s. So much for putting all your potatoes in one basket.

Of course, it wouldn’t be called the Columbian Exchange if the process hadn’t gone both ways. Picture the Plains Indians, then subtract the horses. Picture a Central American banana republic, then subtract the bananas. Picture a Columbian donkey carrying a load of coffee beans, then subtract both the donkey and the coffee beans. Picture a spread of Mexican food, then subtract the rice, cheese, lettuce, black olives, onion, chicken, pork, and beef. Or picture a handful of far-flung, arid, completely impoverished Indian Reservations, then subtract the smallpox, influenza, typhoid, cholera, tuberculosis, measles, scarlet fever, yellow fever, and malaria. These were just a few of the things that Europeans brought with them during the early years of interaction with the New World.

The New World was a pretty healthy place before the Columbian Exchange, which is why Old World diseases had such an easy time decimating the indigenous populations. Think Jim and Dwight talking health insurance on The Office. Dwight: “Don't need it. Never been sick. Perfect immune system.” Jim: “Okay, well, if you've never been sick, then you don't have any antibodies.” Having already spent centuries suffering continuous outbreaks of some thoroughly nasty diseases, Old Worlders had built up quite the array of antibodies by the time they reached the Americas. In fact, many of the animals they brought to the New World – those aforementioned chickens, pigs, and cows, for example – were a major reason that Europeans were so sick all the time. Turns out, sleeping in the same one-room house as your livestock can do some wicked damage to your health, especially at a time when bathing once a week made you a real dandy.

Before Spanish Colonization and the Columbian Exchange, the native population of the Americas was estimated to be between 40 and 100 million, meaning that, in all likelihood, Native Americans far outnumbered Europe’s 60 million citizens. In fact, in 1492, the Aztec capitol of Tenochtitlan was larger, cleaner, and more beautiful than any city in Europe, while the Inca boasted the single largest empire on earth. The “Great Dying” of indigenous people that followed may well have killed as many as 1 in 5 humans worldwide. Westerners love to go on and on about the Black Death of the fourteenth century, but the plague – or even the sum of Europe’s many plagues – can’t hold a candle to what happened in the New World.

When European settlers arrived in what is now the US, they were absolutely delighted by how beautiful, pristine, and park-like the landscape was, and since the “Indians” were dying in droves around them, they thought that God was giving them a sign of their entitlement to the land. Little did they know that they had stumbled upon the work of thousands of years of maintenance by native peoples, many of whom had been decimated by rapidly-spreading European diseases before the colonists had even gotten there.

The vast majority of indigenous people who suffered during the Columbian Exchange no longer exist to tell the tale. However, some of its unexpected survivors include the black populations of the Americas; the introduction of the cassava plant to West Africa resulted in a population boom that would help fuel the slavery built around cultivating Columbian-Exchange cash crops such as cotton, sugarcane, coffee, and tobacco. Although Americans have long been taught to live by words like “Manifest Destiny” and “American Dream,” we mustn’t forget the millions upon millions for whom, to quote Langston Hughes’s poem, America was a Dream Deferred

.

About the Author:

Shmoop is an online study guide for English Literature, Poetry and US history. Its content is written by Ph.D. and Masters students from top universities, like Stanford, Berkeley, Harvard, and Yale who have also taught at the high school and college levels. Teachers and students should feel confident to cite Shmoop.

Article Source: ArticlesBase.com - The Columbian Exchange Beginning with Spanish Colonization: How a Dream of a Great Civilization Became a Dream Deferred

Warm Gingerbread 22oz Double Wick Colonial Candle Free Shipping
Warm Gingerbread 22oz Double Wick Colonial Candle Free Shipping
Paypal   US $26.00
COLONIAL CANDLES SIMPLY VANILLA 22 OZ DOUBLE WICK JAR
COLONIAL CANDLES SIMPLY VANILLA 22 OZ DOUBLE WICK JAR
Paypal   US $23.70
Balsam Wreath 22oz Double Wick Colonial Candle Free Shipping
Balsam Wreath 22oz Double Wick Colonial Candle Free Shipping
Paypal   US $26.00
Colonial Candle Lemon Leaf 22oz Oval Two Wick Jar Candle Removable Label 1pc
Colonial Candle Lemon Leaf 22oz Oval Two Wick Jar Candle Removable Label 1pc
Paypal   US $27.95
Colonial Candle 22 oz 2 Wick Jar Candle 16986
Colonial Candle 22 oz 2 Wick Jar Candle 16986
Paypal   US $23.95
Colonial Candle 8 oz 2 Wick Jar Candle 86760
Colonial Candle 8 oz 2 Wick Jar Candle 86760
Paypal   US $14.50
TWO Large 22 oz ISLAND PINEAPPLE Colonial Candle Candles 2 Wick CC0221714
TWO Large 22 oz ISLAND PINEAPPLE Colonial Candle Candles 2 Wick CC0221714
Paypal   US $62.90
TWO Large 22 oz MANGO SALSA Colonial Candle Candles Oval Jar 2 Wick CC0222073
TWO Large 22 oz MANGO SALSA Colonial Candle Candles Oval Jar 2 Wick CC0222073
Paypal   US $62.90
TWO 22 oz TIBETAN SANDLEWOOD Colonial Candle Candles Oval Jar 2 Wick CC0221866
TWO 22 oz TIBETAN SANDLEWOOD Colonial Candle Candles Oval Jar 2 Wick CC0221866
Paypal   US $62.90
TWO 22 oz SPRING AWAKENING Colonial Candle Candles Oval Jar 2 Wick CC0222069
TWO 22 oz SPRING AWAKENING Colonial Candle Candles Oval Jar 2 Wick CC0222069
Paypal   US $62.90
2 Large 22 oz DRAGON FRUIT Colonial Candle Candles Oval Jar 2 Wick CC0222072
2 Large 22 oz DRAGON FRUIT Colonial Candle Candles Oval Jar 2 Wick CC0222072
Paypal   US $62.90
2 Large 22 oz Cranberry Cosmo Colonial Candle Candles Oval Jar 2 Wick CC0221867
2 Large 22 oz Cranberry Cosmo Colonial Candle Candles Oval Jar 2 Wick CC0221867
Paypal   US $62.90
TWO Large 22 oz APPLE ORCHARD Colonial Candle Candles Oval Jar 2 Wick CC0221896
TWO Large 22 oz APPLE ORCHARD Colonial Candle Candles Oval Jar 2 Wick CC0221896
Paypal   US $62.90
TWO Large 22 oz SIMPLE BREEZE Colonial Candle Candles Oval Jar 2 Wick CC0221896
TWO Large 22 oz SIMPLE BREEZE Colonial Candle Candles Oval Jar 2 Wick CC0221896
Paypal   US $62.90
Colonial Candle Winter Woods Oval Jar TWO WICK 8oz
Colonial Candle Winter Woods Oval Jar TWO WICK 8oz
Paypal   US $10.25
View Page:   1  2


Vornado Whole-Room Evaporative Humidifier, HU1-0021-28 Vornado Whole-Room Evaporative Humidifier, HU1-0021-28
List Price: $129.99
Sale Price: $64.80

Vornado's unique vortex action humidifier sets a new standard for performance and hassle-free use. You can count on Vornado's famous Vortex Action to silently generate and circulate healthy, multi-room humidification...


A Ride into Morning: The Story of Tempe Wick A Ride into Morning: The Story of Tempe Wick
List Price: $21.95
Sale Price: $4.90

The Revolutionary War is raging. General Wayne's soldiers are freezing, underpaid, and resentful. Whispers of mutiny abound. A stone's throw from the restless camp, Tempe Wick wages her own battle for survival...


Secrets To Quality Candle Making Secrets To Quality Candle Making
List Price: $2.99

Secrets To Quality Candle Making is packed with the latest information on Making Candles and it took over a year to research, gather the data and compile it into this amazing new eBook. Candle making is, without a doubt, the most fun you'll ever have creating anything...


This Time, Tempe Wick? This Time, Tempe Wick?
List Price: $9.95
Sale Price: $34.95

Depicts the indomitable spirit of a young girl, Tempe Wick, as she saves her beloved horse from the mutinous soldiers of Jockey Hollow during the American Revolution. Reissue. SLJ. H.


Lamp Wicks - WICK F/8917,8210


Lamp Wicks - WICK F/8917,8210


$8.41


Lamp Wicks - WICK F/8917,8210 Weems & Plath Lamp Wicks - WICK F/8917,8210

Matchlock with Smoking Wick


Matchlock with Smoking Wick


$49.99


Matchlock with Smoking Wick - Giclee Print

Charanga Colonial


Charanga Colonial


$9.99


Charanga Colonial

Van Wick Crab Apple


Van Wick Crab Apple


$19.99


Van Wick Crab Apple - Premium Poster

TeamPistol Flint and Wick Set (9-Piece)


TeamPistol Flint and Wick Set (9-Piece)


$1.25


TeamPistol Flint and Wick Set (9-Piece)

Yaley Wick Tabs 12pc


Yaley Wick Tabs 12pc


$2.19


Yaley Wicks are a "must have" for all your candle projects. What's a candle without a wick? When making candles, be sure to select the correct size. Recommendations as follows: Less than 2" Diameter - Small Wick, 2" to 3" Diameter - Medium Wick, 3" to 4" Diameter - Large Wick, and 4"+ Diameter - Extra Large Wick. Tabs 12pc- Tabs made to hold the wick at the bottom of the candle and give an additional two hours of burning time. Great for votives!

Colonial Correspondence


Colonial Correspondence


$24.99


Colonial Correspondence - Art Print

Colonial Heritage


Colonial Heritage


$19.99


Colonial Heritage - Premium Poster

Colonial Flag


Colonial Flag


$39.99


Colonial Flag - Giclee Print

Colonial Scene


Colonial Scene


$69.99


Colonial Scene - Photographic Print

Colonial Parade


Colonial Parade


$24.99


Colonial Parade - Photographic Print

 

Leave a Reply