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Topic 10.4History HL24 flashcards

Colonial and overseas empires

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Card 1 of 2410.4.1
10.4.1
Question

God, gold and glory

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All Flashcards in Topic 10.4

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10.4.112 cards

Card 1concept
Question

God, gold and glory

Answer

The three main motives usually given for Spanish expansion into the Americas: Catholic religious mission, silver and plunder, and personal status/land for ambitious conquistadors.

Card 2definition
Question

Conquistadors

Answer

Private Spanish soldier-adventurers, like Cortés and Pizarro, who financed and led their own conquest expeditions in return for loot and governing rights, rather than acting as a royal army.

Card 3example
Question

Hernán Cortés and the Aztec Empire

Answer

Cortés led a few hundred Spaniards, allied with resentful subject peoples, to conquer the Aztec capital Tenochtitlan between 1519 and 1521.

Card 4example
Question

Francisco Pizarro and the Inca Empire

Answer

Pizarro captured the Inca ruler Atahualpa at Cajamarca in 1532 and, within a year, seized control of the vast Inca Empire in the Andes.

Card 5definition
Question

Viceroyalty

Answer

A large colonial territory (e.g. New Spain from 1535, Peru from 1542) ruled on the Spanish king's behalf by a viceroy holding near-royal executive power.

Card 6definition
Question

Audiencias

Answer

Royal appellate courts in the Spanish colonies that judged legal cases and also checked the power of the viceroy in their region.

Card 7concept
Question

Encomienda

Answer

A grant giving a Spanish settler the right to demand labour and tribute from an assigned indigenous community, supposedly in return for protection and conversion — in practice, often a brutal forced-labour system.

Card 8example
Question

Potosí

Answer

A mountain in the Andes (modern Bolivia) where Spain discovered enormous silver deposits in 1545; it grew into one of the world's largest cities and financed the Spanish crown.

Card 9definition
Question

Mita

Answer

A rotational forced-labour draft, revived from Inca practice, used to conscript indigenous men to work Spanish silver mines like Potosí under brutal conditions.

Card 10concept
Question

Bartolomé de las Casas

Answer

A Dominican friar who witnessed colonial abuses firsthand and campaigned against them, helping push Spain toward the New Laws of 1542 to restrict encomienda cruelty.

Card 11process
Question

Process: how Spain governed its American empire

Answer

Council of the Indies (Spain, drafts law) → viceroy (executive ruler of a viceroyalty) → audiencias (regional courts checking the viceroy) → encomenderos (local labour/tribute holders).

Card 12comparison
Question

Comparison: Spain's American empire vs a land-based empire (e.g. Ottomans)

Answer

Spain expanded overseas through private conquest and colonial viceroys resting on encomienda labour and silver; the Ottomans expanded contiguous land through a salaried devshirme elite and timar grants — both used religion to legitimise rule.

10.4.212 cards

Card 13definition
Question

What is meant by the 'colonial race' in the Early Modern period?

Answer

The competition among European states — Portugal, the Dutch, England and France — to claim and control overseas territory and trade routes.

Card 14concept
Question

Which power led early overseas expansion, and how?

Answer

Portugal, from the early 1400s, by seizing coastal forts such as Goa and Malacca to control Indian Ocean trade.

Card 15definition
Question

What was the VOC and when was it founded?

Answer

The Dutch East India Company, founded 1602 — a chartered trading company with its own army, able to sign treaties and wage war in Asia.

Card 16concept
Question

Name the three main motives (the rationale) for colonial expansion.

Answer

Economic (bullion, spices, sugar), religious (missionary conversion), and political (prestige and rivalry between states).

Card 17comparison
Question

Compare a trading-post empire with a settler colony.

Answer

A trading-post empire (Portugal, the Dutch) controlled coastal forts and trade routes; a settler colony (England, France) saw colonists move in permanently to farm and displace indigenous peoples.

Card 18definition
Question

What powers did a royal charter give a company like the VOC?

Answer

The right to trade, build forts, raise troops, mint coins, sign treaties and even wage war on behalf of the state.

Card 19process
Question

List three methods colonial powers used to control overseas territory.

Answer

Forts/factories, chartered companies, plantations with forced or enslaved labour, alliances with local groups (divide-and-rule), and religious missions.

Card 20example
Question

What was the Pueblo Revolt and when did it happen?

Answer

A 1680 uprising of Pueblo peoples in Spanish New Mexico, led by Popé, that expelled Spanish rule for over a decade.

Card 21example
Question

What caused the Pueblo Revolt of 1680?

Answer

Decades of forced labour demands, suppression of Pueblo religious practices, and hardship from drought under Spanish rule.

Card 22example
Question

Give an example of conflict BETWEEN colonial powers (not indigenous resistance).

Answer

The Dutch seizing Portuguese bases in Asia, or the Anglo-Dutch wars and Anglo-French rivalry over trade and colonies.

Card 23comparison
Question

What are the two distinct categories of 'challenge to colonial rule'?

Answer

Indigenous resistance and rebellion from within (e.g. the Pueblo Revolt), and rivalry or conflict between competing colonial powers themselves.

Card 24process
Question

How should a Paper 2 essay on colonial expansion be structured?

Answer

Name the two chosen states/regions clearly in the opening line, then organise paragraphs by theme (rationale, methods of control, challenges) comparing both regions within each theme.

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