oh my goodness y'all it's time to talk about the establishment of Maritime Empires and this is a beefy one so G thyself so if you're ready to get them braan cows milk let's get to it so in the last video we witnessed various European States dipping their toes in the pool of seab based trading networks throughout the Indian Ocean but it didn't take long for them to decide that the water was just fine and to cannonball in the middle of everybody's crap and get busy on a full-blown Empire building project and what were their motives for doing so says you well it's complicated says I but we can essentially reduce their motivations to Gold God and Glory which created no small amount of rivalry between them in other words European states began developing Maritime Empires because they wanted to enrich themselves and because they wanted all the world's heathens to worship Jesus and because they wanted to be the greatest state in the world oh and if you want no guys to follow along with this video on all my videos check that link in the description anyway let's get familiar with these European powers and their efforts to take over the world first up was the Portuguese who became the first to establish what became known as a trading post Empire around Africa and throughout the Indian Ocean and they were largely able to do this if you'll recall from my 4.2 video by by noticing that many of the average Merchant ships in the area were pretty lightly armed and so the Portuguese went ahead and loaded their caravels and their carriots with giant honking guns and established their dominance and the key thing to remember here is that once the Portuguese inserted themselves into this trading Network they weren't as interested in participating peacefully as they were in owning and controlling it by force next came the Spanish who early on set up their base of operations in the Philippines and their methods were a little different from the Portuguese what I mean is while the Portuguese were generally content to set up and run small trading posts in these various places the Spanish went ahead and established full-blown colonies and if you remember again from 4.2 how the Spanish ran their colonies in the Americas namely through tribute systems and Taxation and coer labor then it shouldn't surprise you that they use those exact same tactics in their colonial Holdings throughout the Indian Ocean and then we get the Dutch entering the Indian Ocean trade and with their fancy schmancy flouts they took over as the kings of the Indian Ocean trade deposing the Portuguese quick fast and in a hurry kiss my grits look at them Dutch flouts well butter my backside and call me a biscuit I guess we're done y'all pack it up anyway the Dutch used many of the same methods as the Portuguese to establish their dominance and control over this Trade Network and finally we have the British and while they would later end up controlling the largest seab based Empire in the world they had a little trouble getting started and they had their eyes on India but as it turned out they lacked sufficient military power to take it from the mugal Empire so they satisfi themselves by setting up a few trading posts along the coast but I should mention that later in the 18th century toward the end of our period the British would gradually transform those trading posts into full-blown colonial rule in India and just for poops and Giggles I should mention that the Dutch did the same in Indonesia now here's where I tell you that although European domination of the Indian Ocean trade introduced a significant change there was also significant continuity as well for example the Middle Eastern South Asian East Asian and Southeast Asian Merchants who had been using the Trade Network for centuries before the arrival of the Europeans they continued to use it in fact European entrance into this Trade Network increased profits not only for Europeans but also for many of those Merchants who had always used this network for trade additionally long established Merchants like the gujaratis and the mugal Empire continued to make use of the Indian Ocean trade even while Europeans sought to dominate and in doing so they increased their power and wealth okay now I hope you don't have the impression that all the Asian states that have participated in the Indian Ocean trade for centuries were happy about this European intrusion and their attempts to dominate long-standing trade Arrangements don't be crazy no there were significant attempts to resist and I'll mention two of those attempts first we saw resistance in Tokugawa Japan now the short story is that by the early 1600s Japan which had previously been weakened by Metric buttloads of internal fracturing was United under a Shogun from the Tokugawa Clan and while the shun was initially kind of open to trading with Europeans he soon realized that they were in fact a threat to the hard one unification that they had just achieved as you may remember many European merchants and explorers weren't just content to buy and sell goods from these various places many also sought to convert those various peoples to Christianity and so by the second half of the 16th century lots of Japanese people had converted to Christianity and that seemed to the shun like a recipe for a renewed cultural fracturing and so he went ahead and expelled all Christian missionaries from Japan and suppressed the faith within Japan often with violence and then a second example of resistance came from Ming China and remember that the Voyages of Jung ha took place during the Ming era and among the many motives for these voyages among the most important was essentially to create a situation in which most of the maritime trade in the Indian Ocean was processed through the Chinese State I mean ultimately it didn't work and the result was a series of isolationist trade policies that largely shut down seab based trade in China and when the Portuguese came to China in the early 1500s to trade they were only able to do so through bribery and various underhanded tactics but soon Ming officials found out and expelled them which further isolated China from the growing European dominance in the Indian Ocean okay now as we've seen throughout this course trade networks have a way of promoting the growth of certain States who participate in and that was definitely the case for two African states that you need to know first meet the Assante Empire in West Africa now they were a key trading partner with the Portuguese and later the British by providing highly desired Goods like gold and ivory and enslaved laborers as it turned out this economic partnership made the Assante stupid rich and enabled them to expand their military and further expand and consolidate their power throughout the region and kind of like a bonus the Assante used that power in military might later to repel the British from colonizing the region for a long time and then second meet the kingdom of the Congo down here in the South they made strong diplomatic ties to Portuguese traders who were highly desirous to obtain gold and copper and again enslaved people from this state in order to further facilitate this growing economic relationship the king converted to Christianity as did most of the Nobles and although it probably won't surprise you to know that this relationship later deteriorated still that economic connection between Portugal and the kingdom of the Congo massively enriched the African States okay now we've seen how things are going in this part of the world but let's not forget that Europeans were equally busy building their Empires over here in the Americas too and over in the Americas Colonial economies were largely structured around Agriculture and in case you didn't know crops don't plant and harvest themselves so in order to keep this agricultural economy purring Europeans made use of both existing labor systems and they introduce new ones and I reckon some examples are in order in terms of existing labor systems the Spanish made use of the old Inca Mida system and in case you forgot the Inca developed this system in which subjects of the empire were required to provide labor for State projects a certain certain number of days per year and then when the Spanish showed up to these areas they pooped their pantaloons when they discovered the amount of silver buried in the hills and so they needed to figure out how to get enough laborers to dig all that sweet bling out of the mountains and when they learned about the Midas system they were like well if it ain't broke don't fix it that's a rough translation from the Spanish anyway they went ahead and implemented the Midas system largely for their massive silver mining operations but now in terms of introducing new labor systems to the Americas they went Hog Wild and there are four of them you need to know first was race-based chatt slavery as you already know by now enslaved African an were transported by the millions throughout the Americas mainly in order to work on sprawling plantations now chatt is a word that means property and it meant that these laborers were owned as any other piece of property was owned and could be used at the will of the owner and what was new about all this Arrangement was first of all the race-based part and second of all slavery became hereditary so that the children of enslaved people would become enslaved themselves now the second new labor system introduced was indentured servitude an indenture was a contract and a laborer would sign that contract which bound them to a particular work for a period of time usually 7 years and many poorer Europeans entered this kind of agreement in order to pay for their passage to the colonies and then after their indenture was up they could go free and live their lives and then the third system you need to know was the encomenda system now it was the Spanish who cook this form of Labor up and it was used to coers indigenous Americans into working for Colonial authorities essentially indigenous people were forced to provide labor for the Spanish in exchange for food and protection which was similar in a lot of ways to the old system of feudalism in Europe but call it what you want it wasn't that materially different from slavery and fourth we have another gem from the Spanish namely the asenda system and basically hendes were large agricultural Estates owned by Elite Spaniards and on which indigenous laborers were forced to work the fields whose crops were then exported and sold on a global market if you just screw a question mark over your head because that sounds pretty similar to the encom indis system let me try to clear up the difference encomenda was more focused on controlling the population while Henda was more focused on the economics of food export and finally we need to talk about the development of slavery in this period and let's talk about how it demonstrated both continuity and change on the continuity side you need to realize that the African slave trade was not a new development that came with the rise of these Maritime Empires no way before our period the trade of enslaved African people was a regular feature in the Mediterranean and Indian Ocean networks and so enslaved people and those networks were often assimilated into the cultures into which they were sold in the Islamic world the majority of enslaved Africans became domestic servants in households and for those roles the demand was very high for enslaved women and girls additionally in some cases in the Islamic world and slave people could hold significant military or political positions and so it's important to remember that all these realities continued during the rise and establishment of Maritime Empires but let's talk change now and mostly the change occurred in the Americas first because the main economic engine of Imperial empires in the Americas was difficult agricultural work Europeans purchased male slaves 2 to one which significantly impacted the demographics of various African States second the size of the transatlantic slave trade was far more massive than its Indian Ocean and Mediterranean counterparts over the course of about 350 years over 12.5 million Africans were sold to plantation owners in the Americas and then third and most distinctive was the racial component of the Atlantic slave trade in the America slavery became identified with Blackness and that provided the justification for the brutality of slavy to be identified as black was to be less than human and to be less than human meant that plantation owners could treat their workers with violence and keep a clear conscience Okay click here to keep reviewing for unit four and click here if you want to grab my video not gu they're really helpful for students who hate reading their textbook but still need to get all the content of their course firmly crammed into their brain folds anyway thanks for hanging out and I'll catch on the flipflop I'm L out