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Lesson details

Key learning points

  1. In this lesson, we will investigate the 'Columbian Exchange' - the mass movement of people, animals, crops and disease - between the 'Old World' of Europe and the 'New World' of the Americas, and consider how this exchange has shaped the subsequent 500 years.

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5 Questions

Q1.
Tenochtitlán was the most powerful city of which empire?
Correct answer: Aztec
Inca
Maya
Olmec
Q2.
The Discovery Doctrine said it was acceptable to claim land in what case?
The inhabitants of the land attacked you first
Correct answer: The inhabitants were not Christians
The land had no one on it
You first obtained permission from the Pope
Q3.
What disease weakened the city of Tenochtitlán before the Spanish attacked?
Leprosy
Measles
Plague
Correct answer: Smallpox
Q4.
What city was built on the site of Tenochtitlán once it was destroyed?
Aztec City
Correct answer: Mexico City
New Madrid
San Salvador
Q5.
Which of the following were consequences of the Conquistadors? (two answers)
Correct answer: European settler colonies in the 'New World'
Growth of the Silk Road
Correct answer: Increased spread of Christianity
The USA was formed
Weakening of the Ottoman Empire

5 Questions

Q1.
Which of the following foods originally came from the Americas? (pick three)
Correct answer: Cocoa Beans (used to make chocolate)
Correct answer: Potatoes
Rice
Correct answer: Tomatoes
Turnips
Wheat
Q2.
What killed up to 90% of the indigenous people of the Americas?
Correct answer: European Diseases
Flooding
Starvation
War with the Spanish
Q3.
What crop was especially valuable to European nations?
Corn
Correct answer: Sugar
Tea
Wheat
Q4.
Roughly how many African people were enslaved in order to work on European colonies in the New World?
1 to 2 million
Correct answer: 12 million
5 million
500,000
Q5.
What animal was introduced to the New World, transforming the life of indigenous American tribes?
Camel
Donkey
Correct answer: Horse
Wolf