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AP®︎/College US History
Motivations for English colonization
England became a colonial power due to religious conflict resolution, competition with Spain and France, the invention of Joint Stock Companies, and economic depression. These factors led to the establishment of colonies like Virginia, sparking England's imperial expansion in the New World.
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- How come most of the countries that came to the New World wanted to convert the Natives into their religion? Why can't they just leave them alone. They were there first. Am I right?(9 votes)
- Do not fall into simplistic view. Back in the days, life was harder and fighting for new wealth was common. If you judge past history with your actual moral rules, you can't understand it. Moreover, since when is there a "here first" rule ?(15 votes)
- It seems like the aristocracy and gentry in England were Christians but they did not think to or were unwilling to remove enclosures or find ways to help or feed the poor. Were there meetings about the problem? If so- who made the final decisions to cast out the poor to colonies as "surplus" population? Did no one question whether this was the Christian thing to do?(4 votes)
- In many places around the world, a person's religion is often merely a veneer over what is really at the center of her or his life. What seems to have constituted the ways of society in Scotland and England for a LONG time is the rigid class system, and keeping people "in their place". Religion was understood and structured to be a support to the class system.
Sad to say, this is also found in other religions. One hopes it will be different, but money, power and class seem to win the struggle.
That being said, it has been my privilege to be acquainted with some wonderful people of sincere religion who just happened to be rich. It's possible, but it's hard.(9 votes)
- Where was the money coming from for these joint-stock companies? Since the majority of the population in England was really poor, where was the money getting drummed up from? And how big of a group of investors could it be for risk to be spread out?(5 votes)
- They were financed by wealthy business owners. They usually had large companies backing them. Sometimes the crown would help too.(5 votes)
- Notes:
England was Protestant whereas Spain and France were Catholic
Competing with Spain and France for riches and souls
Joint-stock companies allow for risk to be spread around
Wouldn't be bankrupt if failed
East India Company - Holland Company to explore the East employed by England
95% of the English population is in dire poverty
Wool production collapses
Enclosure movement - Privatization of command land but made it harder for poor English citizens
Crime rates skyrocket and aristocrats believe they have a surplus population
The decision was reached to spread the extra off to colonies, the first of which being Jamestown in 1607(6 votes) - Why were furs (like fox, beaver, deer, ect.) so important back then?(3 votes)
- We are used to having heated housing and facilities to live in our everyday life. Back then, homes were not insulated and fires sometimes did not provide enough heat for a family. Furs provided the warmth the colonists needed to survive the harsh winter seasons every year.(6 votes)
- Did the English aristicrats not care that 95% of the population was starving?(5 votes)
- The aristocrats were a generally self-absorbed and oblivious group, and they didn't usually care about the peasants and poorer people. There were one or two who understood and made efforts to help, but not many.(2 votes)
- Why do people try to convert othe into their own religion(3 votes)
- Sometimes people have found great help in their religion, and want others to find that help, too. You can find that in folks who have overcome alcoholism or life tragedy through the ministry of groups like the Salvation Army.
Some religions carry beliefs that only those who believe in their fashion can either advance in karmic reincarnation, or make it to some kind of heaven. These believers want to help others through "bringing them in". Buddhism, Islam and Christianity are all like this.
Some religions require members to attempt to convert others in order to fulfill their own religious duties and advance their own salvation. The Jehovah's Witnesses and some parts of the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter Day Saints are like this.
So, there are many different reasons, in many different religions. It wasn't just 17th Century English protestants who were so motivated.(5 votes)
- Did the English aristocrats not care 95% of the population was starving.(3 votes)
- The aristocrats were a generally self-absorbed and oblivious group, and they didn't usually care about the peasants and poorer people. There were one or two who understood and made efforts to help, but not many.(3 votes)
- Why this colony called Jamestown?(3 votes)
- Jamestown was named after the English king, James I.(5 votes)
- Atwhy didn't they realize these bad reasons and choose somewhere else? 3:41(2 votes)
- If you'd just gotten off of a boat, and kissed the land where you had landed, you don't want to get back onto one.
If there's not a convenient empty boat available to take you to another place, you're pretty much stuck near where you landed.
There were no roads through the wilderness, anyway.(3 votes)
Video transcript
- [Instructor] In the last video, we discussed why it took England another 100 years to start colonizing the New World after Christopher Columbus first set foot in Hispaniola. Among those reasons was conflict
within the United Kingdom, colonial projects closer to home, specifically Ireland, and economic depression
that prevented England from taking much time to
look outside its borders to the broader world. In this video, I'm gonna walk about what led England to finally
get in the colonial game. So what changes that allows England to become a premier colonial empire and go on to found what will be the United States of America, today even an English speaking country? Well, some of these factors kind of turn to their advantage. Once the internal religious conflict has been sorted out, turning England into a Protestant nation, they turn some of that animus outward to Spain, a Catholic nation, and they feel that they
have to compete with Spain for riches and for souls. So certainly, the
Protestant nation of England doesn't wanna be left behind anymore than it already has been by Spain, which has clearly been
reaping great riches from the New World in the form of gold down here in Mexico and Central America and sugar, the Sugar Islands, and they also don't wanna be one upped by the Catholic nation of France, which has been reaping
some excellent profits trading with Native
Americans up in the region which is today New York and Canada, and they're getting furs. So there's clearly a lot to be had in the new world and a lot of Catholics to
triumph over in having it. Another thing that allows England to join the imperial game in the New World is the invention of the
Joint Stock Company. Now, Joint Stock Companies
were kind of the precursor, I mean, more than kind of the precursor, really the precursor to
the modern day corporation, and like modern day corporations, what they did was kind of spread both the riches and also the risk of any kind of
entrepreneurial undertaking. And what I mean by this is that people could buy shares in a Joint Stock Company, and those shares were kind of divested from your personal wealth. So you could invest in something that, if it went belly up, wouldn't necessarily ruin you 'cause you just had a few shares. So it's, you know, similar
to the stock market today, a very early version of that. So these Joint Stock Companies meant that adventurers, people seeking wealth, could go out to the
New World, for example, with many different backers, the risk spread across all of them, and try to make profit
for their investors. So many what we would call promoters of the New World tried to drum up interest in expeditions to the New World. Now, everybody knows that
Spain is making a killing from gold and sugar, and so they're saying, "Well,
maybe private individuals "with the blessing,
though not the sponsorship "of the crown can go to the New World "and start extracting
some of these resources "and start creating wealth
for their investors." And so England issues several charters to Joint Stock Companies that are still familiar names to us today. For example, the East India Company, which Americans know best as the company that supplied the tea
that Bostonians dumped into Boston Harbor slightly
before the American Revolution, but the one that plays the most role in the early founding of the United States is the Virginia Company, and it's under the auspices
of the Virginia Company that explorers like John
Smith head to Virginia and Virginia is named
for Elizabeth the First, Henry the Eighth's daughter, who never married, and
therefore was said to be the Virgin Queen, so a new land named
after her was Virginia. Now, we'll talk more
about the Virginia Company in the next video, but the last thing I wanna
say about what prompted England to join the imperial
game in the New World was that England was having
a serious economic depression and some real poverty. Now remember that England
was a highly classed society with aristocracy and gentry, and these were inherited roles, right? You couldn't rise to be among these ranks, generally. So, you know, about 95% of the population didn't belong to either of these groups, and a strong majority of those were in dire poverty in the 1500s and early 1600s, and there were a number
of reasons for this. The market for wool, which England, being a major textile
producer, had collapsed, so many people who had been wool producers were in dire straits. In fact, many of them were Puritans, and we'll see more about
what happens to the Puritans who leave England in another video, and there's a process going
on in this time period known as enclosure, the Enclosure Movement. And what enclosure meant is
kind of what it sounds like, which is that early English towns and manor houses were
kind of set up to have, you know, the house. That's the big manor house, so just bear with me and imagine here, and then they might have some forest filled with a nice deer to hunt, and then they might have
some nice fields, just grass, and these were kind of
considered common lands. So if you were a peasant, for example, you might graze your cows on these common lands. You might go hunting in the forest. Well, in this time period, these great English lords
started to close off, enclose these common lands. So they'd fence them off. This kind of makes
sense to our modern idea of property holding, right? It makes us understand who owns what thing and how it gets deeded, et cetera, but for very poor people, this was a huge transition because now they didn't have a place to raise their livestock. They didn't have a source
of hunting, protein, so it made people who
were already on the edge of poverty extremely poor. It was a very difficult time if you were already kind of living in the foraging or small farming aspect of English life. And so, because of this Enclosure
Movement and depression, crime rates are going up in England, and this is a time when theft
is still a capital crime. So if you're starving and
you steal something to eat, you could be hanged, and so many of the English gentry, the people in Parliament, are looking around and saying, "Alright, what's going on? "Are we having a moral crisis?" Because they don't think in terms that say, "Alright, many people are poor. "Maybe they're going to steal." Instead, they're saying,
"Why are people stealing? "What's wrong with people?" And so they think of this
as surplus population, say there are too many people in England. Now this is patently untrue because there are way more people living in London today than there were in all of
England at that time period, but the English Parliament, sort of major thinkers in England, start to think that there are
too many people in England. There are just too many people for having enough stuff to go around, and so they start wondering. Maybe these people should go elsewhere. Maybe they should go to colonies where maybe they can buy more goods, produce more raw materials, and find a different place
in the social structure and economy of England, and that starts to come true when the Virginia Company
sets off for Jamestown, which they'll reach in 1607, and we'll talk about
that in the next video.