Columbian Exchange
TimeLine
Aug 3, 1492 Columbus Sails
Christopher Columbus sets sail from Spain, hoping to reach the East Indies by sailing due west across the Atlantic. Contrary to later mythology, Columbus is not the only European to recognize that the earth is round; he is merely the only European to underestimate the circumference of the planet by 10,000 miles, leading him to believe—erroneously—that a ship sailing west can reach China before its crew starves to death.
Aug 12, 1492 Columbus Discovers the New World
Christopher Columbus and his men unexpectedly land in the Bahamas, "discovering" the New World and initiating the Columbian Exchange.
Nov 8, 1519 Cortés Arrives
Conquistador Hernán Cortés arrives at the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan, leading a small army of several hundred Spanish soldiers. The Aztec leader, Moctezuma II, initially welcomes the Spanish into the city as honored guests.
May 1520 Aztec Imprisoned
Relations between the Aztecs and their Spanish guests turn sour, and Hernán Cortés somehow manages to imprison Aztec emperor Moctezuma within his own palace.
Jul 1, 1520 Aztec Attack Spanish
The Spanish occupiers of Tenochtitlan force the imprisoned Aztec emperor Moctezuma II to appear before his people, begging them to submit to Spanish rule. The Aztecs, furious at Moctezuma's betrayal, respond by stoning their leader to death and driving the Spanish out of the city.
Jul 8, 1520 Aztec Smallpox
Smallpox, introduced by an infected soldier in Cortés's army, spreads throughout Tenochtitlan, infecting as much as half the population in the Aztecs' magnificent capital city.
Aug 13, 1521 Aztecs Surrender
The Aztec emperor Cuahtémoc, with his people ravaged by smallpox and besieged by conquistadors, surrenders the capital city of Tenochtitlan to Spanish forces led by Hernán Cortés.
1525 Inca Smallpox
Smallpox strikes the Inca empire, killing more than 200,000 people, including the Incas' divine monarch Wayna Qhapaq, his chosen heir, and many of the empire's top military generals and civilian administrators. A smallpox-induced succession struggle devolves into civil war, which continues until the Spanish invade in 1532.
Nov 16, 1532 Pizarro Captures Incas
Spanish conquistador Francisco Pizarro, leading a force of only 168 men and 62 horses, captures Inca ruler Atawallpa and holds him for ransom.
Aug 29, 1533 Incan Dissarray
Inca ruler Atawallpa fulfills his captor Francisco Pizarro's ransom demands, giving the Spaniard one room filled with gold and two rooms filled with silver. Rather than freeing Atawallpa as promised, Pizarro brutally murders him by garrote, plunging the Inca empire into disarray.
Mar 23, 1534 Spanish Conquest
Francisco Pizarro captures the Incan capital of Cusco, finalizing Spanish conquest of the Inca empire.
Jun 1, 1539 De Soto Expedition
Hernando De Soto's expedition of conquest into North America lands on the Gulf Coast of Florida. De Soto's party of 600 men, traveling with at least that many livestock, seeks to discover gold and an easy water passage through North America to China.
May 21, 1542 De Soto Dies
Hernando De Soto succumbs to disease somewhere in modern-day Arkansas. His soldiers bury his body in the Mississippi River, then flee to Mexico.
1682 La Salle Canoes
French explorer La Salle canoes the length of the Mississippi River, the first European to return to the region since the failed De Soto expedition 140 years before. Where De Soto found dense settlements surrounded with carefully tended fields of corn, La Salle finds an almost uninhabited wilderness overrun with buffalo.
1700 Comanche Utilize Horses
On the southern Great Plains, the Comanche emerge as a distinct Indian nation, breaking away from the Shoshone to adopt a nomadic horseback lifestyle. The Comanche are the first North American Indian tribe to fully integrate the horse into their culture, and quickly use their equestrian skills to dominate the southern Plains.
1845 Potato Famine
Potato blight destroys the Irish potato crop, leading to the deaths of more than 1 million Irish by starvation and an exodus of perhaps 2 million emigrants from the country. The potato—originally cultivated in South America—has become the indispensable sustenance of the Irish people, and the crop's failure has catastrophic effects.