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  1. Find lessons on Three Worlds Meet (Beginnings to 1620) for all grades. Free interactive resources and activities for the classroom and home.

  2. Africa grew wealthy from the slave trade, the Americas gained gold from Europe, and the merchant class of Europe was born. Africa's population declined, the Americas flourished with plants from Europe, and wealth flowed in the European economy.

  3. the three primary trade winds that helped ships travel in the 1500s. the movement of goods, money, and enslaved people that made up Triangular Trade. the movement of silver during the Commercial Revolution. the three primary routes for commercial trade between Hispaniola and the Old World.

  4. After Columbus’ arrival, the lands of the Western Hemisphere were forever connected to the rest of the world. The international slave trade forced millions of Africans to the Americas, bringing these "three worlds" together in unprecedented ways.

  5. three worlds meet (beginnings to 1620) Standard 1 : Comparative characteristics of societies in the Americas, Western Europe, and Western Africa that increasingly interacted after 1450. Standard 2 : How early European exploration and colonization resulted in cultural and ecological interactions among previously unconnected peoples.

  6. The major theme of Era 1 is “Three Worlds Meet,” the story of how people from Asia, Europe, and Africa arrived, settled, and interacted in the Western Hemisphere.

  7. Mar 10, 2013 · Subjects of the lessons include Cabeza de Vaca, Hood's Texas Brigade in the Civil War, life in the Civilian Conservation Corps, the journey of Coronado, the Mier Expedition, runaway slaves, the Shelby County Regulator Moderator war, and a comparison of Wichita and Comanche village life.

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