Columbian Exchange Research Paper

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The Columbian Exchange was a system of trade, initiated by Christopher Columbus’ voyages to the Americas, that spanned from 1492-1800. It consisted of a global exchange of plants, animals, and diseases between the Old World of Europe, Asia, and Africa and the New World of the Americas. This encounter redefined the world through the introduction of new plants and animals to different parts of the world. However, the Columbian Exchange was also devastating for the native people of the Americas because it brought violence and the transmission of new diseases. Ultimately, the Columbian Exchange changed the world for the better, because even though it spread disease to the New World, it had a positive impact on culture and global economies. The …show more content…

The Columbian exchange had a positive impact through its redefining of various cultures. In a paper highlighting the impacts of the Columbian exchange, while describing the items that traveled the Atlantic, professor Thomas Grennes explains that “In addition to cattle, pigs, and wheat, the New World received chickens, horses, sheep, donkeys, rice, oats, barley, rye, onions, garlic, lettuce, cabbage, bananas, and more”. The crops and livestock brought to the New World formed essential parts of many cultures across the American continent. In Mexican culture, though tacos existed prior to the Columbian Exchange, the popular versions today with onions, lettuce, and pork would be impossible to make without trade from the Columbian Exchange. Conquistadors also brought the language of Spanish to much of South and Central America. When Spanish was mixed with local indigenous languages, it created the dialects spoken in much of South and Central America today. Spanish conquistadors also mixed their genes with many native people whose descendants make up today’s unique genome of people from countries like Mexico or …show more content…

Additionally, horses made up a major part of American history as they were used for transportation and became a staple of Western culture in America. Without the Columbian Exchange, Mexico would not be Mexico, Colombia would not be Colombia, and America would not be America. Many integral elements of modern day New World cultures, such as those of the US or Mexico, would simply not be the same without the Columbian Exchange. However, cultures on the other side of the Atlantic exchange were also transformed because of the Columbian exchange. Most European cultures faced a great deal of change with the introduction of new foods from the New World. Some of these changes now define modern day life and culture in European countries. When describing tomatoes, in a paper that analyzes the redistribution of goods brought by the Columbian exchange, authors Nathan Nunn and Nancy Qian explain that “[There was a] significant increase in tomato consumption. Tomatoes have truly become a global food. nine of the top ten tomato-consuming countries are Old World countries. Greece consumes the most tomatoes per capita, followed by other Mediterranean and Middle Eastern

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