Table of Contents
Why did European countries want to spread Christianity?
Why did Europeans want to spread Christianity in the Americas? They believed that God wanted them to convert other peoples.
What influenced the spread of Christianity in Africa?
In the 15th century, Portuguese Jesuits introduced Christianity into sub-Saharan Africa, where it took root and spread. Christianity redefined African societies, helping set the stage for the Africa we know today.
Why did Europeans colonize Africa religious?
Christianity was one justification that European powers used to colonize and exploit Africa. Through the dissemination of Christian doctrine, European nations such as Great Britain, France, and the Netherlands sought to educate and reform African culture.
What was the motive behind Europe’s exploration?
Historians generally recognize three motives for European exploration and colonization in the New World: God, gold, and glory.
How did Christianity spread in Africa?
The Portuguese attempted to introduce a Catholic-influenced form of Christianity between the 16th and 18th centuries in the Kongo Kingdom, but it did not last for long. The Evangelical Revival, in the late 18th century, started sending missionaries to Africa.
What role did Christianity play in the development of Europe?
To many European nations, Christianity represented western civilization and the basis for Anglo-Saxon morality. Christianity served as a major force in the partition and eventual colonization of Africa (Boahen 12). During the late 19 th century, European nations increasingly vied for global power.
What caused religious conflicts in Europe before the trans-Atlantic trade?
The expansion of Islam in the fifteenth century through the Ottoman Empire (which encompassed parts of southeastern Europe, North Africa, Western Asia, and the Middle East by the sixteenth century) further fueled religious conflicts before the trans-Atlantic trade.
Why did the European powers colonize Africa?
While European powers justified colonialism in Africa as a moral obligation to bestow modern civilization and Christianity on African societies, the potential for commerce and natural resources provided the true impetus for the colonization of Africa.