Colombian exchange

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The term Columbian Exchange, a phrase first coined by historian Alfred Crosby, refers to the broad biological and ecological exchange brought on by the arrival of European explorers to the Americas.

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[edit] Agricultural Exchange

One of the largest and most felt aspects of the exchange was the use of hearty New World foods in the old world. An prime example is the adoption of the potato in Western Europe, most notably Ireland, where it bacame a staple crop. Today, nearly 30 percent of the world's cultivated plants originated in the New World.
Crops brought from the New World
-Avocado
-Cacao
-Dandelion
-Guava
-Lemon
-Chilli
-Vanilla
-Capsicum
-Maize
-Manioc
-Orange
-Peanut
-Pineapple
-Potato
-Pumpkin
-Squash
-Tomato
Crops Brought To The New World
-Bannana
-Barley
-Cabbage
-Cattle
-Chicken
-Goat
-Horse
-Lettuce
-Oats
-Pig
-Rice
-Sheep
-Sugar
-Wheat

[edit] Facts on The Exchange

Andean farmers perfected the first freeze-dried method of preserving potatoes. The resulting "chuño" was easily transported and could be stored for half a dozen years without spoiling.

For the first centuries after its introduction in Europe, the potato was little more than a curiosity, a novelty food eaten by the middle and upper segments of society; it was even considered an aphrodisiac.

One difficulty in tracing the history of the potato's importation to the Old World arises from an early confusion of names. The word first came into English representing a different plant transported from the Caribbean, the sweet potato. The word "batata," used by the Taino Indians of Hispaniola, and pronounced "patata" by the Spanish, was transformed into "potato" by the English. When the white potato from the Andes was introduced, it was also called potato, although it belongs to an entirely separate taxonomic family.

Maize production originated in southern Mexico and had spread throughout pre-Columbian America by the time of Columbus' arrival. Along with the potato, it was a primary food of the Incas in Peru and an important staple in Mesoamerica and North America as well.

Manioc, or cassava, is a major American staple in tropical areas, but is little known in the temperate zones, where it is familiar only as tapioca served for dessert. Cassava was extensively cultivated in the New World as slave provisions.

The breadfruit still is grown as a staple in the Pacific tropics and the West Indies. The British naval vessel Bounty, under Capt. William Bligh, was transporting breadfruit plants to Jamaica when the famous mutiny led by Fletcher Christian occurred in April 1789. Bligh finally succeeded in introducing the fruit to the West Indies in January 1793.

Believed to have originated in tropical Asia, the banana was brought to Santo Domingo from the Canary Islands by the Spaniards in 1516. Large international production and trade of the fruit, however, began only in the late 19th century with the development of refrigerated transport.

Amédée Frézier was a French royal military engineer under contract to the Spanish government. He was commissioned to sail to its colonies in South America to construct forts against English and Dutch attacks. His book includes descriptions of the chief towns of Chile and Peru. Frézier introduced one of the ancestors of the modern strawberry to France, where it was called the "fraise du Chili."

Believed to be native to Ethiopia, coffee was introduced into Arabia by the 15th century and from there spread to Egypt and Turkey. By the mid-1600s, it had reached most of Europe and soon thereafter was introduced to North America, although it only surpassed tea as the preferred American beverage after the latter fell out of favor following the Boston Tea Party.

D. de Quélus's "Histoire naturelle du Cacao, et du sucre," first published in Paris in 1719, includes descriptions of the cacao tree and its cultivation as well as chapters on the uses and properties of chocolate. Here the author discusses chocolate's ability to restore mental and physical well-being: "For if a person, for example, fatigued with long and hard labor, or with a violent agitation of mind, takes a good dish of chocolate, he shall perceive almost instantly, that his faintness shall cease, and his strength shall be recovered, when digestion is hardly begun."

[edit] See also

[edit] Sources

Exhibition catalog, "A Harvest Gathered: Food in the New World," prepared by Daniel J. Slive, reference librarian, John Carter Brown Library (1989). The exhibition was first displayed at the library Nov. 13, 1989 - April 29, 1990.