Introduction to the Columbian Exchange and Slavery in North America

What you’ll learn to do: describe labor and commerce in Europe and the New World, and analyze the effects of the Columbian Exchange

A collage of 8 different plants that were included in the Columbian Exchange. The collage includes citrus fruits, apples, bananas, mangos, rice, and onions among other things.

In the minds of European rulers, colonies existed to create wealth for imperial powers. Guided by mercantilist ideas, European rulers and investors hoped to enrich their own nations and themselves, in order to gain the greatest share of what was believed to be a limited amount of wealth. In their own individual quest for riches and preeminence, European colonizers who traveled to the Americas blazed new and disturbing paths, such as the encomienda system of forced labor and the use of millions of enslaved Africans.

All native inhabitants of the Americas who came into contact with Europeans found their worlds turned upside down as the new arrivals introduced their religions and ideas about property and goods. Europeans gained new foods, plants, and animals in the Columbian Exchange, turning whatever they could into a commodity to be bought and sold, and Indians were introduced to diseases that nearly destroyed them. At every turn, however, Indians placed limits on European colonization and resisted the newcomers’ ways.