Can you help me understand this History question?
Questions to be answered: Look at the seal of the Massachusetts Bay Colony (Attached). Based on everything you learned about early New England this week, discuss the meanings of the seal. What do the various images/words mean, and why did the MBC choose to depict itself and its mission visually in this way?U.S. HISTORY
Chapter 3 Creating New Social Orders: Colonial Societies, 1500–1700
PowerPoint Image Slideshow
FIGURE 3.1
John Smith’s famous map of Virginia (1622) illustrates many geopolitical features of early
colonization. In the upper left, Powhatan, who governed a powerful local confederation of
Algonquian communities, sits above other local chiefs, denoting his authority. Another native
figure, Susquehannock, who appears in the upper right, visually reinforces the message that
the English did not control the land beyond a few outposts along the Chesapeake.
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FIGURE 3.2
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FIGURE 3.3
In this drawing by French artist Jacques le Moyne de Morgues, Timucua flee the
Spanish settlers, who arrive by ship. Le Moyne lived at Fort Caroline, the French
outpost, before the Spanish destroyed the colony in 1562.
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FIGURE 3.4
The Spanish fort of Castillo de San Marcos helped Spanish colonists in St. Augustine
fend off marauding privateers from rival European countries.
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FIGURE 3.5
The Castello Plan is the only extant map
of 1660 New Amsterdam (present-day
New York City). The line with spikes on
the right side of the colony is the
northeastern wall for which Wall Street
was named.
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FIGURE 3.6
This 1684 map of New Netherland shows the extent of Dutch settlement.
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FIGURE 3.7
French Jesuit missionaries to New
France kept detailed records of their
interactions with—and observations of—
the Algonquian and Iroquois that they
converted to Catholicism. (credit: Project
Gutenberg).
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FIGURE 3.8
In the early seventeenth century,
thousands of English settlers came to
what are now Virginia, Maryland, and the
New England states in search of
opportunity and a better life.
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FIGURE 3.9
In this 1670 painting by an unknown artist, slaves work in tobacco-drying sheds.
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FIGURE 3.10
This 1616 engraving by Simon van de
Passe, completed when Pocahontas and
John Rolfe were presented at court in
England, is the only known contemporary
image of Pocahontas. Note her
European garb and pose. What message
did the painter likely intend to convey
with this portrait of Pocahontas, the
daughter of a powerful Indian chief?
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FIGURE 3.11
The original Mayflower Compact is no
longer extant; only copies, such as this
ca.1645 transcription by William
Bradford, remain.
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FIGURE 3.12
In the 1629 seal of the Massachusetts Bay Colony (a), an Indian is shown asking
colonists to “Come over and help us.” This seal indicates the religious ambitions of
John Winthrop (b), the colony’s first governor, for his “city upon a hill.”
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FIGURE 3.13
This map indicates the domains of New England’s native inhabitants in 1670, a few
years before King Philip’s War.
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FIGURE 3.14
Puritan woman Mary Rowlandson wrote her captivity narrative, the front cover of which
is shown here (a), after her imprisonment during King Philip’s War. In her narrative, she
tells of her treatment by the Indians holding her as well as of her meetings with the
Wampanoag leader Metacom (b), shown in a contemporary portrait.
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FIGURE 3.15
In this 1681 portrait, the NianticNarragansett chief Ninigret wears a
combination of European and Indian
goods. Which elements of each culture
are evident in this portrait?
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FIGURE 3.16
Adriaen van Ostade, a Dutch artist, painted An Apothecary Smoking in an Interior in
1646. The large European market for American tobacco strongly influenced the
development of some of the American colonies.
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FIGURE 3.17
English naturalist Sir Hans Sloane
traveled to Jamaica and other Caribbean
islands to catalog the flora of the new
world.
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