Diverging World Views (College Board AP® US History): Study Guide
Differences in religion & culture between Europeans & Native Americans
- Europeans and the Indigenous people in the Americas differed in many aspects of life - These differences often led to conflicts between the two groups when Europeans invaded Indigenous lands 
 
Religion
Both Europeans and Indigenous peoples felt strongly about their religious beliefs and practices
- Europeans mostly believed in monotheism 
- Their main religions were: - Protestantism 
- Catholicism 
 
- Many Indigenous peoples believed in polytheism 
- Different Indigenous groups used different names for their gods, but many Indigenous peoples worshiped gods for similar reasons: - To give thanks for the creation of the world 
- To give thanks for the seasons, weather, and the sun, moon, and stars 
- To ask for fertility 
- To ask for successful hunting or growth of crops 
 
Gender Roles
- At this time European men held higher social status than European women 
- Indigenous societies used egalitarianism, the practice of social, economic, and political equality between men and women 
- This difference in ideas of gender roles led to misunderstandings and violence - Europeans believed the women in Indigenous society oppressed Indigenous men 
- Indigenous men thought European men were doing women’s jobs when they worked the fields - Indigenous women often produced over half their community’s food supply for a year 
 
 
Family
- The European family model was patriarchal, where the male was head of the household 
- In the patriarchal society, European women: - had no voting rights 
- were legally seen as the property of their husband or father if unmarried 
- could not annul marriages 
 
- Some Indigenous tribes were matrilineal, a structure where women held power and wealth in a society 
- In matrilineal communities, Indigenous women: - were the heads of households 
- held and owned property, including the property of a household 
- had the right to annul their marriages and divorce their husbands 
- maintained custody of children 
 
Power
- Many Europeans viewed Indigenous people as inferior and believed they had to be subjugated 
- Europeans began to act violently toward Indigenous women because they expanded tribal communities when they had children 
- Treaties between Europeans and Indigenous peoples were created - Europeans used treaties to get what they wanted, and they often broke these agreements 
- Indigenous peoples made treaties to protect their land, way of life, and rights 
 
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