A very few of the Europeans had well thought-out that the Native Americans were a match to their society or an equal I would say, all just because of their dissimilarities in religion, dress, practice, agricultural, housing, and their individualities. However, the Spanish, Dutch, and the French sought out profit through the access to the new equipment, trading of knives, axes, cooking utensils, weapons, and a long list of other belongings, and the utilization of the resources, knowing that the Native Americans would be the main key into their triumph. The Europeans response to the Indian tribes such as the Iroquois had begun to allocate more devotion to the fur catching; furs and pelts had provided the tribes the much means in buying royal goods. The Europeans furthermore wanted to transform the Native Americans into the Christianity way of being/faith. Consequently, the financial gain and their beliefs were the two most factors that was most affected by the changing aspects for the European and indigenous American …show more content…
Once they had enslaved the native people from the Caribbean and the Southern area of America so they may grow the harvest, mine for silver, gold, and other cherished metals, the Spanish had relocated into North America where they focused their energy on what is now called the Southwestern and Southeastern United States. After moving into the South, Spain had established their military post in St. Augustine but only then a small number of Spaniards had settled there at that time. The Indigenous people had dropped in number over the seventeenth century, as a rise in war which was brought in by the Spanish who had killed a very big number of the Indigenous