Respuesta :

Trade. The Europeans had silk, coffee, tea and other goods to trade with the people on the Asian continents, this was the key driving force behind trying to find a route to Asia, as they could cut costs with a cheaper route, they wanted to control the potential sea-faring routes. 

The reason why the Europeans were eager to find an oceanic route to Asia was for having a shorter route to their destination. It would be very beneficial for their trade business as well as to avoid warfare and violence on the Silk Road.

 

EXPLANATION:

The European-Asian marine path, so-called the sea route to the Cape Route or India is a delivery route from the European shoreline of the Atlantic Ocean to the Asian shoreline in the Indian Ocean that passes through the Cape of Good Hope and Cape of Agulha in the south. the tip of Africa.

 

Discovery

In the late Middle Ages, the spice business from India and the Silk Road from China was very important economically, but the fall of Constantinople in 1453 disrupted the trade and provided Europeans with inducements to find a sea route. Portuguese voyager, Diogo Cão roamed the coast of southern Africa to present-day Namibia, and Bartolomeu Dias discovered the Cape of Good Hope in 1488.  

Vasco da Gama led a display that led to the Portuguese discovery about the sea route to India in 1498, and a series of voyages so-called Carreira da Índia. Ever since the Cape Route has been in use.

 

Use during Age of Sail

The Cape route was operated by Eastern European Indian Companies. Caribbean pirates tracked the Pirate Round in the 17th century; a parallel route from the Caribbean throughout the southern Atlantic, to the Indian Ocean. The Dutch East India Company established the Dutch Cape Colony as a stopover port on its way to the Dutch East Indies. The Brouwer Route was an expansion of the Cape Route throughout the Indian Ocean to Indonesia. The Clipper route is a route down the Roaring Forties between Australia and Europe.

 

Suez Canal

The Suez Canal was opened in 1869, enabling a shortcut between the Indian Ocean and the Atlantic. Due to strong winds in Suez, the canal is less suitable for sailing ships, so steamers have a competitive benefit when the canal was opened. While the Cape Route remained beneficial for clippers for several decades, the opening of the canal was the start of the end of the Cape Route and the Age of Sail as a whole. This route has been relevant as a secondary way if the Suez Canal were disturbed, as well as in cruise ship racing.

LEARN MORE

If you’re interested in learning more about this topic, we recommend you to also take a look at the following questions:

• What is the trading route between the Indian Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea? https://brainly.com/question/2111312

• Which three regions were part of the Indian Ocean trade route? https://brainly.com/question/11609454

KEYWORDS : Oceanic Route, The European-Asian Sea Route

Subject  : History

Class  : 10-12

Sub-Chapter : Oceanic Route

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