Ways of the World - Ms. Cabrera
... Russia and the Mongols • Brutal invasion of a disunited Kievan Rus (1237– 1240): Using technology such as catapults and battering rams gained from campaigns in China and Persia, the invasion of the Kievan Rus was an assault on a weak and disunited people • Khanate of the Golden Horde: This was the R ...
... Russia and the Mongols • Brutal invasion of a disunited Kievan Rus (1237– 1240): Using technology such as catapults and battering rams gained from campaigns in China and Persia, the invasion of the Kievan Rus was an assault on a weak and disunited people • Khanate of the Golden Horde: This was the R ...
World History: Connections to Today, The Modern
... SE/TE: Humanitarian Goals & Social Darwinism, 317; Forms of Imperial Rule, 318; Missionaries, 320; A Schoolroom in East Africa, 323; Different Views on Culture, 331 TE: 314A–314B ...
... SE/TE: Humanitarian Goals & Social Darwinism, 317; Forms of Imperial Rule, 318; Missionaries, 320; A Schoolroom in East Africa, 323; Different Views on Culture, 331 TE: 314A–314B ...
Slavery and British Industrialisation: The `New History Of Capitalism`
... of Britain, especially upon Britain’s transition, first in the world, to a highly developed industrial economy in the late eighteenth century. The historian who gave the most compelling answer to this question was the Trinidad scholar, and later Prime Minister, Eric Williams. Williams wrote a hugely ...
... of Britain, especially upon Britain’s transition, first in the world, to a highly developed industrial economy in the late eighteenth century. The historian who gave the most compelling answer to this question was the Trinidad scholar, and later Prime Minister, Eric Williams. Williams wrote a hugely ...
correlation to the AP® World history curriculum Framework
... In response to warming climates at the end of the last Ice Age, from about 10,000 years ago, some groups adapted to the environment in new ways, while others remained hunter-foragers. Settled agriculture appeared in several different parts of the world. The switch to agriculture created a more relia ...
... In response to warming climates at the end of the last Ice Age, from about 10,000 years ago, some groups adapted to the environment in new ways, while others remained hunter-foragers. Settled agriculture appeared in several different parts of the world. The switch to agriculture created a more relia ...
Period 5: industrialization and Global inteGration
... soc-2 Assess how the development of specialized labor systems interacted with the development of social hierarchies. soc-3 Assess the impact that different ideologies, philosophies, and religions had on social hierarchies. soc-4 Analyze ways in which legal systems have sustained or challenged class, ...
... soc-2 Assess how the development of specialized labor systems interacted with the development of social hierarchies. soc-3 Assess the impact that different ideologies, philosophies, and religions had on social hierarchies. soc-4 Analyze ways in which legal systems have sustained or challenged class, ...
era i - foundations – 10000 bce – 600 ce
... Social structures/gender structures – Shang social structure Cultural and intellectual developments – Shang culture o Basic features of Ancestor worship prior to 600 CE, where it applied by 600 CE and the role of women in it. Be able to compare to other belief systems. o Early Chinese society ha ...
... Social structures/gender structures – Shang social structure Cultural and intellectual developments – Shang culture o Basic features of Ancestor worship prior to 600 CE, where it applied by 600 CE and the role of women in it. Be able to compare to other belief systems. o Early Chinese society ha ...
The Making of a Global Commodity
... central Europe, China, Japan and the Mongol Empire, but also in many parts of the Indian subcontinent. Different varieties of linen were produced in all these areas and they were traded in local and national, rather than international of intercontinental markets. In the case of China, the use of lin ...
... central Europe, China, Japan and the Mongol Empire, but also in many parts of the Indian subcontinent. Different varieties of linen were produced in all these areas and they were traded in local and national, rather than international of intercontinental markets. In the case of China, the use of lin ...
WARM UP#2a WK4 TUESDAY 11-19-13
... LOOK AT YOUR GEO CHALLENGE #2 MAP P40+41 GREY W/B – 72+73 TEXT ...
... LOOK AT YOUR GEO CHALLENGE #2 MAP P40+41 GREY W/B – 72+73 TEXT ...
Big Era 6 Power Point Notes
... Environmental change accelerated with the Columbian Exchange, intensified resource exploitation, and continuing ______________________. World population ___________________ owing to improved nutrition and migration. But Africa gained only slowly due to slavery, and Native Americans suffered massive ...
... Environmental change accelerated with the Columbian Exchange, intensified resource exploitation, and continuing ______________________. World population ___________________ owing to improved nutrition and migration. But Africa gained only slowly due to slavery, and Native Americans suffered massive ...
Governing the “Spatial Reach”? Spheres of Influence and
... paradigm) but a ‘relativistic’ process. A process conceptually driven not so much by a simplified parallelism but rather an emerging ‘dialectic’ sphere of global/local relations which was first addressed in notions “stretching” and at the same time, “disembedding” (Giddens, 1990) of “the locale” as ...
... paradigm) but a ‘relativistic’ process. A process conceptually driven not so much by a simplified parallelism but rather an emerging ‘dialectic’ sphere of global/local relations which was first addressed in notions “stretching” and at the same time, “disembedding” (Giddens, 1990) of “the locale” as ...
the british empire and the economic development of india (1858
... state remains a difficult question to answer. This is so because European expansion and resettlement could lead to a variety of political effects, which it would be misleading to lump under one label, «Empire»4. For the British Empire in India, which fundamentally changed in character from its early ...
... state remains a difficult question to answer. This is so because European expansion and resettlement could lead to a variety of political effects, which it would be misleading to lump under one label, «Empire»4. For the British Empire in India, which fundamentally changed in character from its early ...
Name: MODERN WORLD HISTORY “FINALS” STUDY GUIDE *RE
... the Netherlands, a heavily Protestant region of the Spanish Empire, emerged as a great power in its own right. The English monarch, Elizabeth, sought to placate both Protestants and Catholics at home while balancing the power of France and Spain. Hoping to restore Catholicism to power, Philip tried ...
... the Netherlands, a heavily Protestant region of the Spanish Empire, emerged as a great power in its own right. The English monarch, Elizabeth, sought to placate both Protestants and Catholics at home while balancing the power of France and Spain. Hoping to restore Catholicism to power, Philip tried ...
World History Curriculum Map - Chinle Unified School District
... Timeline: Quarter - Date: June 2011 Strand/Concept: ...
... Timeline: Quarter - Date: June 2011 Strand/Concept: ...
Global Conflict Imperialism Notes 14.notebook
... work in Southern and Central Africa b. H.M. Stanley found Livingston 1871(who westerners thought to be dead); news reports created European interest in Africa; sought aid of king of Belgium to dominate the Congo 3. New military and naval bases to protect ones interests against other ...
... work in Southern and Central Africa b. H.M. Stanley found Livingston 1871(who westerners thought to be dead); news reports created European interest in Africa; sought aid of king of Belgium to dominate the Congo 3. New military and naval bases to protect ones interests against other ...
Course Timeline
... moving through levels of generalizations from the global to the particular. This skill will be especially useful for writing the Change over Time essay on the AP World History Exam and often is a major focus in upper-level college courses in the social sciences as well as in the discipline of scienc ...
... moving through levels of generalizations from the global to the particular. This skill will be especially useful for writing the Change over Time essay on the AP World History Exam and often is a major focus in upper-level college courses in the social sciences as well as in the discipline of scienc ...
Saskia Sassen and the Sociology of Globalization
... Saskia Sassen and the Sociology of Globalization However, this displacement does not account for outmigration as opposed to internal migration and nor does it explain the particular direction of outmigration. Only when this disruption is coupled with other objective and cultural-ideological linkage ...
... Saskia Sassen and the Sociology of Globalization However, this displacement does not account for outmigration as opposed to internal migration and nor does it explain the particular direction of outmigration. Only when this disruption is coupled with other objective and cultural-ideological linkage ...
SUSHI: Globalization through Food Culture:
... was thriving during the 1960s. Their expense accounts enabled them to enjoy the relatively expensive sushi in Los Angeles. It was at this point that nigiri and fish maki began to be available. This led to the launching of new sushi restaurants and the increasing visibility of the dish. Issenberg (20 ...
... was thriving during the 1960s. Their expense accounts enabled them to enjoy the relatively expensive sushi in Los Angeles. It was at this point that nigiri and fish maki began to be available. This led to the launching of new sushi restaurants and the increasing visibility of the dish. Issenberg (20 ...
Making Inferences and Drawing Conclusions
... events of the Age of Exploration. • Europeans risked dangerous ocean voyages to discover new sea routes. • Early European explorers sought gold in Africa, then began to trade slaves. • Trade increased in Southeast Asia, and the Dutch built a trade empire based on spices in the Indonesian Archi ...
... events of the Age of Exploration. • Europeans risked dangerous ocean voyages to discover new sea routes. • Early European explorers sought gold in Africa, then began to trade slaves. • Trade increased in Southeast Asia, and the Dutch built a trade empire based on spices in the Indonesian Archi ...
• What were the major patterns of Native American life in North
... are hotly debated by archaeologists. Others may have arrived by sea from Asia or Pacific islands. Around rc000 years ago, when glaciers began to melt at the end of the last Ice Age, the land link became submerged under water, once again separating the Western Hemisphere from Asia. History in North a ...
... are hotly debated by archaeologists. Others may have arrived by sea from Asia or Pacific islands. Around rc000 years ago, when glaciers began to melt at the end of the last Ice Age, the land link became submerged under water, once again separating the Western Hemisphere from Asia. History in North a ...
Journal of World History, vol. 2, no. 1 (1991)
... “nomad” and “sedentary” peoples. However that may be, there can be little doubt about the central roles of central Asia in world (system) history (Frank 1990 d). Africa has also received less attention than it merits in world (system) history. Curtin has done pioneering work on trade and migration i ...
... “nomad” and “sedentary” peoples. However that may be, there can be little doubt about the central roles of central Asia in world (system) history (Frank 1990 d). Africa has also received less attention than it merits in world (system) history. Curtin has done pioneering work on trade and migration i ...
Unit 3
... plow technology (H-1C-M4) 31. Identify the effects of migration and militarization on the politics and social fabric of Europe and Asia (H-1C-M5) 34. Explain the significance of Phoenician trade in the Mediterranean basin (H-1C-M6) ...
... plow technology (H-1C-M4) 31. Identify the effects of migration and militarization on the politics and social fabric of Europe and Asia (H-1C-M5) 34. Explain the significance of Phoenician trade in the Mediterranean basin (H-1C-M6) ...
Day - Houston ISD
... -Analyzing Primary/Secondary Documents (Question & Answer) -Review for Unit 5 Test ...
... -Analyzing Primary/Secondary Documents (Question & Answer) -Review for Unit 5 Test ...
World History II Flashcards
... The ideas of the Enlightenment and French participation in the American Revolution influenced the French people to view their government in new ways. As a result, the French: ...
... The ideas of the Enlightenment and French participation in the American Revolution influenced the French people to view their government in new ways. As a result, the French: ...
Proto-globalization
Proto-globalization or early modern globalization is a period of the history of globalization roughly spanning the years between 1600 and 1800, following the period of archaic globalization. First introduced by historians A. G. Hopkins and Christopher Bayly, the term describes the phase of increasing trade links and cultural exchange that characterized the period immediately preceding the advent of so-called 'modern globalization' in the 19th century.Proto-globalization distinguished itself from modern globalization on the basis of expansionism, the method of managing global trade, and the level of information exchange. The period of proto-globalization is marked by such trade arrangements as the East India Company, the shift of hegemony to Western Europe, the rise of larger-scale conflicts between powerful nations such as the Thirty Year War, and a rise of new commodities—most particularly slave trade. The Triangular Trade made it possible for Europe to take advantage of resources within the western hemisphere. The transfer of plant and animal crops and epidemic diseases associated with Alfred Crosby's concept of The Columbian Exchange also played a central role in this process. Proto-globalization trade and communications involved a vast group including European, Muslim, Indian, Southeast Asian and Chinese merchants, particularly in the Indian Ocean region.The transition from proto-globalization to modern globalization was marked with a more complex global network based on both capitalistic and technological exchange; however, it led to a significant collapse in cultural exchange.