
The High Middle Ages
... •Large cities, like London, became more common in the High Middle Ages. •Most of this trade was controlled by merchant from Italy and northern Europe ...
... •Large cities, like London, became more common in the High Middle Ages. •Most of this trade was controlled by merchant from Italy and northern Europe ...
The Globe Encompassed, 1500–1750
... still primarily a maritime force. Asians and Africans generally retained control of their lands and participated freely in overseas trade. The Islamic world saw the dramatic expansion of the Ottoman Empire in the Middle East and the establishment of the Safavid Empire in Iran and the Mughal Empire i ...
... still primarily a maritime force. Asians and Africans generally retained control of their lands and participated freely in overseas trade. The Islamic world saw the dramatic expansion of the Ottoman Empire in the Middle East and the establishment of the Safavid Empire in Iran and the Mughal Empire i ...
NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES THE HECKSCHER-OHLIN MODEL BETWEEN
... history, not all. Long distance trade between continents developed as transport costs, monopoly, government intervention, and international conflicts declined. Initially, only goods with very high value to bulk ratios were shipped, like silk, exotic spices and precious metals. The range of goods tra ...
... history, not all. Long distance trade between continents developed as transport costs, monopoly, government intervention, and international conflicts declined. Initially, only goods with very high value to bulk ratios were shipped, like silk, exotic spices and precious metals. The range of goods tra ...
Russian Revolution
... Readings/Documents: Siddhartha by Herman Hesse, The Tao of Pooh by Benjamin Hoff, Epic of Gilgamesh (read in literature class), The Hebrew Flood Story (read in literature class), The Rig Veda (excerpt), The Tao Te Ching (excerpt), Poems by Lu Tung Pin, Meno and Apology (excerpts) by Plato. Essential ...
... Readings/Documents: Siddhartha by Herman Hesse, The Tao of Pooh by Benjamin Hoff, Epic of Gilgamesh (read in literature class), The Hebrew Flood Story (read in literature class), The Rig Veda (excerpt), The Tao Te Ching (excerpt), Poems by Lu Tung Pin, Meno and Apology (excerpts) by Plato. Essential ...
Becoming the World, 1000-1300
... the east awaited his reports. In the end, neither monk ever returned. Yet their voyages exemplified the crisscrossing of people, money, and goods along the trade routes and sea-lanes that connected the world’s regions. For just as religious conflict was a hallmark of this age, so was a surge in trad ...
... the east awaited his reports. In the end, neither monk ever returned. Yet their voyages exemplified the crisscrossing of people, money, and goods along the trade routes and sea-lanes that connected the world’s regions. For just as religious conflict was a hallmark of this age, so was a surge in trad ...
Age of Exploration - Mr. Ritter`s Page
... _____ Create a 20 question test using the information from your notes. _____ Pretend you are a cook on a trip overseas. Plan a day’s meals for the Captain and the crew. What foods would you serve? Select one, make from scratch, and bring to class! RUBRIC _____ Create a model of a ship used during ex ...
... _____ Create a 20 question test using the information from your notes. _____ Pretend you are a cook on a trip overseas. Plan a day’s meals for the Captain and the crew. What foods would you serve? Select one, make from scratch, and bring to class! RUBRIC _____ Create a model of a ship used during ex ...
The Age of European Domination - Assets
... If such was the world of the late eighteenth century in which the United States made its appearance, the following century at once confirmed and added variations to the picture. The nineteenth century opened with French revolutionary wars in which France, led by Napoleon Bonaparte, sought to establi ...
... If such was the world of the late eighteenth century in which the United States made its appearance, the following century at once confirmed and added variations to the picture. The nineteenth century opened with French revolutionary wars in which France, led by Napoleon Bonaparte, sought to establi ...
The Columbian Exchange: A History of Disease
... caused devastation far exceeding that of even the Black Death in fourteenth-century Europe. Europeans brought deadly viruses and bacteria, such as smallpox, measles, typhus, and cholera, for which Native Americans had no immunity (Denevan, 1976). On their return home, European sailors brought syphil ...
... caused devastation far exceeding that of even the Black Death in fourteenth-century Europe. Europeans brought deadly viruses and bacteria, such as smallpox, measles, typhus, and cholera, for which Native Americans had no immunity (Denevan, 1976). On their return home, European sailors brought syphil ...
“INFESTED WITH PIRATTS”: PIRACY AND THE ATLANTIC SLAVE
... that pirates found on plundered slave vessels. Most importantly, while some historians, like Marcus Rediker, suspect that the inanimate cargo onboard slave ships was the most attractive component of the slave ship prize, there is primary source evidence that some pirates did in fact take Africans sp ...
... that pirates found on plundered slave vessels. Most importantly, while some historians, like Marcus Rediker, suspect that the inanimate cargo onboard slave ships was the most attractive component of the slave ship prize, there is primary source evidence that some pirates did in fact take Africans sp ...
American History I
... II. Early Civilizations of Mesoamerica A. During the agricultural revolution between 9,000 and 10,000 years ago, Native Americans in Mesoamerica learned how to plant and raise crops. The most important crop was maize, a large-seeded grass known today as corn. Agriculture allowed people to stay in pe ...
... II. Early Civilizations of Mesoamerica A. During the agricultural revolution between 9,000 and 10,000 years ago, Native Americans in Mesoamerica learned how to plant and raise crops. The most important crop was maize, a large-seeded grass known today as corn. Agriculture allowed people to stay in pe ...
File
... six weeks, were spaced through the year's calendar. To cross the Alps, the caravans made a journey that took more than a month from Genoa to the fair cities. ...
... six weeks, were spaced through the year's calendar. To cross the Alps, the caravans made a journey that took more than a month from Genoa to the fair cities. ...
2015-2016 Year at Glance Grade 10 World History
... Humanities Out There, 2003. • DBQ Project Binder “Female workers in Japanese silk factories: Did the costs outweigh the benefits?” ...
... Humanities Out There, 2003. • DBQ Project Binder “Female workers in Japanese silk factories: Did the costs outweigh the benefits?” ...
the columbian exchange
... Step 1 — Half of the students will be New World consumers and the other half will be Old World consumers. Make enough copies of the cards so that each New World consumer receives two New World food cards and each Old World consumer receives two Old World food cards. You may choose to give some consu ...
... Step 1 — Half of the students will be New World consumers and the other half will be Old World consumers. Make enough copies of the cards so that each New World consumer receives two New World food cards and each Old World consumer receives two Old World food cards. You may choose to give some consu ...
The Columbian Exchange: A History of Disease, Food, and Ideas
... caused devastation far exceeding that of even the Black Death in fourteenth-century Europe. Europeans brought deadly viruses and bacteria, such as smallpox, measles, typhus, and cholera, for which Native Americans had no immunity (Denevan, 1976). On their return home, European sailors brought syphil ...
... caused devastation far exceeding that of even the Black Death in fourteenth-century Europe. Europeans brought deadly viruses and bacteria, such as smallpox, measles, typhus, and cholera, for which Native Americans had no immunity (Denevan, 1976). On their return home, European sailors brought syphil ...
Full text
... partisan; they hold that the social sciences have an emancipatory function. In the field of globalization studies, few authors use critical theory explicitly. Most scholars working on globalization would formally subscribe to Max Weber’s injunction to abstain from value judgments. In fact, however, ...
... partisan; they hold that the social sciences have an emancipatory function. In the field of globalization studies, few authors use critical theory explicitly. Most scholars working on globalization would formally subscribe to Max Weber’s injunction to abstain from value judgments. In fact, however, ...
World History First quarter Planning Guide **Note: Refer to the
... on the peoples of Africa and the Americas? How did a small number of Spanish conquistadors conquer a huge Native American empires? How did Spain and Portugal build colonies in the Americas? How did European struggles for power shape the North American continent? How did the Atlantic slave trade shap ...
... on the peoples of Africa and the Americas? How did a small number of Spanish conquistadors conquer a huge Native American empires? How did Spain and Portugal build colonies in the Americas? How did European struggles for power shape the North American continent? How did the Atlantic slave trade shap ...
HH4003: THE SILK ROAD
... This course shall examine the relevance of the Silk Roads as a framework for understanding Asian and global history. It will examine the fascinating and complex history of Eurasian trade routes over land and sea, and the social, religious and political histories of the civilizations, which developed ...
... This course shall examine the relevance of the Silk Roads as a framework for understanding Asian and global history. It will examine the fascinating and complex history of Eurasian trade routes over land and sea, and the social, religious and political histories of the civilizations, which developed ...
FREE Sample Here
... constitute four of the top five most dominant economies by the year 2050 C. Estimates that the BRIC economies' share of world growth could rise from 40 percent in 2000 to more than 70 percent in 2025 D. Reports that Germany, followed by India a decade later, will overtake the United States as the wo ...
... constitute four of the top five most dominant economies by the year 2050 C. Estimates that the BRIC economies' share of world growth could rise from 40 percent in 2000 to more than 70 percent in 2025 D. Reports that Germany, followed by India a decade later, will overtake the United States as the wo ...
File
... • British humiliated with loss – offer Americans everything they ask for with home rule, EXCEPT official independence from the empire • Howe (British general) let Americans retreat several times – Hudson ‘half’ strategy of colonies • Indians – some allied with U.S., others with British • Ben Frankli ...
... • British humiliated with loss – offer Americans everything they ask for with home rule, EXCEPT official independence from the empire • Howe (British general) let Americans retreat several times – Hudson ‘half’ strategy of colonies • Indians – some allied with U.S., others with British • Ben Frankli ...
Department of Politics and Public Administration University of
... enough to resolve all of the principal-agent control problems created by the vastness of the state’s holdings. As a result, not all decisions that were made in the economy were economically rational. The setting of prices and the shortages that resulted from this and from breakdowns in production le ...
... enough to resolve all of the principal-agent control problems created by the vastness of the state’s holdings. As a result, not all decisions that were made in the economy were economically rational. The setting of prices and the shortages that resulted from this and from breakdowns in production le ...
The Economic and Military Foundations of European World Empires
... trade in the development of ancillary technology. A nascent community of innovators developing new weapons, fortifications, and tactics was just as critical to the success of military campaigns as the number and quality of the soldiers involved. Indeed, even highly trained warriors could be defeated ...
... trade in the development of ancillary technology. A nascent community of innovators developing new weapons, fortifications, and tactics was just as critical to the success of military campaigns as the number and quality of the soldiers involved. Indeed, even highly trained warriors could be defeated ...
Full-Text PDF
... short-term loans mainly for big Austrian banks and a few Czech banks, especially the Živnostenská banka. Business relations with these banks were firmly established. A large part of their foreign transactions continued to be carried out by Viennese banking and commercial channels. The economic isola ...
... short-term loans mainly for big Austrian banks and a few Czech banks, especially the Živnostenská banka. Business relations with these banks were firmly established. A large part of their foreign transactions continued to be carried out by Viennese banking and commercial channels. The economic isola ...
apus review questions
... – South Carolina and the West Indies - focused on rice and sugar, slaves made up most of the population ...
... – South Carolina and the West Indies - focused on rice and sugar, slaves made up most of the population ...
AP World History Syllabus
... one quantitative) from the course primary source readers. These skills of primary source analysis will be applied throughout the course. Document Based Question (DBQ): Students analyze evidence from a variety of sources in order to develop a coherent written argument that has a thesis supported by r ...
... one quantitative) from the course primary source readers. These skills of primary source analysis will be applied throughout the course. Document Based Question (DBQ): Students analyze evidence from a variety of sources in order to develop a coherent written argument that has a thesis supported by r ...
Course Description And Expectations Advanced Placement World
... A. States were powerful new systems of rule that mobilized surplus labor and resources over large areas. Early states were often led by a ruler whose source of power was believed to be divine or had divine support and/or who was supported by the military. B. As states grew and competed for land and ...
... A. States were powerful new systems of rule that mobilized surplus labor and resources over large areas. Early states were often led by a ruler whose source of power was believed to be divine or had divine support and/or who was supported by the military. B. As states grew and competed for land and ...
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.