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Chapter 11, The Age of Imperialism, 1800-1920
Chapter 11, The Age of Imperialism, 1800-1920

... territory in Asia and Africa. While Europeans had built trading posts along those continents’ coasts, they held little territory farther inland. By the late 1700s, however, European states began expanding their power in Asia and Africa. Two factors that made this possible were new technologies and t ...
U8_The-First-Silk-Roads_2014_1480L
U8_The-First-Silk-Roads_2014_1480L

... their domesticated animals like cattle, sheep, camels, or horses) were also important in these exchanges. Toward the end of the first millennium BCE, large and powerful pastoral nomadic communities appeared — the Scythians, the Xiongnu, and the Yuezhi. The ability of pastoral nomads to thrive in the ...
Some Parts Sooner, Some Later, and Finally All
Some Parts Sooner, Some Later, and Finally All

... Early American political theorists fought over this project ferociously. The Union married security and commerce to state sovereignty, while circumscribing that sovereignty within an apparatus managed by political elites. This formula made statehood into the principal conduit of political expression ...
US History Ch 1 PP Notes
US History Ch 1 PP Notes

... German Johann Gutenberg produced a Bible made on a printing press in 1455. This invention meant books could be mass produced, rather than copied by hand. The Reformation, a revolt led by Martin Luther, declared that the Bible, not the Church, was the true authority. Luther’s followers called themsel ...
Theorizing Globalization Author(s)
Theorizing Globalization Author(s)

... marketsystem that is absorbingever more areas of the world and spheres of production, exchange, and consumptioninto its orbit.The technological revolutionpresupposesglobal computerizednetworks and the free movement of goods, information,and peoples across national boundaries. Hence, the Internet and ...
Extended Essay - History - ibhistorylevel2hongkong
Extended Essay - History - ibhistorylevel2hongkong

... cast as evil knaves. Profits from the bloody trade secured the imperial hegemony of Georgian England. It was only brought to an end in 1807 because of the move from a colonial sugar trade to industrial capitalism.”15. Economics and morality were the two opposing forces of abolition. Anti-abolitionis ...
THE IMPACT OF GLOBALIZATION ON EDUCATION
THE IMPACT OF GLOBALIZATION ON EDUCATION

... others, the national currency has been pegged to the United States dollar. In still others, major transactions like real states unusually take place using the dollar. Dollarization eliminates the possibility of independent national monetary policy and it exposes countries to policies set in Washingt ...
a) “Old school” Imperialism - Historical Friction
a) “Old school” Imperialism - Historical Friction

... Yet the fate of the mass of its people was hardly more desirable. The wealth of China had excited the greed of western merchants from the time of Marco Polo in the 13th century. But they faced a problem. While China produced many things Europeans wanted, Europe did not produce much the Chinese wante ...
Period 1 - Edublogs @ Macomb ISD
Period 1 - Edublogs @ Macomb ISD

... demographic of herders as they mostly mated within their population ...
HIST 206 Fall 2016 Syllabus for website
HIST 206 Fall 2016 Syllabus for website

... The states of the early modern world transformed themselves into empires, both territorial and overseas, through the mobilization of individuals: missionaries, soldiers, merchants, and settlers. The “discovery” of new lands, the globalization of the market, and the (in)voluntary movement of peoples ...
Theme: Change and Turning Points
Theme: Change and Turning Points

... Americas for Spain. These discoveries had a lasting impact on Europe, Asia, Africa and the Americas. Imperialism European nations competed for colonies across the globe. These colonies were exploited for their raw materials, and used as new markets for European goods. Europeans had little regard for ...
14. Continuity and Change: Since 1648
14. Continuity and Change: Since 1648

... disproportionate to the small size of the Dutch population), so the Dutch were able t o take over the Asian trade routes from Portugal by military force . This gave th e Netherlands control of both the intra-European and long-distance trades . Dutch agricultural technology was quite advanced, concen ...
February 2012 - Harvard University
February 2012 - Harvard University

... Since its emergence in the late 1700s, modern capitalism has been the focus of intense controversy. On the one hand, capitalist economic growth has been extraordinary. On the other hand, capitalism has been prone to crisis, and is also associated with a striking degree of inequality. Much of the po ...
1 Period 1: Technological and Environmental Transformations, to c
1 Period 1: Technological and Environmental Transformations, to c

... sometimes to integrate them within an imperial society and sometimes to exclude them. In some cases, these empires became victims of their own successes. By expanding boundaries too far, they created political, cultural and administrative difficulties that they could not manage. They also experience ...
Chapter 25 - Beaufort County Schools
Chapter 25 - Beaufort County Schools

... territory in Asia and Africa. While Europeans had built trading posts along those continents’ coasts, they held little territory farther inland. By the late 1700s, however, European states began expanding their power in Asia and Africa. Two factors that made this possible were new technologies and t ...
the first silk roads 8
the first silk roads 8

... European neighbors to the west. Small-scale regional trade now became a great trans-Afro-Eurasian exchange network. This occurred around the same time that Augustus came to power in Rome. His rise to become emperor ended a century of civil war. A relatively peaceful era ensued. Trade increased and t ...
HCPSS Curriculum Framework Modern World History Close
HCPSS Curriculum Framework Modern World History Close

... Unit I: Redefining World Society and Culture (transition from the ancient and classical worlds to 1300s) Overview: The end of the classical era is dominated by disturbances in the balance of Afro-Eurasian power with the fall of both the Roman and Han empires. This led to a power void that was soon f ...
Unit 5: Age of Global Empires (Imperialism)
Unit 5: Age of Global Empires (Imperialism)

... With little regard for traditional patterns of settlement, European powers portioned almost the entire African continent. ...
Modern World In Transition
Modern World In Transition

... development of the towns, particularly Italian cities. An important theory regarding the result of Crusades is that it resulted in the economic growth and commercial development of the west with the contact of the East. It is often said that ‘Trade followed the Cross’. Though the knights lost Palest ...
9/21/11 1 AP World History Syllabus
9/21/11 1 AP World History Syllabus

... is  this  the  West  and  the  Rest.  World  historians  seek  to  understand  change  over  time,  cross   cultural  contact  and  exchange,  comparative  history,  and  regional  practices  that  illuminate   world  systems.      Devel ...
1.1-Contact Historysage
1.1-Contact Historysage

... (heavy demand for fur in European fashion) a. Ameridians gained firearms, alcohol, pots, glass beads b. coureurs de bois (“runners of the woods”) – Rough frontiersmen who sought to tap the lucrative fur trade. c. French seamen—voyageurs –befriended and recruited Indians into the fur trade c. French ...
CONTACT - KCSD Connect
CONTACT - KCSD Connect

... (heavy demand for fur in European fashion) a. Ameridians gained firearms, alcohol, pots, glass beads b. coureurs de bois (“runners of the woods”) – Rough frontiersmen who sought to tap the lucrative fur trade. c. French seamen—voyageurs –befriended and recruited Indians into the fur trade c. French ...
Asymmetric Globalization
Asymmetric Globalization

... countries that aggressively sought commercial links to the rest of the world that grew quickly enough to catch up to their richer counterparts. These include Japan, beginning in the Meiji era between 1868 and 1912; and the poorer countries of Western Europe during the 19th century and then again dur ...
standard k - O`Brien Associates
standard k - O`Brien Associates

... d) explaining the rise of industrial economies and their link to imperialism and nationalism; e) assessing the impact of European economic and military power on Asia and Africa, with emphasis on the competition for resources and the responses of colonized peoples. STANDARD WHII.10 The student will d ...
Document
Document

... • Chapter 10: Early Christian and Middle Ages • Chapter 11: Pre-Columbian America • Chapter 12: Tang and Song • Chapter 13: Sinification in Japan, Korea, Vietnam • Chapter 14: Mongols • Chapter 15: Golden Age of Exploration ...
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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.
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