
Historical Thinking Skills (“The Nine Habits of Mind”)
... time as it spread throughout Asia — first through the support of the Mauryan Emperor Ashoka, and then through the efforts of missionaries and merchants, and the establishment of educational institutions to promote its core teachings. B. Confucianism’s core beliefs and writings originated in the writ ...
... time as it spread throughout Asia — first through the support of the Mauryan Emperor Ashoka, and then through the efforts of missionaries and merchants, and the establishment of educational institutions to promote its core teachings. B. Confucianism’s core beliefs and writings originated in the writ ...
Global Flashcards – Set 1
... (2) an international policy of laissez-faire economics (3) a network linking industrialized nations (4) an exchange of land between nobles (Aug 14 Q17) In the 17th and 18th centuries, the primary goal of mercantilism as practiced by European countries was to (1) glorify the power and aggressiveness ...
... (2) an international policy of laissez-faire economics (3) a network linking industrialized nations (4) an exchange of land between nobles (Aug 14 Q17) In the 17th and 18th centuries, the primary goal of mercantilism as practiced by European countries was to (1) glorify the power and aggressiveness ...
Europe 1750 to 1914
... Ability to destroy land for resources increased due to technology Examples: Industrial areas of Western Europe, Eastern USA ...
... Ability to destroy land for resources increased due to technology Examples: Industrial areas of Western Europe, Eastern USA ...
The Age of Imperialism (1870–1914)
... Since the seventeenth century, China had isolated itself from the rest of the world and refused to adopt Western ways. The Chinese permitted trade but only at the Port of Canton, where the rights of European merchants were at the whim of the emperor. Imperialism in China began with the First Opium W ...
... Since the seventeenth century, China had isolated itself from the rest of the world and refused to adopt Western ways. The Chinese permitted trade but only at the Port of Canton, where the rights of European merchants were at the whim of the emperor. Imperialism in China began with the First Opium W ...
Manage War on Terrorism Coalition
... Afghanistan and Iraq: Differences Afghan War: multilateral approach that led to military success– non-exclusivist understanding of exceptionalism Iraq: unilateral approach and exclusivist exceptionalism that demonstrates the ascendancy of the neoconservatives and the problems of that approach. Also ...
... Afghanistan and Iraq: Differences Afghan War: multilateral approach that led to military success– non-exclusivist understanding of exceptionalism Iraq: unilateral approach and exclusivist exceptionalism that demonstrates the ascendancy of the neoconservatives and the problems of that approach. Also ...
Trade Cooperation before 1914
... When the great nineteenth-century expansion in foreign trade took off following the industrial revolution and the end of the Napoleonic wars, Britain stood out as the economic leader. In some respects, its position was not unlike that of the United States after the Second World War. Though it did no ...
... When the great nineteenth-century expansion in foreign trade took off following the industrial revolution and the end of the Napoleonic wars, Britain stood out as the economic leader. In some respects, its position was not unlike that of the United States after the Second World War. Though it did no ...
globalisation advantages and disadvantages
... of population, consumption or religious habits appear at the level of a single country or continent, region; Interdependence. The independent nature is the result of connections established among various components of environmental structure, mutual influences and conditioning. The economic situa ...
... of population, consumption or religious habits appear at the level of a single country or continent, region; Interdependence. The independent nature is the result of connections established among various components of environmental structure, mutual influences and conditioning. The economic situa ...
6692 EXPLORATIONS HISTORY A-cg_156x234mm
... also occurred in commercialized regions in Japan, and became a widespread pattern in many parts of the world in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Although most migrants initially traveled only a few hundred kilometers, fast and cheap transport by boat and train meant that, from the 1860s onwar ...
... also occurred in commercialized regions in Japan, and became a widespread pattern in many parts of the world in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Although most migrants initially traveled only a few hundred kilometers, fast and cheap transport by boat and train meant that, from the 1860s onwar ...
AP World History Survival Guide
... c. Audience: To whom is the speaker addressing his arguments? Is he/she writing to someone in a position of authority, a subordinate, or a foreign leader? Ex: Asantewa addresses the men of her tribe in an impassioned speech. She claims that if the men will not fight as in the days of old, then the w ...
... c. Audience: To whom is the speaker addressing his arguments? Is he/she writing to someone in a position of authority, a subordinate, or a foreign leader? Ex: Asantewa addresses the men of her tribe in an impassioned speech. She claims that if the men will not fight as in the days of old, then the w ...
Part 2, 1500 to the present
... possible prices due to competition among producers. But with companies focused on making the best possible profits, capitalism can sometimes harm people. The African slave trade was one example. After the discovery of America, European countries began sending people to the New World to establish col ...
... possible prices due to competition among producers. But with companies focused on making the best possible profits, capitalism can sometimes harm people. The African slave trade was one example. After the discovery of America, European countries began sending people to the New World to establish col ...
RAI DIEZ a feb 27.indd - Sistema abierto de publicaciones seriadas
... Strauss and George Wilhelm Friederich Hegel. Considers what Hegel said about Napoleon who understood the rationality of the world and was the person who was in the possibility to obtain universal recognition. Huntington view about the clash of civilization on the other hand shows a political tendenc ...
... Strauss and George Wilhelm Friederich Hegel. Considers what Hegel said about Napoleon who understood the rationality of the world and was the person who was in the possibility to obtain universal recognition. Huntington view about the clash of civilization on the other hand shows a political tendenc ...
Africa and its Golden Age of Empires
... of the caliphate did not survive, Islam held the areas together culturally as it mixed with natively customs and religions. Despite the political disunity and the splits between Sunni and Shi'a, the Islamic World emerged as an entire cultural area during this era. Vikings - The Vikings swept into ma ...
... of the caliphate did not survive, Islam held the areas together culturally as it mixed with natively customs and religions. Despite the political disunity and the splits between Sunni and Shi'a, the Islamic World emerged as an entire cultural area during this era. Vikings - The Vikings swept into ma ...
international communication - Cognella Academic Publishing
... dependence of a minor’ (Kant). But the claim to bestow happiness condensed, first, in the violent history of European colonialism and imperialism, and then, after the Second World War, in so-called ‘development politics’ and the ‘theory of developing countries’. It is no accident that the word ‘moder ...
... dependence of a minor’ (Kant). But the claim to bestow happiness condensed, first, in the violent history of European colonialism and imperialism, and then, after the Second World War, in so-called ‘development politics’ and the ‘theory of developing countries’. It is no accident that the word ‘moder ...
Modern World History B - Mrs. Goldstein`s Class
... Directions: Use this list of key concepts, questions, and ideas as a starting place for studying. Use class notes and your textbook to review specific events mentioned below. Check your understanding by answering the key questions, thinking about all possible responses and multiple examples. Think a ...
... Directions: Use this list of key concepts, questions, and ideas as a starting place for studying. Use class notes and your textbook to review specific events mentioned below. Check your understanding by answering the key questions, thinking about all possible responses and multiple examples. Think a ...
English - Permanent Mission of the Republic of Belarus to the United
... that has irrevocably changed the course of history had not been fired? The shot set in motion some still fully unexplained dynamic. The question of “honor” there for some key European countries overrode both common sense and all other considerations. Millions paid with their lives for that hypocriti ...
... that has irrevocably changed the course of history had not been fired? The shot set in motion some still fully unexplained dynamic. The question of “honor” there for some key European countries overrode both common sense and all other considerations. Millions paid with their lives for that hypocriti ...
this report - Brookings Institution
... and fall of globalization a century ago.1 Globalization’s first wave, which lasted from 1870 to 1914, is viewed today as the embodiment of the liberal open economic paradigm. This period saw the spread of international trade, built on the exchange of Western manufactures for developing economies’ pr ...
... and fall of globalization a century ago.1 Globalization’s first wave, which lasted from 1870 to 1914, is viewed today as the embodiment of the liberal open economic paradigm. This period saw the spread of international trade, built on the exchange of Western manufactures for developing economies’ pr ...
Global European economic model
... to create a transnational political model to harmonize their markets and gain an advantage in global economies of scale through regional. U.S. are so strong in relation to Canada and Mexico (two major trading partners) that it would be impossible to create an entity that would even resemble a partne ...
... to create a transnational political model to harmonize their markets and gain an advantage in global economies of scale through regional. U.S. are so strong in relation to Canada and Mexico (two major trading partners) that it would be impossible to create an entity that would even resemble a partne ...
Fusion West African Kingdoms - White Plains Public Schools
... The camel could plod steadily over much longer distances, covering as much as 60 miles in a day. In addition, it could travel more than ten days without water, twice as long as most pack animals. With the camel, trade increased. The trade routes crossed the savanna through the region farmed by the S ...
... The camel could plod steadily over much longer distances, covering as much as 60 miles in a day. In addition, it could travel more than ten days without water, twice as long as most pack animals. With the camel, trade increased. The trade routes crossed the savanna through the region farmed by the S ...
MCHS Modern World History Curriculum Pacing 1st Sem 2012
... Create a work of art or a piece of writing that reflects the changes in thinking after World War I. Create a grid with all causes of World War I down the vertical axis and all the participant nations across the top. In each box formed by this grid, indicate with the first letter whether this was a p ...
... Create a work of art or a piece of writing that reflects the changes in thinking after World War I. Create a grid with all causes of World War I down the vertical axis and all the participant nations across the top. In each box formed by this grid, indicate with the first letter whether this was a p ...
European Slave Routes in the Indian Ocean
... Britain’s supremacy in the area was strengthened by the ring of strategic places it had captured during the war, such as Cape of Good Hope (1806), Ile de France – Mauritius (1810), Simon Bay (1813) and Seychelles (1810). After the Treaty of Paris (1814), England returned Bourbon (off Mauritius) to F ...
... Britain’s supremacy in the area was strengthened by the ring of strategic places it had captured during the war, such as Cape of Good Hope (1806), Ile de France – Mauritius (1810), Simon Bay (1813) and Seychelles (1810). After the Treaty of Paris (1814), England returned Bourbon (off Mauritius) to F ...
transregional interaction in the third
... second-wave they too featured states, cities, specialized economic roles, and sharp class and gender inequalities. Thus all represent a continuation of a well-established pattern in world history- the globalization of civilization. As newcomers to the growing number of civilizations, all borrowed he ...
... second-wave they too featured states, cities, specialized economic roles, and sharp class and gender inequalities. Thus all represent a continuation of a well-established pattern in world history- the globalization of civilization. As newcomers to the growing number of civilizations, all borrowed he ...
Study Questions - Imagine School at North Port
... 1. Compare one or more major European monarchies from this period with an Asian state, such as Ottoman Turkey, Ming China, Tokugama Japan, or Mughal India. 2. How were states in Africa and the Americas similar to and different from those in Europe and Asia? 3. Consider the various forms of monarchy ...
... 1. Compare one or more major European monarchies from this period with an Asian state, such as Ottoman Turkey, Ming China, Tokugama Japan, or Mughal India. 2. How were states in Africa and the Americas similar to and different from those in Europe and Asia? 3. Consider the various forms of monarchy ...
CHAPTER 6 India and Southeast Asia, 1500 B.C.E.–1025 C.E.
... After the death of the Buddha, some of his followers organized themselves into monasteries and nunneries and developed a complex, hierarchical religion, complete with worship of the Buddha, reverence for bodhisattvas, and artistic representations of the Buddha. The religion broke into two major scho ...
... After the death of the Buddha, some of his followers organized themselves into monasteries and nunneries and developed a complex, hierarchical religion, complete with worship of the Buddha, reverence for bodhisattvas, and artistic representations of the Buddha. The religion broke into two major scho ...
AP World Global Interactions Review 1450
... tip of Africa and connect to the Indian Ocean ◦ By the end of the 15th c their feat was accomplished - after years of experiments with wind and ocean currents and discovering the fastest and safest way to return home to Portugal ...
... tip of Africa and connect to the Indian Ocean ◦ By the end of the 15th c their feat was accomplished - after years of experiments with wind and ocean currents and discovering the fastest and safest way to return home to Portugal ...
Period 4 Review
... to the Indian Ocean ◦ By the end of the 15th c their feat was accomplished - after years of experiments with wind and ocean currents and discovering the faste ...
... to the Indian Ocean ◦ By the end of the 15th c their feat was accomplished - after years of experiments with wind and ocean currents and discovering the faste ...
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.