
The Early Modern Systems in the Fifteenth to the
... Venice for the Eastern spice trade. They began the circumnavigation of Africa and the establishment of trade enclaves in India, the East Indies and Southern China (Macao). The Portuguese King Henry the Navigator established a school for the study of oceanic navigation on a cape overlooking the Atlan ...
... Venice for the Eastern spice trade. They began the circumnavigation of Africa and the establishment of trade enclaves in India, the East Indies and Southern China (Macao). The Portuguese King Henry the Navigator established a school for the study of oceanic navigation on a cape overlooking the Atlan ...
Modern European History II HIS-107
... Aspired towards political and territorial domination Exerted influence on governments already in place ...
... Aspired towards political and territorial domination Exerted influence on governments already in place ...
1 - White Plains Public Schools
... An ethnic group called the Rus first appeared in the historical record in 860 AD. They grew in size and power and were influenced by the Byzantines. They became Orthodox Christians and used the Cyrillic alphabet. The Ottoman Turks attacked and conquered the Byzantine empire in 1453 AD. They restrict ...
... An ethnic group called the Rus first appeared in the historical record in 860 AD. They grew in size and power and were influenced by the Byzantines. They became Orthodox Christians and used the Cyrillic alphabet. The Ottoman Turks attacked and conquered the Byzantine empire in 1453 AD. They restrict ...
AP World History
... spread of agricultural, pastoral, and industrial production; the development of various labor systems associated with these economic systems (including different forms of household management and the use of coerced or free labor); and the ideologies, values, and institutions (such as capitalism and ...
... spread of agricultural, pastoral, and industrial production; the development of various labor systems associated with these economic systems (including different forms of household management and the use of coerced or free labor); and the ideologies, values, and institutions (such as capitalism and ...
medieval europe - Maple Mountain High School
... After the breakup of Charlemagne's empire, European political organization was characterized by weak kings and strong nobles or lords who ruled their estates rather independently. This kind of political organization is known as feudalism. Feudalism was also a social and economic organization based ...
... After the breakup of Charlemagne's empire, European political organization was characterized by weak kings and strong nobles or lords who ruled their estates rather independently. This kind of political organization is known as feudalism. Feudalism was also a social and economic organization based ...
Exploring Central Asia in World History
... the cultural blending within Muslim civilization (Phoenician and Persian) and the spread and acceptance of Islam and the Arabic language. (P, R, M, S) 8. Describe the establishment of trade routes among Asia, Africa, and Europe; the role of the Mongols in increasing Euro-Asian trade; the products an ...
... the cultural blending within Muslim civilization (Phoenician and Persian) and the spread and acceptance of Islam and the Arabic language. (P, R, M, S) 8. Describe the establishment of trade routes among Asia, Africa, and Europe; the role of the Mongols in increasing Euro-Asian trade; the products an ...
Chap 1-4.pmd
... trading group in England could compete with the East India Company. With this charter the Company could venture across the oceans, looking for new lands from which it could buy goods at a cheap price, and carry them back to Europe to sell at higher prices. The Company did not have to fear competitio ...
... trading group in England could compete with the East India Company. With this charter the Company could venture across the oceans, looking for new lands from which it could buy goods at a cheap price, and carry them back to Europe to sell at higher prices. The Company did not have to fear competitio ...
Ch 4 Complete
... 1. Slave societies arose in areas where a commodity was produced that commanded an international market. 2. Tobacco was the most important commodity produced in eighteenth century North America, accounting for 25 % of the value of all colonial exports. 3. Slavery allowed the expansion of tobacco pro ...
... 1. Slave societies arose in areas where a commodity was produced that commanded an international market. 2. Tobacco was the most important commodity produced in eighteenth century North America, accounting for 25 % of the value of all colonial exports. 3. Slavery allowed the expansion of tobacco pro ...
Unit 6-Old Regime & European Involvement in the Americas
... New Methods of Textile Production *Textile production pioneered the Industrial Revolution Earliest industrial change took place in the countryside cottage industry = 1. an agent would take wool to a peasants home 2. peasant would spin the wool into_THREAD__ domestic system = 3. agent would return to ...
... New Methods of Textile Production *Textile production pioneered the Industrial Revolution Earliest industrial change took place in the countryside cottage industry = 1. an agent would take wool to a peasants home 2. peasant would spin the wool into_THREAD__ domestic system = 3. agent would return to ...
Information - U3A Adelaide
... publication of opinions critical of the Church in the vernacular brought forth a violent response from the Church: Luther’s publication of a treatise in German marked his final break with the Papacy. However, the majority of humanists were appalled by the growth of Protestant belief and the loss of ...
... publication of opinions critical of the Church in the vernacular brought forth a violent response from the Church: Luther’s publication of a treatise in German marked his final break with the Papacy. However, the majority of humanists were appalled by the growth of Protestant belief and the loss of ...
Europeans Explore the East - Mr. O`Sullivan`s World of History
... Spain and established the Dutch Republic. In a short time, the Netherlands became a leading sea power. By 1600, the Dutch owned the largest fleet of ships in the world—20,000 vessels. Pressure from Dutch and also English fleets eroded Portuguese control of the Asian region. The Dutch and English the ...
... Spain and established the Dutch Republic. In a short time, the Netherlands became a leading sea power. By 1600, the Dutch owned the largest fleet of ships in the world—20,000 vessels. Pressure from Dutch and also English fleets eroded Portuguese control of the Asian region. The Dutch and English the ...
GLOBAL HISTORY AND GEOGRAPHY Friday, REGENTS HIGH SCHOOL EXAMINATION
... 32 World War II was a turning point for many European colonies in Africa and Asia because the war led to (1) the occupation of most European colonies by United Nations troops (2) increased efforts by these colonies to gain independence (3) the expansion of European imperialism (4) decreased friction ...
... 32 World War II was a turning point for many European colonies in Africa and Asia because the war led to (1) the occupation of most European colonies by United Nations troops (2) increased efforts by these colonies to gain independence (3) the expansion of European imperialism (4) decreased friction ...
Chapter 25 notes
... By the late 17th century, many Fulani had settled in cities Observed a strict form of Islam like that in NN Afr and Arabia Beginning about 1680 and through the 19th, the Fulani led military campaigns to establish Islam and create their own brand of Islam in E Afr Did not stamp out African re ...
... By the late 17th century, many Fulani had settled in cities Observed a strict form of Islam like that in NN Afr and Arabia Beginning about 1680 and through the 19th, the Fulani led military campaigns to establish Islam and create their own brand of Islam in E Afr Did not stamp out African re ...
pacing guide - Tallapoosa County Schools
... World History: 1500 to the Present 11. Describe the impact of European nationalism and Western imperialism as force of global transformation, including the unification of Italy and Germany, the rise of Japan’s power in East Asia, economic roots of imperialism, imperialist ideology, colonialism and n ...
... World History: 1500 to the Present 11. Describe the impact of European nationalism and Western imperialism as force of global transformation, including the unification of Italy and Germany, the rise of Japan’s power in East Asia, economic roots of imperialism, imperialist ideology, colonialism and n ...
REGENTS: June 2009 File - Smithtown Central School District
... Print your name and the name of your school on the lines above. Then turn to the last page of this booklet, which is the answer sheet for Part I. Fold the last page along the perforations and, slowly and carefully, tear off the answer sheet. Then fill in the heading of your answer sheet. Now print y ...
... Print your name and the name of your school on the lines above. Then turn to the last page of this booklet, which is the answer sheet for Part I. Fold the last page along the perforations and, slowly and carefully, tear off the answer sheet. Then fill in the heading of your answer sheet. Now print y ...
World History High School World History
... Recall how Russia also built a powerful state and empire. Observe how Muslim invaders from Central Asia took power in India and established the Mughal Empire, which lasted from 1526 to 1707 Explain why East Asian states also increased their power during this era. Describe how interrelated factors he ...
... Recall how Russia also built a powerful state and empire. Observe how Muslim invaders from Central Asia took power in India and established the Mughal Empire, which lasted from 1526 to 1707 Explain why East Asian states also increased their power during this era. Describe how interrelated factors he ...
NA_Boyer Ch 02.v2
... Congo River, a welter of chiefdoms gave rise to four major kingdoms by the fifteenth century. Their kings were chiefs who, after defeating neighboring chiefdoms, installed their own kin as local rulers of the newly conquered territories. Of these kingdoms, Kongo was the most powerful and highly cent ...
... Congo River, a welter of chiefdoms gave rise to four major kingdoms by the fifteenth century. Their kings were chiefs who, after defeating neighboring chiefdoms, installed their own kin as local rulers of the newly conquered territories. Of these kingdoms, Kongo was the most powerful and highly cent ...
Case study 15.1: The WTO – a victim of its own success?
... and complex component of the talks. Developing countries want, among other things, an end to agricultural subsidies in developed markets and greater access to developed markets. This requires deep cuts in support to farmers in developed countries, which will only be possible for developed country po ...
... and complex component of the talks. Developing countries want, among other things, an end to agricultural subsidies in developed markets and greater access to developed markets. This requires deep cuts in support to farmers in developed countries, which will only be possible for developed country po ...
AP World History Review
... and less internally coherent than the Middle Kingdom (interior mountains etc), which helps explain the differences in openness to influence, and political stability India absorbed other cultures while China remains ethnically homogeneous (90 % of all Chinese trace their ancestry back to the Han dyna ...
... and less internally coherent than the Middle Kingdom (interior mountains etc), which helps explain the differences in openness to influence, and political stability India absorbed other cultures while China remains ethnically homogeneous (90 % of all Chinese trace their ancestry back to the Han dyna ...
File
... The people of Ghana used their ability make iron swords, spears, and lances to defeat their neighbors and gain control over West Africa’s major trade routes ...
... The people of Ghana used their ability make iron swords, spears, and lances to defeat their neighbors and gain control over West Africa’s major trade routes ...
Alternatives to Realism and Idealism
... • While other nation-states existed, international politics was essentially European politics – Power distributed among England, France, Austria, Sweden, Spain, Turkey, and later Prussia and Russia – Aggressively minded states were deterred from seeking hegemony by the “balance of power” represented ...
... • While other nation-states existed, international politics was essentially European politics – Power distributed among England, France, Austria, Sweden, Spain, Turkey, and later Prussia and Russia – Aggressively minded states were deterred from seeking hegemony by the “balance of power” represented ...
Hobsbawm_Age of Revolution_Ch 01
... smaller one, the Americas obviously a much smaller one. Roughly, two out of every three humans would be Asians in 1800, one out of everyfiveEuropean, one out of ten African, one out of thirty-three American or Oceanian. It is obvious that this much smaller population was much more sparsely distribut ...
... smaller one, the Americas obviously a much smaller one. Roughly, two out of every three humans would be Asians in 1800, one out of everyfiveEuropean, one out of ten African, one out of thirty-three American or Oceanian. It is obvious that this much smaller population was much more sparsely distribut ...
Review Essay: Teaching the Great Divergence
... amount of "breathing room," because eventually the region became densely populated and less dependent on the core regions of China. Because disease had wiped out the native populations of the Americas, there were far more available resources. Europeans in the Americas also set up plantations that on ...
... amount of "breathing room," because eventually the region became densely populated and less dependent on the core regions of China. Because disease had wiped out the native populations of the Americas, there were far more available resources. Europeans in the Americas also set up plantations that on ...
apwh_curriculumframeworkperiod3
... networks of human interaction within and across regions. The results were unprecedented concentrations of wealth and the intensification of cross-cultural exchanges. Innovations in transportation, state policies, and mercantile practices contributed to the expansion and development of commercial net ...
... networks of human interaction within and across regions. The results were unprecedented concentrations of wealth and the intensification of cross-cultural exchanges. Innovations in transportation, state policies, and mercantile practices contributed to the expansion and development of commercial net ...
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.