GWH Chapter 13B - Stamford High School
... 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 ...
Piracy in a Mercantilist Society
... were very well planned. The pirates were knowledgeable sailors and knew the trade routes of the merchants. They did not typically go out to sink ships and kill everyone in their path. The main goal of the pirates was to procure the spoils that the ships could offer. With all of Spain’s wealth from h ...
... were very well planned. The pirates were knowledgeable sailors and knew the trade routes of the merchants. They did not typically go out to sink ships and kill everyone in their path. The main goal of the pirates was to procure the spoils that the ships could offer. With all of Spain’s wealth from h ...
The Indian Ocean in World History
... The Cape of Good Hope route. Not developed until the start of the sixteenth century, this route came to be favored by Portugal, Spain, the Netherlands, France, the British Empire, and the United States. It was the favored trading path of early modern times. ...
... The Cape of Good Hope route. Not developed until the start of the sixteenth century, this route came to be favored by Portugal, Spain, the Netherlands, France, the British Empire, and the United States. It was the favored trading path of early modern times. ...
Atlantic History: Concept and Contours
... a whole library of narratives of the first settlements that resulted from the discoveries they traced. They were detailing how a world new to Europeans was gradually explored, not what the emerging world was like. By World War II both imperial history and the history of exploration and discovery had ...
... a whole library of narratives of the first settlements that resulted from the discoveries they traced. They were detailing how a world new to Europeans was gradually explored, not what the emerging world was like. By World War II both imperial history and the history of exploration and discovery had ...
sample
... © 2010 Wadsworth, Cengage Learning ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. No part of this work covered by the copyright herein may be reproduced, transmitted, stored, or used in any form or by any means graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including but not limited to photocopying, recording, scanning, digitizing, tap ...
... © 2010 Wadsworth, Cengage Learning ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. No part of this work covered by the copyright herein may be reproduced, transmitted, stored, or used in any form or by any means graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including but not limited to photocopying, recording, scanning, digitizing, tap ...
Functional Independence World History & Geography Extended High School Content Expectations
... Analyze important regional developments and cultural changes, including the growth of states, towns, and trade in Africa south of the Sahara, Europe, the Americas, and China. W4.3.1 Africa to 1500 – Describe the diverse characteristics of early African societies and the significant changes in Africa ...
... Analyze important regional developments and cultural changes, including the growth of states, towns, and trade in Africa south of the Sahara, Europe, the Americas, and China. W4.3.1 Africa to 1500 – Describe the diverse characteristics of early African societies and the significant changes in Africa ...
Official PDF , 47 pages
... sustaining international commodity to consumers. In short, FT works to connect Southern producers with Northern consumers through international trade networks dedicated to community development. Created by ‘alternative trade organizations’ in recognition of the deteriorating livelihoods of small-sca ...
... sustaining international commodity to consumers. In short, FT works to connect Southern producers with Northern consumers through international trade networks dedicated to community development. Created by ‘alternative trade organizations’ in recognition of the deteriorating livelihoods of small-sca ...
WORLD HISTORY PACING GUIDE 1st QUARTER 23 Days PUT
... 2. How and why ancient trade routes in West Africa allowed for the development of major empires. 3. How maritime and overland trade routes such as the African caravan and Silk Road impacted urbanization, transportation, communication, and the development of international trade centers. 4. Why increa ...
... 2. How and why ancient trade routes in West Africa allowed for the development of major empires. 3. How maritime and overland trade routes such as the African caravan and Silk Road impacted urbanization, transportation, communication, and the development of international trade centers. 4. Why increa ...
US-Africa AGOA Trade Program
... • Legislation affords preferential (duty-free) and nonreciprocal access to U.S. markets to eligible SSA countries • Since its inception in 2000 AGOA has benefitted a few SSA economies, but largely failed to reach its potential as major driving force in continent’s development ...
... • Legislation affords preferential (duty-free) and nonreciprocal access to U.S. markets to eligible SSA countries • Since its inception in 2000 AGOA has benefitted a few SSA economies, but largely failed to reach its potential as major driving force in continent’s development ...
Before Hegemony: Adam Smith, American Independence, and the
... embraced because they fit Britain’s new circumstances+ For centuries, the story goes, London’s policymakers had been in the pockets of England’s “merchants and manufacturers+” Fearful of international competition, these special interests promoted mercantilism as an intellectual justification for pro ...
... embraced because they fit Britain’s new circumstances+ For centuries, the story goes, London’s policymakers had been in the pockets of England’s “merchants and manufacturers+” Fearful of international competition, these special interests promoted mercantilism as an intellectual justification for pro ...
Period I (8000BCE-600BCE)
... I can identify specific technological innovations related to agriculture, including the development of champa rice in Asia, the chinampa field system in the Americas, and the horse collar in Europe, and explain how they allowed production to increase. I can identify specific foreign luxury crops ...
... I can identify specific technological innovations related to agriculture, including the development of champa rice in Asia, the chinampa field system in the Americas, and the horse collar in Europe, and explain how they allowed production to increase. I can identify specific foreign luxury crops ...
Global Citizen – Challenges and Responsibility
... Before the outbreak of the First World War, in the famous essay The Economic Consequences of the Peace (1919), he writes: “The inhabitant of London could order by telephone, sipping his morning tea in bed, the various products of the whole earth, in such quantity as he might see fit, and reasonably ...
... Before the outbreak of the First World War, in the famous essay The Economic Consequences of the Peace (1919), he writes: “The inhabitant of London could order by telephone, sipping his morning tea in bed, the various products of the whole earth, in such quantity as he might see fit, and reasonably ...
History and Social Science
... WHI.15 Describe the indigenous religious practices observed by early Africans before contact with Islam and Christianity. (H) WHI.16 Explain how extended family/kinship and tribal relationships have shaped indigenous African cultures, and their effects on the political and economic development of Af ...
... WHI.15 Describe the indigenous religious practices observed by early Africans before contact with Islam and Christianity. (H) WHI.16 Explain how extended family/kinship and tribal relationships have shaped indigenous African cultures, and their effects on the political and economic development of Af ...
IMPERIALISM
... canon of historical interpretation. Likewise, sovereignty may be infringed by diplomatic means, by treaty, or by economic pres sure. A backward country legally prevented from developing its industries suffers a loss of sovereignty no less real because it may be invisible to the naked eye of the beh ...
... canon of historical interpretation. Likewise, sovereignty may be infringed by diplomatic means, by treaty, or by economic pres sure. A backward country legally prevented from developing its industries suffers a loss of sovereignty no less real because it may be invisible to the naked eye of the beh ...
The League of Nations and the Right to be Free from Enslavement
... The work of the League of Nations' 0 was the turning point. It convinced most of the world to eradicate slavery and to halt the slave trade. By doing so, the League established the right to be free from enslavement as a fundamental freedom under customary international law. It became the first recog ...
... The work of the League of Nations' 0 was the turning point. It convinced most of the world to eradicate slavery and to halt the slave trade. By doing so, the League established the right to be free from enslavement as a fundamental freedom under customary international law. It became the first recog ...
Global Marshall Plan Initiative
... agreed upon internationally in the Millennium Development Declaration in 2000. However, respective efforts and concrete measures to bridge the divide between the rich and the poor, between North and South, and action to safeguard the environment have proved to be grossly inadequate. The Global Marsh ...
... agreed upon internationally in the Millennium Development Declaration in 2000. However, respective efforts and concrete measures to bridge the divide between the rich and the poor, between North and South, and action to safeguard the environment have proved to be grossly inadequate. The Global Marsh ...
COntEnt - 400 Bad Request
... The congress theme of ‘Comparisons and Connections’ is meant to be both generic and specific. It is intended to be generic enough to attract participants from all the overlapping approaches which share a commitment to transcend national historiographies, whether under such headings as (to give only ...
... The congress theme of ‘Comparisons and Connections’ is meant to be both generic and specific. It is intended to be generic enough to attract participants from all the overlapping approaches which share a commitment to transcend national historiographies, whether under such headings as (to give only ...
a printable list of Global Studies approved electives.
... Latin American Studies LAS/GS/MLL/ENGL 202 Latin American in Fact, in Fiction (HU) LAS/SPAN 213 Introduction to Hispanic Literature and Film (ND) LAS/ART 227 Latino Visual Arts and Culture in American Art (HU) LAS/SPAN 243 Indigenous Cultures in Spanish American Narrative (ND) LAS/SPAN 265 Spanish ...
... Latin American Studies LAS/GS/MLL/ENGL 202 Latin American in Fact, in Fiction (HU) LAS/SPAN 213 Introduction to Hispanic Literature and Film (ND) LAS/ART 227 Latino Visual Arts and Culture in American Art (HU) LAS/SPAN 243 Indigenous Cultures in Spanish American Narrative (ND) LAS/SPAN 265 Spanish ...
World History Pacing Guide
... causes of frontier interactions and conflicts, and internal disputes between cultural, social and/or religious groups in classical China, the Mediterranean world, and south Asia (India) prior to 300 C.E. (National Geography Standards 3 and 13A, pp. 188 and 210 4.1 Cross-temporal or Global Expectatio ...
... causes of frontier interactions and conflicts, and internal disputes between cultural, social and/or religious groups in classical China, the Mediterranean world, and south Asia (India) prior to 300 C.E. (National Geography Standards 3 and 13A, pp. 188 and 210 4.1 Cross-temporal or Global Expectatio ...
Modern Capitalism - McMaster University, Canada
... meaning that the historian does not receive great help from the company of sociologists and economists. Are not the latter concerned mainly with observing contemporaneous society? And the historian, in order to understand the past, needs to know and to understand the present. Would it occur to us to ...
... meaning that the historian does not receive great help from the company of sociologists and economists. Are not the latter concerned mainly with observing contemporaneous society? And the historian, in order to understand the past, needs to know and to understand the present. Would it occur to us to ...
Curriculum Map - World History CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RH.9
... *I will analyze the effect of the American Revolution of the creation of independent nation-states. *I will analyze the effect of the French Revolution of the creation of independent nation-states. *I will analyze the effect of the unification of Germany on the creation of independent nation-states. ...
... *I will analyze the effect of the American Revolution of the creation of independent nation-states. *I will analyze the effect of the French Revolution of the creation of independent nation-states. *I will analyze the effect of the unification of Germany on the creation of independent nation-states. ...
A FAIR GLOBALIZATION: CREATING OPPORTUNITIES FOR ALL
... We propose a series of actions – each small in themselves. Yet taken together they will set in train a process to achieve this goal by stimulating and energizing the networks of people and ideas and the economic and social interactions of globalization itself. Our experience working in the Commissio ...
... We propose a series of actions – each small in themselves. Yet taken together they will set in train a process to achieve this goal by stimulating and energizing the networks of people and ideas and the economic and social interactions of globalization itself. Our experience working in the Commissio ...
Global Competency Thesis - DU Portfolio
... the primary research question was whether scholars within the field of global affairs have formed a consensus or not to that effect. Much of the data sought came from scholarly journals and papers as well as recognized institutions and organizations in the field. Findings largely consisted of opinio ...
... the primary research question was whether scholars within the field of global affairs have formed a consensus or not to that effect. Much of the data sought came from scholarly journals and papers as well as recognized institutions and organizations in the field. Findings largely consisted of opinio ...
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.