
The Decline of the Church
... the Middle East. Europeans were about to rediscover the wealth and more advanced civilizations of Asia. The Roman Catholic Church was the only center of knowledge during this period and learning was mostly religion-centered. True scholarship lived on in the monasteries where devout monks had withdra ...
... the Middle East. Europeans were about to rediscover the wealth and more advanced civilizations of Asia. The Roman Catholic Church was the only center of knowledge during this period and learning was mostly religion-centered. True scholarship lived on in the monasteries where devout monks had withdra ...
Communication in the Age of Globalization
... Indonesia; Christianity reached Africa, Europe, and Asia • Buddhism migrated from India into much of East and Southeast Asia; Jews, Indians and Chinese have long lived in vast diasporas. ...
... Indonesia; Christianity reached Africa, Europe, and Asia • Buddhism migrated from India into much of East and Southeast Asia; Jews, Indians and Chinese have long lived in vast diasporas. ...
Asian Power Goes South
... region to be affected by the European expansion. When Vasco da Gama first entered Calicut harbor in 1498, their appearance perplexed virtually everyone in the port. The admiral explained that he had been sent to develop a southern trade route that would bypass the ancient land connection now dominat ...
... region to be affected by the European expansion. When Vasco da Gama first entered Calicut harbor in 1498, their appearance perplexed virtually everyone in the port. The admiral explained that he had been sent to develop a southern trade route that would bypass the ancient land connection now dominat ...
FALL 2015 HISTORY 105-003 SURVEY OF GLOBAL HISTORY
... Course description: This course will study the successive waves of integration and conflict that shaped the world from the late 1400s to the present. The study of the international economic, social, cultural, and political processes that unfolded in the last five centuries will make students aware o ...
... Course description: This course will study the successive waves of integration and conflict that shaped the world from the late 1400s to the present. The study of the international economic, social, cultural, and political processes that unfolded in the last five centuries will make students aware o ...
ap 1450 – 1750 test review sheet
... To Africa from Europe: European manufactured goods (guns, copper goods) 49) Major consequence of monoculture: environmental degradation 50) Which British rulers were associated with the Glorious Revolution? _________________________. (It was bloodless!! ) 51a) Which nursery rhyme is associated with ...
... To Africa from Europe: European manufactured goods (guns, copper goods) 49) Major consequence of monoculture: environmental degradation 50) Which British rulers were associated with the Glorious Revolution? _________________________. (It was bloodless!! ) 51a) Which nursery rhyme is associated with ...
globalization and state power
... Transnational networks are such by virtue of their ability to operate without regard to national boundaries and without being affected by them. Examples include cultural movements and religious sects. Their reach may be cross continental in scope (e.g. the ‘hippy’ movement of the 1960s), or they may ...
... Transnational networks are such by virtue of their ability to operate without regard to national boundaries and without being affected by them. Examples include cultural movements and religious sects. Their reach may be cross continental in scope (e.g. the ‘hippy’ movement of the 1960s), or they may ...
WHIIExplorers
... 6. In Asia, a great part of colonization took place because of groups of ____---. A) Mercenaries B)Monarchs, C) Merchants D) Indigenous Peoples ...
... 6. In Asia, a great part of colonization took place because of groups of ____---. A) Mercenaries B)Monarchs, C) Merchants D) Indigenous Peoples ...
Examples of What You Need to Know
... Role of women in different belief systems -- Buddhism, Christianity, Confucianism, and Hinduism Understanding of how and why the collapse of empire was more severe in western Europe than it was in the eastern Mediterranean or in China Compare the caste system to other systems of social inequality de ...
... Role of women in different belief systems -- Buddhism, Christianity, Confucianism, and Hinduism Understanding of how and why the collapse of empire was more severe in western Europe than it was in the eastern Mediterranean or in China Compare the caste system to other systems of social inequality de ...
Unit Outlines - One Page Each Unit
... Role of women in different belief systems -- Buddhism, Christianity, Confucianism, and Hinduism Understanding of how and why the collapse of empire was more severe in western Europe than it was in the eastern Mediterranean or in China Compare the caste system to other systems of social inequality de ...
... Role of women in different belief systems -- Buddhism, Christianity, Confucianism, and Hinduism Understanding of how and why the collapse of empire was more severe in western Europe than it was in the eastern Mediterranean or in China Compare the caste system to other systems of social inequality de ...
Foundations: c. 8000 B.C.E.–600 C.E.
... Role of women in different belief systems -- Buddhism, Christianity, Confucianism, and Hinduism Understanding of how and why the collapse of empire was more severe in western Europe than it was in the eastern Mediterranean or in China Compare the caste system to other systems of social inequality de ...
... Role of women in different belief systems -- Buddhism, Christianity, Confucianism, and Hinduism Understanding of how and why the collapse of empire was more severe in western Europe than it was in the eastern Mediterranean or in China Compare the caste system to other systems of social inequality de ...
Chapter 11 PPT File - Northwest ISD Moodle
... • With the Cotton Gin, a single worker could produce 50 lbs. of cotton each day. • This soon became the fastest growing industry in America because cotton was now worth more than most other farm products. • It caused many farmers to move further west in order to get more land for cotton farming. • I ...
... • With the Cotton Gin, a single worker could produce 50 lbs. of cotton each day. • This soon became the fastest growing industry in America because cotton was now worth more than most other farm products. • It caused many farmers to move further west in order to get more land for cotton farming. • I ...
The deconstruction of eurocentric myths and the reconstruction of global histories of material progress in China and the West from the accession of the Ming (1368) to the British Industrial Revolution (1756-1846)
... from imperial rule. This impressive, but still far from comprehensive, volume of historical research has, moreover, been communicated to the West by specialists in area studies from North American, European, Australian and Japanese universities. Not long after the second world war and during the er ...
... from imperial rule. This impressive, but still far from comprehensive, volume of historical research has, moreover, been communicated to the West by specialists in area studies from North American, European, Australian and Japanese universities. Not long after the second world war and during the er ...
Unit 15 Early Global Commodities Section 1 Unit Purpose
... relationships, because its history reveals both the everyday life of common folks and the intricacies of status and class. This unit looks at the changing foodways, culture, and commerce in the Caribbean, Asia, and Europe. It is related to Unit 15 because changing foodways emerged from the increasin ...
... relationships, because its history reveals both the everyday life of common folks and the intricacies of status and class. This unit looks at the changing foodways, culture, and commerce in the Caribbean, Asia, and Europe. It is related to Unit 15 because changing foodways emerged from the increasin ...
Slide 1 - Ms. Merino`s Advanced Placement World History
... a textile mill in England, early 1800s. ...
... a textile mill in England, early 1800s. ...
1. Laws that established literacy tests, poll taxes, and grandfather
... (2) Progressive Movement Changes American Lives (3) American Citizens Get New Responsibilities (4) United States Becomes an Industrial Nation In the period from 1890 to 1910, most immigrants from eastern and southern Europe settled in large cities of the eastern United States primarily because (1) f ...
... (2) Progressive Movement Changes American Lives (3) American Citizens Get New Responsibilities (4) United States Becomes an Industrial Nation In the period from 1890 to 1910, most immigrants from eastern and southern Europe settled in large cities of the eastern United States primarily because (1) f ...
Economics of Conflict and Peace
... Rival mechanisms that explain the relationship between natural resource and conflict: Natural resources could provide a way to finance rebellions that have been started for other reasons thereby increasing the prospects of success. If so, then there should be reasons to take these other reasons into ...
... Rival mechanisms that explain the relationship between natural resource and conflict: Natural resources could provide a way to finance rebellions that have been started for other reasons thereby increasing the prospects of success. If so, then there should be reasons to take these other reasons into ...
What Trade Policy for the Developed Countries Today: Clusters like
... preferential agreements with third countries have lowered the level of tariff protection community, resulting in increased vulnerability to fluctuations in exchange rates of countries. Moreover, at the time of the signing of the Treaty of Rome, the economy and foreign trade of the Community were pri ...
... preferential agreements with third countries have lowered the level of tariff protection community, resulting in increased vulnerability to fluctuations in exchange rates of countries. Moreover, at the time of the signing of the Treaty of Rome, the economy and foreign trade of the Community were pri ...
Trade and Towns
... (urban city-states) like their counterparts in Italy. Oftentimes approving the town’s independent status would be a charter that would detail the specific duties and liberties the town and lord owed each other. Also, as serfs and towns bought their freedom, they came more closely under the king's au ...
... (urban city-states) like their counterparts in Italy. Oftentimes approving the town’s independent status would be a charter that would detail the specific duties and liberties the town and lord owed each other. Also, as serfs and towns bought their freedom, they came more closely under the king's au ...
Globalization Presentation
... growing population means that the developing nations have a large labor force. However, these laborers often lack education, healthcare and nutrition. Despite having a large labor force developing nations often have unskilled and unhealthy labor. ...
... growing population means that the developing nations have a large labor force. However, these laborers often lack education, healthcare and nutrition. Despite having a large labor force developing nations often have unskilled and unhealthy labor. ...
Globalization
... growing population means that the developing nations have a large labor force. However, these laborers often lack education, healthcare and nutrition. Despite having a large labor force developing nations often have unskilled and unhealthy labor. ...
... growing population means that the developing nations have a large labor force. However, these laborers often lack education, healthcare and nutrition. Despite having a large labor force developing nations often have unskilled and unhealthy labor. ...
File
... - To prevent fighting 14 European nations met at the Berlin Conference of 1884-1885 to lay down the ground rules for the division of Africa o The nations agreed to: Any European country could claim land in Africa by notifying other nations of their claims and showing they could control the area o ...
... - To prevent fighting 14 European nations met at the Berlin Conference of 1884-1885 to lay down the ground rules for the division of Africa o The nations agreed to: Any European country could claim land in Africa by notifying other nations of their claims and showing they could control the area o ...
HIBT – Economics of Business Environment – Notes Lecture 10
... Extending product life-cycles by producing and marketing products in new countries The urge to merge – the financial incentives created by the global deregulation of capital markets is making it easier to achieve acquisitions and mergers and thereby encouraging the external growth of a business Impa ...
... Extending product life-cycles by producing and marketing products in new countries The urge to merge – the financial incentives created by the global deregulation of capital markets is making it easier to achieve acquisitions and mergers and thereby encouraging the external growth of a business Impa ...
Rise of the West DBQ
... England's development. Yet England's 19th C growth, after all, was based on both cotton and coal, and while England had coal in plenty, cotton was completely absent and England depended entirely on imports. China had lots of cotton and lots of coal, although as Pomeranz argues much of that coal was ...
... England's development. Yet England's 19th C growth, after all, was based on both cotton and coal, and while England had coal in plenty, cotton was completely absent and England depended entirely on imports. China had lots of cotton and lots of coal, although as Pomeranz argues much of that coal was ...
THE AMERICAN PEOPLE CREATING A NATION
... 1757 British Prime Minister William Pitt focused warfare in North America, sending 23,000 troops and 14,000 mariners in 1757 and 1758 ...
... 1757 British Prime Minister William Pitt focused warfare in North America, sending 23,000 troops and 14,000 mariners in 1757 and 1758 ...
AP® World History Syllabus
... What are the issues involved in using “civilization” as an organizing principle in world history? What is the most common source of change: connection or diffusion versus independent invention? What was the effect of the Neolithic Revolution on gender relations? Major Comparisons and Analyses: Examp ...
... What are the issues involved in using “civilization” as an organizing principle in world history? What is the most common source of change: connection or diffusion versus independent invention? What was the effect of the Neolithic Revolution on gender relations? Major Comparisons and Analyses: Examp ...
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.