File - World History - Mr. K
... • While the Portuguese sailed east to reach the source of the spice trade, the Spanish sailed west • Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand of Spain financed Christopher Columbus to sail west to reach Asia in 1492 – Columbus thinks that the circumference of the world is not as large as others thought it ...
... • While the Portuguese sailed east to reach the source of the spice trade, the Spanish sailed west • Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand of Spain financed Christopher Columbus to sail west to reach Asia in 1492 – Columbus thinks that the circumference of the world is not as large as others thought it ...
World Trade, Globalization, and the Emergence of Europe
... African slave traders & prince grew rich Latin American regional merchants and farmers that supplied food to the mines ...
... African slave traders & prince grew rich Latin American regional merchants and farmers that supplied food to the mines ...
Chapter 14 - Mr. Rhone
... volume of trade for most of the time period By 1789, however, a shift in the balance of trade saw huge increases in overseas trade and much lower increases in intra-European trade These changing trade patterns interlocked Europe, Africa, the East and the Americas ...
... volume of trade for most of the time period By 1789, however, a shift in the balance of trade saw huge increases in overseas trade and much lower increases in intra-European trade These changing trade patterns interlocked Europe, Africa, the East and the Americas ...
APWH REVIEW
... industrialized countries produced manufactured products, and people in less industrialized countries produced manufactured products, and people in less industrialized countries produced the materials necessary for that production. • Many countries in Latin America, sub-Saharan Africa, south Asia, an ...
... industrialized countries produced manufactured products, and people in less industrialized countries produced manufactured products, and people in less industrialized countries produced the materials necessary for that production. • Many countries in Latin America, sub-Saharan Africa, south Asia, an ...
Ch 1 Key Points
... home country and could only buy their manufactured goods from that home country. ...
... home country and could only buy their manufactured goods from that home country. ...
Slide 1 - My CCSD
... were vulnerable to attack from central Asia and therefore tried to absorb Central Asian territory and make it self-supporting and profitable by developing agriculture and mining Also it was expensive to maintain garrisons of troops there because everything had to be brought in. This was accomplished ...
... were vulnerable to attack from central Asia and therefore tried to absorb Central Asian territory and make it self-supporting and profitable by developing agriculture and mining Also it was expensive to maintain garrisons of troops there because everything had to be brought in. This was accomplished ...
Africa, India, and the New British Empire, 1750-1970
... 1. Historians usually depict Britain in this period as a reluctant empire builder, more interested in trade than in acquiring territory. Most of the new colonies were intended to serve as ports in a global shipping network that the British envisioned in terms of free trade, as opposed to the previou ...
... 1. Historians usually depict Britain in this period as a reluctant empire builder, more interested in trade than in acquiring territory. Most of the new colonies were intended to serve as ports in a global shipping network that the British envisioned in terms of free trade, as opposed to the previou ...
Africa, India, and the New British Empire, –1870 1750 CHAPTER 25
... 1. Historians usually depict Britain in this period as a reluctant empire builder, more interested in trade than in acquiring territory. Most of the new colonies were intended to serve as ports in a global shipping network that the British envisioned in terms of free trade, as opposed to the previou ...
... 1. Historians usually depict Britain in this period as a reluctant empire builder, more interested in trade than in acquiring territory. Most of the new colonies were intended to serve as ports in a global shipping network that the British envisioned in terms of free trade, as opposed to the previou ...
CHAPTER 26 - AFRICA, INDIA, AND THE NEW BRITISH EMPIRE
... 1. Historians usually depict Britain in this period as a reluctant empire builder, more interested in trade than in acquiring territory. Most of the new colonies were intended to serve as ports in a global shipping network that the British envisioned in terms of free trade, as opposed to the previou ...
... 1. Historians usually depict Britain in this period as a reluctant empire builder, more interested in trade than in acquiring territory. Most of the new colonies were intended to serve as ports in a global shipping network that the British envisioned in terms of free trade, as opposed to the previou ...
Homework/Graded Paper Name: Social Studies Seven/PD: _____ D
... Asia. Further complicating the situation, outbreaks of the Black Plague disrupted trade throughout Europe and the Middle East and several of the Italian City States were at war with one another. After centuries of trading for silks, spices, and exotic foods, many European nations found that they fac ...
... Asia. Further complicating the situation, outbreaks of the Black Plague disrupted trade throughout Europe and the Middle East and several of the Italian City States were at war with one another. After centuries of trading for silks, spices, and exotic foods, many European nations found that they fac ...
AP World History Class Notes Ch 22 Cross
... ideas. Ironically, that same traffic helped spread the bubonic plague, the Black Death, which ravaged much of Eurasia in the mid-14th century. Common elements of these cross-cultural networks include: • Diplomacy. Different states used trade routes to send envoys abroad seeking either to form allian ...
... ideas. Ironically, that same traffic helped spread the bubonic plague, the Black Death, which ravaged much of Eurasia in the mid-14th century. Common elements of these cross-cultural networks include: • Diplomacy. Different states used trade routes to send envoys abroad seeking either to form allian ...
File - All Things History
... – Took Ceylon & Spice Islands from Portugal – By 1650: began challenging Spain in new world ...
... – Took Ceylon & Spice Islands from Portugal – By 1650: began challenging Spain in new world ...
Topic no. 11 - U of T : Economics
... What particular factors -- economic, social, cultural, political/military -- led or inspired Western Europeans, and especially Iberians, to engage in overseas explorations, discoveries, and then colonizations from the early fifteenth century? How important were relations and conflicts with the Islam ...
... What particular factors -- economic, social, cultural, political/military -- led or inspired Western Europeans, and especially Iberians, to engage in overseas explorations, discoveries, and then colonizations from the early fifteenth century? How important were relations and conflicts with the Islam ...
MS Word. - U of T : Economics
... What particular factors -- economic, social, cultural, political/military -- led or inspired Western Europeans, and especially Iberians, to engage in overseas explorations, discoveries, and then colonizations from the early fifteenth century? How important were relations and conflicts with the Islam ...
... What particular factors -- economic, social, cultural, political/military -- led or inspired Western Europeans, and especially Iberians, to engage in overseas explorations, discoveries, and then colonizations from the early fifteenth century? How important were relations and conflicts with the Islam ...
The West`s First Outreach: Maritime Power
... What are the rights and privileges of the various “trading companies?” Why do you think they were given so much freedom from their homelands? ...
... What are the rights and privileges of the various “trading companies?” Why do you think they were given so much freedom from their homelands? ...
Social Studies - Buford Middle School
... powers. Africans were the only people in history used as slaves. Africans declared war against Europe to end the slave trade. ...
... powers. Africans were the only people in history used as slaves. Africans declared war against Europe to end the slave trade. ...
Unit III Test
... 21. Many electronics are made from materials like coltan that are obtained by slave labor or in factories like the Foxconn Plants that use slave labor to produce the finished goods. 22. There were no established trading patterns or networks in the Americas until the arrival of Europeans. 23. Many ea ...
... 21. Many electronics are made from materials like coltan that are obtained by slave labor or in factories like the Foxconn Plants that use slave labor to produce the finished goods. 22. There were no established trading patterns or networks in the Americas until the arrival of Europeans. 23. Many ea ...
File
... 1 . Historians usually depict Britain in this period as a reluctant empire builder, more interested in trade than in acquiring territory. 2. Whether colonized or not, African, Asian, and Pacific lands were being drawn into the commercial networks created by British expansion and industrialization. T ...
... 1 . Historians usually depict Britain in this period as a reluctant empire builder, more interested in trade than in acquiring territory. 2. Whether colonized or not, African, Asian, and Pacific lands were being drawn into the commercial networks created by British expansion and industrialization. T ...
CHAPTER 24 – THE NEW BRITISH EMPIRE
... 1. Historians usually depict Britain in this period as a reluctant empire builder, more interested in trade than in acquiring territory. Most of the new colonies were intended to serve as ports in a global shipping network that the British envisioned in terms of free trade, as opposed to the previou ...
... 1. Historians usually depict Britain in this period as a reluctant empire builder, more interested in trade than in acquiring territory. Most of the new colonies were intended to serve as ports in a global shipping network that the British envisioned in terms of free trade, as opposed to the previou ...
The Transformation of the World Economy
... • As world trade skyrocketed, an increased number of goods began to circulate around the globe • Supermarkets, stores, and so on now stock their shelves with products from every part of the globe ...
... • As world trade skyrocketed, an increased number of goods began to circulate around the globe • Supermarkets, stores, and so on now stock their shelves with products from every part of the globe ...
The Transformation of the World Economy
... • As world trade skyrocketed, an increased number of goods began to circulate around the globe • Supermarkets, stores, and so on now stock their shelves with products from every part of the globe ...
... • As world trade skyrocketed, an increased number of goods began to circulate around the globe • Supermarkets, stores, and so on now stock their shelves with products from every part of the globe ...
European Nations Settle North America
... The Settlement of Jamestown The colony’s start was disastrous. Settlers were more interested in finding gold than planting crops. Seven out of every ten people died of hunger, disease or battles with Native Americans. Jamestown eventually became successful, especially after the discovery of ...
... The Settlement of Jamestown The colony’s start was disastrous. Settlers were more interested in finding gold than planting crops. Seven out of every ten people died of hunger, disease or battles with Native Americans. Jamestown eventually became successful, especially after the discovery of ...
WSL Print Job - Los Alamitos Unified
... 54. English political philosopher John Locke asserted that if the monarch [A] ruled absolutely without controls, harmony would ensue. [B] was elected by the people, he could rule forever. [C] ruled with morality, society would be moral as well. [D] fed the people, the people should be loyal. [E] abu ...
... 54. English political philosopher John Locke asserted that if the monarch [A] ruled absolutely without controls, harmony would ensue. [B] was elected by the people, he could rule forever. [C] ruled with morality, society would be moral as well. [D] fed the people, the people should be loyal. [E] abu ...
CIVILIZATION: Ming China
... -Next Emperor calls them back and returns to a “Middle Kingdom” mentality but far from isolated -there were more than 3 emperors and up until the late 1500s (when decline began) the Chinese gov’t ruled over the largest population utilizing its vast internal resources and technology with a very organ ...
... -Next Emperor calls them back and returns to a “Middle Kingdom” mentality but far from isolated -there were more than 3 emperors and up until the late 1500s (when decline began) the Chinese gov’t ruled over the largest population utilizing its vast internal resources and technology with a very organ ...
Lecture, 06 October
... • The Japanese resisted European methods and customs • After initial contact with Europeans in the 16th century, the Tokugawa Shogun in 1635 initiated a policy of seclusion – tightly controlling all trade and cultural contact with Europe for the next two centuries • They saw Christian missionaries a ...
... • The Japanese resisted European methods and customs • After initial contact with Europeans in the 16th century, the Tokugawa Shogun in 1635 initiated a policy of seclusion – tightly controlling all trade and cultural contact with Europe for the next two centuries • They saw Christian missionaries a ...
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.