Periodizaton and Themes - White Plains Public Schools
... First trans-regional civilization Spans Eurasia and Africa ...
... First trans-regional civilization Spans Eurasia and Africa ...
Period 3 Review
... land, even though localized smaller religions remained in place. Two nomadic groups - the Bedouins and the Mongols - had a huge impact on the course of history during this era. A new religion - Islam - began in the 7th century and spread rapidly throughout the Middle East, Northern Africa, Europ ...
... land, even though localized smaller religions remained in place. Two nomadic groups - the Bedouins and the Mongols - had a huge impact on the course of history during this era. A new religion - Islam - began in the 7th century and spread rapidly throughout the Middle East, Northern Africa, Europ ...
Ways of the World - Ms. Cabrera
... Calcutta, and Madras • The British merchants imported cotton textiles for their home economy • “Carrying trade” and bulk commodities: Like the Portuguese before them, the British and Dutch discovered that they could make money in the inter-Asian trade carrying goods from one place to another • They ...
... Calcutta, and Madras • The British merchants imported cotton textiles for their home economy • “Carrying trade” and bulk commodities: Like the Portuguese before them, the British and Dutch discovered that they could make money in the inter-Asian trade carrying goods from one place to another • They ...
600 - 1450 - mrfarshtey.net
... areas of land, even though localized smaller religions remained in place. • Two nomadic groups - the Bedouins and the Mongols - had a huge impact on the course of history during this era. • A new religion - Islam - began in the 7th century and spread rapidly throughout the Middle East, Northern Afri ...
... areas of land, even though localized smaller religions remained in place. • Two nomadic groups - the Bedouins and the Mongols - had a huge impact on the course of history during this era. • A new religion - Islam - began in the 7th century and spread rapidly throughout the Middle East, Northern Afri ...
`Akira Iriye, Global Community : the Role of International
... ‘Akira Iriye, Global Community : the Role of International Organizations in the Making of the Contemporary World, University of California Press, Berkeley, ,**. (Paperback). Pp. ix, ῏ῐῑ, Index.’ ...
... ‘Akira Iriye, Global Community : the Role of International Organizations in the Making of the Contemporary World, University of California Press, Berkeley, ,**. (Paperback). Pp. ix, ῏ῐῑ, Index.’ ...
Post-Classical Trade Routes WHAP/Napp “The great crossroads of
... 2. Flourished in 7th and 8th centuries CE: Byzantine, Abbasid, T’ang 3. Flourished in 13th and 14th centuries: Pax Mongolia of Mongol Empire D. Luxury products for elite; silk came to symbolize exchange E. Conduit of Culture 1. Buddhism spread on Silk Roads – owing much to merchants 2. Buddhism appe ...
... 2. Flourished in 7th and 8th centuries CE: Byzantine, Abbasid, T’ang 3. Flourished in 13th and 14th centuries: Pax Mongolia of Mongol Empire D. Luxury products for elite; silk came to symbolize exchange E. Conduit of Culture 1. Buddhism spread on Silk Roads – owing much to merchants 2. Buddhism appe ...
AP Audit: AP World History Syllabus
... o Free labor: resisted attempts to raise taxes through revolts - China, Byzantine Empire o Diffusion of Buddhism, Christianity, Islam, Neo-Confucianism led to significant changes in gender relations/family structure ...
... o Free labor: resisted attempts to raise taxes through revolts - China, Byzantine Empire o Diffusion of Buddhism, Christianity, Islam, Neo-Confucianism led to significant changes in gender relations/family structure ...
WHAP Teacher Copy Western Christendom after the fall of Rome
... - corps de metiers, Zünfte, Arti - guilds were organized throughout Europe beginning in the twelfth century. As their numbers increased, the guilds became increasingly specialized. In Paris in 1260 there were 101 guilds. A century later, there were several dozen metalworking guilds in Nuremberg. Ove ...
... - corps de metiers, Zünfte, Arti - guilds were organized throughout Europe beginning in the twelfth century. As their numbers increased, the guilds became increasingly specialized. In Paris in 1260 there were 101 guilds. A century later, there were several dozen metalworking guilds in Nuremberg. Ove ...
Lsn 26 European Explorations
... • Desire to establish new trade routes to Asian markets • Desire to expand the influence of Christianity ...
... • Desire to establish new trade routes to Asian markets • Desire to expand the influence of Christianity ...
The European Reconnaissance of the World`s Oceans
... Access to new and better foods allowed the European population to grow, and access to the New World gave these people a place to go. New World civilizations such as the Inca and Aztecs, faced near total destruction of their cultures either through disease brought by the Europeans, or by colonization ...
... Access to new and better foods allowed the European population to grow, and access to the New World gave these people a place to go. New World civilizations such as the Inca and Aztecs, faced near total destruction of their cultures either through disease brought by the Europeans, or by colonization ...
7th Grade - HargroveKMS
... 1. H2.2How did former European colonies in Africa gain their independence? a. through peaceful transitions as well as bloody wars b. through agreements worked out in the United Nations c. through agreements worked among European powers d. through continuing warfare in each former colony 2. H2.1Many ...
... 1. H2.2How did former European colonies in Africa gain their independence? a. through peaceful transitions as well as bloody wars b. through agreements worked out in the United Nations c. through agreements worked among European powers d. through continuing warfare in each former colony 2. H2.1Many ...
Globalization and Contemporary Society
... as a term is used more frequently than any other terms. Globalization is a heroic process; globalization is a sinister process, depending on which side of the debate one stand. Some tend to see globalization as a brakeless train crushing everything in his path, others see benefit in getting on board ...
... as a term is used more frequently than any other terms. Globalization is a heroic process; globalization is a sinister process, depending on which side of the debate one stand. Some tend to see globalization as a brakeless train crushing everything in his path, others see benefit in getting on board ...
CHAPTER 12 I
... 1. In what ways did the network of trade routes called the silk roads make life dUring the classical era significantly different from life in the pre classical world? ConsiGier all the different effects and the various cultnres involved. 2. The textbook states, "Christianity was perhaps the most ...
... 1. In what ways did the network of trade routes called the silk roads make life dUring the classical era significantly different from life in the pre classical world? ConsiGier all the different effects and the various cultnres involved. 2. The textbook states, "Christianity was perhaps the most ...
Age of Discovery Student Notes
... - Vasco da Gama (P): First to reach India from Europe by sea; went around Southern tip of Africa - Christopher Columbus (S): Wanted to reach India; landed in Bahamas, Cuba, S. America; called the natives ‘Indians’ bc he always believed he was off the coast of India - Amerigo Vespucci (S): Several vo ...
... - Vasco da Gama (P): First to reach India from Europe by sea; went around Southern tip of Africa - Christopher Columbus (S): Wanted to reach India; landed in Bahamas, Cuba, S. America; called the natives ‘Indians’ bc he always believed he was off the coast of India - Amerigo Vespucci (S): Several vo ...
Arab-Islamic Empires and the Indian Ocean Basin
... THE ISLAMIC EMPIRES AND INDIAN OCEAN TRADE There's lots of commotion In the Indian Ocean Must be the trade The Arabs made Overland or maritime, they were both successful The Indians and Arabs were ever so fruitful ...
... THE ISLAMIC EMPIRES AND INDIAN OCEAN TRADE There's lots of commotion In the Indian Ocean Must be the trade The Arabs made Overland or maritime, they were both successful The Indians and Arabs were ever so fruitful ...
The Post-Classical Period, 500-1450
... V. Two themes serve as primary focal points for the postclassical period. A. The first theme involves the spread of world religions, which showed the capacity to pour across political and cultural boundaries without necessarily erasing those boundaries. 1. Christianity, Buddhism and Islam would pus ...
... V. Two themes serve as primary focal points for the postclassical period. A. The first theme involves the spread of world religions, which showed the capacity to pour across political and cultural boundaries without necessarily erasing those boundaries. 1. Christianity, Buddhism and Islam would pus ...
PowerPoint
... Painted the Mona Lisa; designed plans for flying machines Painter and sculptor; student of Michelangelo and da Vinci Paintings of the Madonna (mother of Jesus) Author of The Prince; advised rulers how to gain and keep power English playwright; wrote in the vernacular; wrote about the joys and sorrow ...
... Painted the Mona Lisa; designed plans for flying machines Painter and sculptor; student of Michelangelo and da Vinci Paintings of the Madonna (mother of Jesus) Author of The Prince; advised rulers how to gain and keep power English playwright; wrote in the vernacular; wrote about the joys and sorrow ...
Trade and Conflict in Early Modern Asia
... Access to new and better foods allowed the European population to grow, and access to the New World gave these people a place to go. ...
... Access to new and better foods allowed the European population to grow, and access to the New World gave these people a place to go. ...
Trade and Conflict in Early Modern Asia
... Access to new and better foods allowed the European population to grow, and access to the New World gave these people a place to go. ...
... Access to new and better foods allowed the European population to grow, and access to the New World gave these people a place to go. ...
practice exam 1
... 6. Which of the following statements best describes the silk roads between 400 and 800 C.E.? a. There was thriving commerce between the Middle East, India, and China but very little involvement on the part of Europeans. b. Since the Mongols protected the routes, there was more commerce than in the e ...
... 6. Which of the following statements best describes the silk roads between 400 and 800 C.E.? a. There was thriving commerce between the Middle East, India, and China but very little involvement on the part of Europeans. b. Since the Mongols protected the routes, there was more commerce than in the e ...
1. NOMADS were important in the period 600 to 1450 CE. For trade
... D) It was a major political, economic, and cultural center of the Mali Empire. 3. How did the Vikings impact European trade towards the end of the first millennium? [this means around 1000 CE] A) They provided the only access to the Eastern empires. B) They maintained contacts between Eastern and We ...
... D) It was a major political, economic, and cultural center of the Mali Empire. 3. How did the Vikings impact European trade towards the end of the first millennium? [this means around 1000 CE] A) They provided the only access to the Eastern empires. B) They maintained contacts between Eastern and We ...
Unit 2- Turning Points - Edward R. Murrow High School
... (3) control of Jerusalem by Europeans (4) growth of trade and towns in western Europe 7 One way Japanese feudalism during the Tokugawa shogunate was different from European feudalism is that during this period of Japanese feudalism (1) political power was more centralized (2) foreign missionaries we ...
... (3) control of Jerusalem by Europeans (4) growth of trade and towns in western Europe 7 One way Japanese feudalism during the Tokugawa shogunate was different from European feudalism is that during this period of Japanese feudalism (1) political power was more centralized (2) foreign missionaries we ...
Archaic globalization
Archaic globalization is a phase in the history of globalization, and conventionally refers to globalizing events and developments from the time of the earliest civilizations until roughly 1600 (the following period is known as early modern globalization). This term is used to describe the relationships between communities and states and how they were created by the geographical spread of ideas and social norms at both local and regional levels.States began to interact and trade with others within close proximity as a way to acquire coveted goods that were considered a luxury. This trade led to the spread of ideas such as religion, economic structure and political ideals. Merchants became connected and aware of others in ways that had not been apparent. Archaic globalization is comparable to present day globalization on a much smaller scale. It not only allowed the spread of goods and commodities to other regions, but it also allowed people to experience other cultures. Cities that partook in trading were bound together by sea lanes, rivers, and great overland routes, some of which had been in use since antiquity. Trading was broken up according to geographic location, with centers between flanking places serving as ""break-in-bulk"" and exchange points for goods destined for more distant markets. During this time period the subsystems were more self-sufficient than they are today and therefore less vitally dependent upon one another for everyday survival. While long distance trading came with many trials and tribulations, still so much of it went on during this early time period. Linking the trade together involved eight interlinked subsystems that were grouped into three large circuits, which encompassed the western European, the Middle Eastern, and the Far Eastern. This interaction during trading was early civilization's way to communicate and spread many ideas which caused modern globalization to emerge and allow a new aspect to present day society.