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1500 - present Changes in Europe : 1500CE to 1750 Absolutism, Rise of States Renaissance and Reformation Scientific Revolution Enlightenment Exploration & Colonization: 1500-1800 Muslim Empires: Ottomans, Mughals, Safavids China: Ming Dynasty Africa? Early Portuguese Exploration & Rest of Europe New World Colonies & Natives Columbian Exchange, Slave Trade World War I Nationalist Revolutions Great Depression, Rising Totalitarianism World War II, Holocaust World Revolutions, Nationalism & Napoleon: 1789 through 1800s Industrialization, Reform Movements, Inventions: 1850 -1914 Imperialism, China/Japan: 1850 - 1914 World at War: 1914-1945 Cold War: 1945 - 1991 China, Vietnam, Korea, Afghanistan, other “hot spots” Decolonization: 1945 - 1975 Struggles for Democracy & Human Rights Global Interdependence Divine right of kings Height 1400-1800 Louis XIV: "L'état, c'est moi“ Catherine the Great of Russia, Elizabeth I of England, Phillip II of Spain, many others Declined after French Revolution Renaissance: rebirth of learning, culture, art, etc., looked to “Classical” times, secular Europe: 1400-1700CE Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Reformation: Martin Luther, 95 Thesis, 1517CE: PROTESTants want to REFORM the Catholic Church Branches of Protestantism Europe, mid-1500s-1700s Using observation, scientific method to find truth rather than Bible or Greek/Roman scholars Heliocentric theory of Copernicus, Galileo’s moons of Jupiter, Harvey’s heart, Boyle’s Law, Newton’s Laws of Gravity and Motion, Fahrenheit’s thermometer, etc… Renaissance, Reformation + Scientific Revolution=trouble for the church Using reason, scientific thinking, power of individuals to solve problems Mid-1600s – 1789 Montesquieu, Locke, Rousseau, Voltaire, Beccaria, Wollstonecraft Wide impact Belief in progress, secularism, individualism Muslim Empires past their Golden Age called “Gunpowder Empires”: after Golden Age, Muslims never united under Caliph again Ottomans (Middle East): 1299-1923CE Mughals (Persia): 1526-1764CE Safavids (India): 1501-1736CE Sulieman the Lawgiver Janissaries & devshirme, conquered Constantinople, tried to conquer Europe Theocracy, religious toleration, sultan as head Present-day Turkey, controlled trade Shi’ia Muslims Iranian origin No religious freedom Sunni (Ottoman)Shi’ia conflict Arts: collaboration with China and Europe Perisan carpets From “Mongols” Guptas collapse, Mongols invade, Indians 2nd class citizens Cultural blending, fair taxes, equal opportunity 100+ million people Gender, social reform Taj Majal Wanted to get in to silk and spices trade Impossible to bypass Muslim Empires, cannot obtain any control over Silk Roads New technology from Mongol conquest and from Portuguese development permits the beginning of the European seafaring era Portuguese, followed by Dutch, followed by everyone Ming Voyages of Zheng He, then isolation Qing Dynasty: 1368-1644 Dynasty: 1644-1912 Continued isolation, lucrative trade Trade along Silk Routes, restricted Europeans to trading only at special ports and paying tribute Dutch kowtowed, so accepted as trading partners British asked for better trade arrangements in 1793, denied Colonies: Christopher Columbus, 1492CE By 1750, map established Columbian Exchange Slave Trade Silver answer for Spice Trade Washington, George(1789-1797) Rebecca Harrison, Benjamin(1889-1893) Jackie Adams, John(1797-1801) Chloe Cleveland, Grover(1893-1897) Rachel Jefferson, Thomas(1801-1809) Jackie McKinley, William(1897-1901) Elliana Madison, James(1809-1817) Rachel Roosevelt, Theodore(1901-1909) Sophia Monroe, James(1817-1825) Elliana Taft, William Howard(1909-1913) Ben Adams, John Quincy(1825-1829) Sophia Wilson, Woodrow(1913-1921) Lucas Jackson, Andrew(1829-1837) Ben Harding, Warren Gamaliel(1921-1923) Aaron Van Buren, Martin(1837-1841) Lucas Coolidge, Calvin(1923-1929) Zur Harrison, William Henry(1841) Aaron Hoover, Herbert Clark(1929-1933) Harrison Tyler, John(1841-1845) Zur Roosevelt, Franklin Delano(1933-1945) Harrison Polk, James Knox(1845-1849) Rebecca Truman, Harry(1945-1953) Rebecca Taylor, Zachary(1849-1850) Chloe Eisenhower, Dwight David(1953-1961) Chloe Fillmore, Millard(1850-1853) Jackie Kennedy, John Fitzgerald(1961-1963) Jackie Pierce, Franklin(1853-1857) Rachel Johnson, Lyndon Baines(1963-1969) Rachel Buchanan, James(1857-1861) Elliana Nixon, Richard Milhous(1969-1974) Elliana Lincoln, Abraham(1861-1865) Sophia Ford, Gerald Rudolph(1974-1977) Sophia Johnson, Andrew(1865-1869) Ben Carter, James Earl Jr.(1977-1981) Harrison Grant, Ulysses S.(1869-1877) Lucas Reagan, Ronald Wilson(1981-1989) Ben Hayes, Rutherford Birchard(1877-1881) Aaron Bush, George Herbert Walker(1989-1993) Zur Garfield, James Abram(1881) Zur Clinton, William Jefferson(1993-2001) Lucas Arthur, Chester Alan(1881-1885) Rebecca Bush, George Walker(2001-2009) Aaron Cleveland, Grover(1885-1889) Chloe Obama, Barack Hussein(2009-present) Wiped out Native Americans from Incas to Mohawks Competition among European nations for colonies, wars among Natives Americans on behalf of Europeans Big early players: England, Spanish, Portuguese, French Religious, economic reasons for immigrating, some forced immigrations (slaves, indentured servitude) Economic changes for Europe: Rise of capitalism Joint-stock companies Mercantilism Growth of towns in Europe Rise of merchant class World trade greatly increased as West began to rival East Europe finally had something of value to trade to China: GOLD and SILVER About 1500 in Europe: Absolutism + absolute power of church Then you add: Renaissance (focus on individual, secular things) Reformation Scientific Revolution Enlightenment And you get REVOLUTION! American: 1775 French: 1789 Haiti: 1791 (first successful slave rebellion) Napoleon, 1799-1814 “He was as great as a man can be without virtue.” –Alexis de Tocqueville Congress of Vienna, 1815 restores monarchies Balances power b/t Russia, Prussia, Austria, Great Britain & France Lasting peace, nationalism spreads: Italy & Germany unify Revolutions sweep the Americas after Enlightenment and successes of French and American revolutions, nationalism increases Haiti: 1791 Venezuela: 1810 Argentina: 1816 Chile: 1817 Peru, Mexico: 1821 Brazil: 1822 Ecuador, Panama, Columbia: 1824 Brazil: 1822* Europe: Greece 1827, other failed uprisings Tears apart: Austrian Empire of the Hapsburgs (Slovenes, Hungarians, Germans, Czechs, Slovaks, Croats, Poles, Serbs, Italians) Russian Empire of the Romanovs (Russians, Ukrainians, Poles, others) Ottoman Empire of the Turks (Greeks, Slavs, Arabs, Bulgarians, Armenians) Brings together: Italy: Papal States, Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, Sardinia, Venetia, Lombardy, Piedmont Germany: Prussia, Westphalia, Saxony, Hanover, Lorraine, Alsace, others 1750 – 1914 Began in England Starts with textiles, then transportation Assembly lines, factories Urbanization Some Working conditions Living conditions Class tensions Global inequality Pollution Some Negatives: Positives: Increased wealth Raised standard of living, health Technological progress Innovation Industrialized in 1800s=First World today Reform Reaction to Industrialization to reform society’s ills Progressivism: late 1800s movements Temperance, Anti-Slavery, Unions, Women’s Rights Socialism offshoots: 1800s John Stuart Mill & Utilitarianism Utopian ideas Socialism, Marxism 1850: Mendel experiments with genetics 1859: Darwin’s Origin of Species 1860: Medical advances of Lister (antiseptics) 1869: Transcontinental RR completed in U.S.; Mendeleev’s Periodic of Elements 1876: Bell patents telephone Edison develops light bulb:1879 1880s: Internal combustion engine perfected Marconi sends first radio signals:1895 First modern Olympic games: 1896 First airplane flight by Wright brothers: 1903 Ford introduces Model T: 1908 Imperialism: seizure of a country/territory by a stronger entity Imperialism in 15th/16th centuries: Economic Imperialism Imperialism in 18th/19th centuries: Total Imperialism (political, cultural, economic control) 1850s – 1914, all over the world Some countries modernize to avoid Japan, Thailand, Ethiopia Other revolts Great Britain, France and Russia (Allies) fight against Germany & Austria-Hungary (Central Powers) 2-front war: Eastern Front b/t France & Germany Western Front b/t Germany/A-H & Russia Trench warfare: stalemate Mechanized warfare Whole world involved U.S. joins 1917 Treaty of Versailles 1919 Europe 1918 Europe 1914 Rebuilding after WWI: economically, physically, socially Some countries struggled through democracy: France, Great Britain, Austria Some turned to totalitarianism: Germany, Italy, Spain, Japan, Russia, China Great Depression 1929 - 1939 Scientific advances: Einstein, Freud Artistic revolution: existentialism, surrealism, jazz Innovations: radio, movies, auto, air travel Women get the vote Chinese Revolution & Civil War: 1912-49, Mao makes China communist 1949 Russian Revolution: 1917, Lenin then Stalin in 1929 communist Soviet Union India: Gandhi’s civil disobedience campaign 1920-47 Modernization in Middle East Ottoman EmpireTurkey 1922 PersiaIran 1925 Kingdoms of Hejaz&NejdSaudi Arabia: 1932 1939 – 1945 Axis Powers: Germany, Italy, Japan make acts of aggression in mid-late-1930s Allies: Great Britain, France, Russia oppose U.S. joins Allies 1941 after Pearl Harbor 2 theaters: Europe & Pacific Ocean Europe: Western and Eastern fronts Pacific Ocean: sea war, island hopping Holocaust: genocide of Jews and others, 11 million killed by Nazis U.S. drops 2 atomic bombs on Japan Aug, 1945 1945 – 1991 Soviet Union and its allies competing with United States and its allies Soviet Union: China, Cuba, North Korea, Warsaw Pact: Communists United States: Western Europe, NATO: non-Communist Space Race: 1969 Arms Race First World, Second World, Third World Brinkmanship, no direct wars: fought through “hot spots” like Vietnam, Korea, Afghanistan 1989: Berlin Wall falls 1991: Soviet Union collapses 1945 – present Nations that were imperialized gaining independence Struggles began before WII India from Britain 1947 become India & Pakistan Ghana from Britain Indonesia from Holland 1949 Israel: 1947 Many, many others: some violently, some peacefully Globalization Human Rights Struggles for Democracy Rising Nations of India, China & Brazil Environment Global Terrorism Global Inequality & Poverty Technology & Innovation