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COURSE OUTLINE Periodization 1: Technological and Environmental Transformations (to 600 BCE) Unit 1:Early Humans & River Valley Civilizations Periodization 2: Organization and Reorganization of Human Societies (600 BCE-600 CE) Unit 2: India and China Unit 3: Greece & Rome Periodization 3: Regional and Trans-regional Interactions (600-1450) Unit 4: Islam & Africa Unit 5: Byzantine Empire & the Middle Ages Unit 6: Americas, China, & the Mongols Periodization 4: Global Interactions (1450-1750) Unit 7: The Renaissance & Protestant Reformation Unit 8: Exploration & Scientific Revolution Periodization 5: Industrialization and Global Integration (1750-1900) Unit 9: The Middle East, Japan, & China Unit 10: Enlightenment, Revolutions, & Napoleon Unit 11: Industrial Revolution & Imperialism Periodization 6: Accelerating Global Change and Realignments (1900-Present) Unit 12: World War I, Rise of Consumerism, and Global Depression Unit 13: World War II Unit 14: The Cold War Unit 15: Decolonization & Globalization Units 7 and 8: Renaissance, Reformation, and the Age of Exploration The Big Picture: Units 7 and 8 cover the historical era from 1300 to 1600 called the Renaissance when Western Europe recovered from the Middle Ages. During this “rebirth,” Europe experienced a revival in trade, learning, political stability, and cultural innovation. New scholars called Humanists believed that people were capable of doing anything. Renaissance artists like Michelangelo and Leonardo da Vinci used new techniques of realism, perspective, and classical designs from Greece and Rome. Authors emphasized human emotions, criticized medieval authority, and inspired a new wave of rulers. As the feudal system broke down and lords lost power, nations began to form under the rule of powerful kings. During the era of change, many people began questioning the practices of the Catholic Church and hoped to reform religious practices. During this Protestant Reformation, leaders like Martin Luther, John Calvin, and Henry VIII formed new broke from the Catholic Church and formed new denominations of Christianity. The Catholic Church responded to these new Protestant faiths by sending Jesuit missionaries to make new converts. The increase in trade during the Renaissance led to an Age of Exploration. During this era of discovery, European explorers searched for new trade routes to Asia, new people to convert to Christianity, and new lands to conquer in the name of their kings. Unit Pacing: Homework (Due Dates) Key Terms and Phrases: 12/6 – Rise of the Renaissance 12/6 – Analyze Documents 1. Renaissance 17. Justification by Faith 12/10 – DBQ Timed Writing 12/10 – Prepare for timed writing 2. Florence, Italy 18. John Calvin (Calvinism) 12/12 – Complete Semester Exam Review 3. Medici Family 19. Predestination 4. Classicism 20. Henry VIII (Anglicanism) 5. “Renaissance Man” 21. Counter Reformation 6. Leonardo da Vinci 22. Council of Trent 7. Michelangelo 23. Jesuits 8. Realism & Perspective 24. Johann Gutenberg 9. Humanism 25. Henry the Navigator 12/12 – Review for Semester Exam 1/7– Art and Literature of the Renaissance 1/7 – Reading Assignment 1 1/9 – Protestant Reformation 1/13 – Reading Assignment 3 1/13 – The Counter Reformation 1/15 – The Age of Exploration 1/15 – Hands On History Packet – Annotate and develop questions 1/22 – Compare and Contrast – Timed Writing 1/24 – Unit 7 Test 1/9 – Reading Assignment 2 10. Machiavelli 26. Ferdinand Magellan 1/22 – Prepare for timed Writing 11. Petrarch, Dante, Erasmus 27. Dutch East India Co. 12. William Shakespeare 28. Colombian Exchange 1/24 – Complete Test Review 13. Protestant Reformation 29. Coercive Labor 14. Indulgences 30. New France 31. Gold, Glory, God 15. Martin Luther (Lutheranism) 16. Ninety-Five Theses Essential Questions: 1. What factors caused the decline of Middle Ages and the rise of the Renaissance? 2. How did the Renaissance change (a) art. (b) literature, (c) government, and (d) learning? 3. Contrast Catholicism with the Protestant religions of Lutheranism, Calvinism, and Anglicanism? 4. Why did people explore the “New World?” TEKS 1D, 4G, 5A, 5B, 23B, 24B, 25C, 26A, 27C, 27E Reading Assignment 1 – Chapter 16 The Transformation of the West, pp 363-374 1. The Protestant Reformation is credited to a German monk named _____________________________, who in 1517 nailed a document containing 95 theses, or propositions, to a university door in Wittenberg. 2. His 95 propositions stated the following arguments: The churches selling of _____________________________, or grants of salvation, for money was wrong; Only _____________________ could gain you salvation; __________________________ was wrong; Priests should __________________; and that the Bible should be _____________________________________ 3. List the two reasons why German princes supported Luther’s ideas. 4. This religious dissent was commonly called___________________. 5. List the two reasons why German peasants supported Luther’s ideas. 6. What was the church established by Henry VIII in England? 7. Explain the initially reason Henry VIII established this church. 8. The theological foundation of Calvinism is a belief in God’s _________________ of those who would be saved. 9. The political impact of Calvinism was that Calvinists sought the participation of all believers in ________________________________________________. 10. By the early 17th century, _______________________ brought Calvinism to North America. 11. 9. The Catholic Church was able to defend religious unity in the following areas; 12. What was the Catholic Reformation. 13. ______________________________ were a new religious order that developed during the Catholic Reformation. They were active in politics, education, and missionary work to regaining parts of Europe for the Church. 14. Europe during the late 16th and early 17th centuries was plagued by a series of 15. The Edict of Nantes (1598) granted: 16. In which area of Europe did the Thirty Years War breakout? 17. What were the results of the Thirty Years War? 18. Its treaty granted independence to _____________________. 19. The English Civil War in the 1640s, was a battle between 20. List the three lasting effects of the religious wars in Europe. a. 25. Inflation and the new colonial opportunities led to the formation of ___________________________________________ 26. The average Western peasant or artisan owned about how many times more “things” than his or her counterpart in southeastern Europe? b. c. 21. Though Spanish power was in decline due to the religious wars, ______________ and ______________________________________ were galvanized towards a growing international role. 22. List the four impacts brought about from the religious changes in the 16th and 17th centuries. 27. Inflation and commercialization in the West produced a new group of people called proletariat. Define this term. 28. List the three occupations of the proletariat. a. b. c. 29. Explain the public views of this new social class. 30. Who were the Levelers? 23. What caused price inflation to occur throughout western Europe during the 16th century? 31. During the 17th century European and New England experienced an unprecedented outburst of__________________________. They were reflected of a new__________________________ and hysteria due to new _____________________________. 32. Define the term scientific revolution. 24. What affect did inflation have European merchants? 33. List the achievement of the Polish clergyman Copernicus. 34. ____________________ publicized Copernicus’s discoveries while adding his own basic findings about the law of gravity and planetary motion. 42. Some intellectuals believed in a new concept of God. They were called Deists. They believed: 35. John Harvey was responsible for what discovery during the scientific revolution? 43. How did the Western view of science compare with that of other civilizations? 36. __________________________________ urged the value of careful empirical research and predicted that scientific knowledge could advance steadily, producing improvements in technology. 44. By the 17th century the feudal monarchy, the balance between king and nobles, was finally being undone. 37. ________________________________ established the importance of a skeptical review of all received wisdom, arguing that human reason could develop laws that would explain the fundamental workings of nature. 38. Name Isaac Newton’s work published in 1687 that drew various theories together into a framework of natural laws. a. b. c. d. e. They stopped convening their They blew up The appointed They sent The professionalized 45. The monarch most associated with absolute monarchy was: 39. The principles of motion which state that a body in motion remains in motion unless acted upon by outside forces such as friction was first advocated by _______________________________. He also defined the forces of gravity in the universe. 46. He increased his political power by; a. Becoming a major b. Creating academies to. c. Creating a sumptuous palace at Versailles to 40. The scientific revolution was quickly popularized among educated Westerners. Thus leading to the following affects. New ____________________________ were set up to advance research and disseminate findings. Public hysteria __________________. ________________________ sprang up to guard against risk. Doctors _______________________________________ 47. Define the term mercantilism. 41. It created a wider assumption about the: 48. List the three mercantilist strategies utilized by absolute monarchs. a. b. c. 49. The ___________________________________ kings in Austria-Hungary were the official rulers of the Holy Roman Empire. 4. Prior to the 15th century, what two events spurred European interest in global trade? 50. Most absolute monarchs saw a ____________________________________ as a key political goal. 51. Which two nations stood apart from the trend toward absolute monarchy in the 17th century? They built parliamentary regimes in which the king shared power with representative parliaments. 52. The absolute monarchies and the parliamentary monarchies shared important characteristics as nation-states. They ruled 53. They could appeal to 54. They kept the West Reading Assignment 2 – The West and the World Chapter 17, pp 383-394 1. The voyages of exploration, and the empires built by European conquerors and missionaries resulted in a_________________ in world affairs and a _______________________________ between world societies and civilizations. 2. What two factors cause a significant increase in contact between civilizations during the post-classical period? 3. Between _________________ and ____________________, various western European nations gained unprecedented mastery of the world’s oceans. 5. Explain how eastern trade goods found their way to European markets. 6. Europeans entered into this era of growing contacts with the wider world with several disadvantages. They __________________________________ of the wider world. Many Europeans continued to believe that the ________________________________. Europe feared the growing strength of the ________________________. Europe lacked the _________________________ for Asian goods. And European ships could not __________________________. 7. The _______________________________ were the first European people to explore the Atlantic Ocean and Americas. However, they quickly lost interest; because they encountered ___________________________________. 8. List the five technological improvements, of the 15th century, that aided European exploration. 9. By the 15th century, the West began to forge a military advantage over all other civilizations of the world, an advantage it would retain into the ___________________________. 15. In 1492, the Italian navigator ___________________________, operating in the name of Spain, set sail for a western route to India. 10. What three motivations drew Portugal’s rulers to global exploration? 16. _____________________________________ gave the New World its name. 17. ______________________________________ set sail westward in 1519. It was on the basis of this voyage, the first trip around the world, that Spain claimed the ______________ ________________________________, which it held until 1898. 11. Portugal’s prince, ___________________________________, organized a series of expeditions along the African coast and also outward to islands such as the Azores. 12. What three things did Portuguese sailors bring back from Africa? 13. __________________________________ rounded the Cape of Good Hope in 1498 C.E. and eventually sailed to India. 14. Portuguese expeditions set up trading forts on the along the coast of Africa and India. Such trading colonies were ________________________________________ in east Africa, and _______________________________ in India. They also gained control of the islands of __________________________, which was the center of spice production; and, gained some missionary success in __________________________. 18. Portugal emerged from this first round of exploration with coastal holdings in parts of ___________________________ and in the Indian port of _____________________, a lease on the Chinese port of _________________________________, short-lived interest in trade with _______________________, and a claim on ______________________________. 19. Spain emerged from this first round of exploration with control of the ________________ __________________________, various _______________________________________ ___________________________________________, and the bulk of South and central _________________________, as well as _______________________________, and the _____________________________________________ of North America. 20. Later in the 16th century, the lead in exploration shifted to the nations of _______________________________, _________________________________________, and ________________________________________________ ___________________. 21. What two reasons caused this shift in exploration leadership? 22. The British won a historic sea battle in 1588 C.E., when it routed a massive _______________________________________ 23. ____________________________________________ in 1534 C.E., were the first northern Europeans to cross the Atlantic, reaching Canada, which they claimed. 24. ________________________________________ hoped to discover a northwest passage to spice-rich India, but ended up exploring the Hudson Bay. 25. The __________________________________, after winning their independence from Spain, quickly became a major competitor with Portugal in Southeast Asia. 26. The only area of Africa colonized by Europeans by to the mid17th century was ________________________________ of Africa by the ________________________________ mainly to provide a relay station for its ships bound for the East Indies. 27. In order to facilitate colonization, settlement, and exploration, the British, French, and Dutch, all charted great ________________________________. These companies were given government _____________________________ of trade in the region designated, they were not rigorously _________________________ ______________________, and they were allowed to raise __________________ and ______________________________________ on their own. 28. The _________________________________ effectively ruled the island of Taiwan off the coast of China. And the ____________________ _____________________ played a similar role in India. 29. List the three major consequences brought by Europe’s maritime dominance. 30. It is estimated that _________% to 80% of Native American populations died from smallpox and measles during the first 150 years of European contact. 31. China adopted ______________________ and _____________________ which were two crops that originated from the Americas. 32. In some cases new productive crops from the Americas, along with local agricultural improvements, trigged ________________________________________ in the “old world.” 33. Western Europe’s dominates of oceanic shipping led to increased ____________________________________, and European ability to ________________________________________________ 34. Who did the Spanish defeat at the battle of Lepanto? 35. Explain the significance of this Spanish victory. 36. Western Europe did not conquer inland territory of Africa and Asia. Explain the dominant trade technique in these areas. 37. Where direct control was not feasible, European influence led to the formation of special Western enclaves in existing cities like; ______________________________ in the Ottoman Empire, _____________________ and _____________________ in Russia, and _____________________________ in Japan. 38. Spain briefly dominated global trade; but, it lacked a good __________________ _________________________ and could not support a ________________________________________________ 39. What was mercantilism. 47. Explain why Russia also lay outside the world economic orbit until the 18th century. 48. Other than the slave-trading regions, ________________________ remained untouched by world trading patterns. 49. What were the two British intentions for passing tariffs against the import of cotton cloth made in India? 40. Beyond western Europe lay the areas that played a dependent role in this new world economy. These areas produced _________________________________: like precious metals, and cash crops, and exchanged them for manufactured goods. 50. What was the primary export product of Eastern Europe to Western Europe? Reading Assignment 3 - Colonial Expansion pp 394 – 402 41. Parts of sub-Saharan Africa entered the new world economy mainly as suppliers of _____________________________________. 42. Because dependent economies relied on cheap production of unprocessed goods, there was a tendency to build a system of _____________________________ that would cost little. 1. Opportunities to establish colonies were particularly inviting in the Americas, where _______________________________offered special advantages. 43. Why didn’t Europeans utilize Native Americans for force labor? 2. Spain colonized __________________________ soon after Columbus’s first voyages. 44. What were mestizos. 3. Only in _________did they begin settlement on the mainland. 45. Explain why East Asia (China) remained outside this new world economy. 46. Explain why world trade was a sideline in the Indian economy. 4. ________________ established the first colony in what is now Panama. 5. Another Spanish expedition headed toward the Inca Realm in the Andes in 1531. 6. Who is Francisco Pizarro? 7. Pizarro first came to the Americas in 1502 and settled on the island of _____________ 8. At dinner in 1541_____________________________________. 1. 9. Early colonies in the Americas typically were developed by _________________________________ 19. Where was New France? 20. By 1755 New France had about _________________ 10. Why did colonial rulers first establish loose control over Indian populations? 21. France lost its colony under the terms of _______________, which in 1763 settled the Seven Years War. 11. Gradually, more formal administration spread as ________________________________________________ ________________________________________________ ____________ 22. Describe the Treaty of Paris. 12. What else added another layer of detailed administration throughout the Spanish holdings in North and South America? ________________________________________________ ________________________________________________ ____________ 13. Who else staked out colonial settlements in the Americas? 19 The first substantial European settlements were launched by the French government under _______________ 23. The Dutch were more attached to their ____________________ 24. British and French leaders valued their ______________________much more than their North American colonies. 14. The French led expeditions along the _______________________ 25. While the American Revolution set a example of a _______________________________________________th at was widely noted, in the main North America did not loom large in world affairs in the 18 th century. 15. Dutch and English settlers moved into portions of the _________________early in the 17th century. 26. Driven by ______________________________ Europeans colonized the Atlantic coast. 16. English colonies along the Atlantic received religious refugees, such as the ____________________________________ to settle in New England. 27. The society that developed in the British colonies was far closer to west European forms than was that of ________________ 17. ________________________________________ led to explicit efforts to recruit settlers. 18. New York began as a Dutch settlement but was taken over easily by an _______________________ 28. Colonists were also avid consumers of __________________ written in Europe. 29. Institutions such as the 18th century _______________________ deliberately imitated European scientific institutions. th 30. By the late 18 century, some American merchants were trading with China. 31. Great Britain hoped to win greater tax revenues and to guarantee _________________________________ 32. __________________________________ reduced the Indian population greatly. 33. The horse was brought to __________________________ 34. By 1700, the importation of _______________ proved to be a more important addition to the North American experience. 35. By the late 18th century, _________ of the population of the English colonies was of African origin. 36. American colonists were able to marry slightly earlier than ordinary western Europeans because of ___________________________, and they had larger families. 37. Even when the key colonists rebelled against European control they moved in the name of 41. 43. As Mughal inefficiency increased, with a resultant surge of regional states ruled by Indians, Portions of the subcontinent became an arena for the growing _________________________________________. 42. 44. What was the importance of Calcutta? 43. 45. The French were also more interested in _____________ than the British. 44. 47. Outright British – French warfare erupted in _________. 45. 47. In 1756, an Indian ruler in Bengal ________________________________________________ 46. 48. The East India Company’s army recaptured Calcutta and then seized additional Indian and French territory, _______________________________________. 47. 49. In most colonies, European administration long remained ____________. 48. Missionary activity won many converts in the Philippines but not elsewhere in ____________________. 49. Western Europe was affected by its own colonial success, not only economically but also _________________. 38. 40. Define Cape Colony. 39. 41. Who were the Boers? 40. 42. The Dutch East India Company administrated portions of the main islands of present day _________________ and also _______________, off the coast of China. 50. Now for the first time, except for salt, a basic product, sugar, available to ordinary people ______________________________. 51. The spread of sugar promoted a growing role for _____________________________________________