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AP WORLD HISTORY EXAM REVIEW 2017 EXAM ADMINISTRATION MAY 11, 2017 OPTIONAL WHAP EXAM REVIEW This review, completed IN FULL, and BY HAND, submitted to your teacher (Conrad, Rivas, or Trcka) the day OF or FOLLOWING the AP World History Exam will be good for and additional test grade of 100% (no reviews will be accepted after the deadline) The AP World History course is structured around themes and concepts in six different chronological periods from approximately 8000 BCE to the present: • Technological and Environmental Transformations (to c. 600 BCE) • Organization and Reorganization of Human Societies (c. 600 BCE to c. 600 CE) • Regional and Transregional Interactions (c. 600 CE to c. 1450) • Global Interactions (c. 1450 to c. 1750) • Industrialization and Global Integration (c. 1750 to c. 1900) • Accelerating Global Change and Realignments (c. 1900 to the Present) Within each period, key concepts organize and prioritize historical developments. Themes allow students to make connections and identify patterns and trends over time. 1 Period 1: Technological and Environmental Transformations, to c. 600 B.C.E. Locating world history in the environment and time Describe how geography and climate interacted with the development of human society. What marks the beginning of this time period and the end? Development of agriculture and technology Basic economic units describe Agricultural Pastoral Foraging society Demographic characteristics Nature of village settlements Impact of agriculture on environment Stages of metal use 2 Civilizations Define-general characteristics Identify basic features: culture, state, and social structure of the following: Mesopotamia Egypt Indus Shang Mesoamerica and Andean South America Period 2: Organization and Reorganization of Human Societies, c. 600 B.C.E. to c. 600 C.E. Classical Civilizations Major political, social, economic, cultural, arts, sciences, and technological developments for the following: China 3 India Mediterranean 4 Major Belief Systems prior to 600 C.E. Note basic features, where applied, similarities, effects on social hierarchy, differences, role of women Polytheism Judaism Hinduism Confucianism Daoism 5 Buddhism Christianity Collapse of Empires - Why and how? Han China Western portion or the Roman Empire Gupta 6 Movements of Peoples/ Migrations Huns Germanic tribes Locate interregional trade and religious networks Major Comparisons – Know, Understand, be able to Explain Compare major religions and philosophical systems including similarities in affects on social hierarchy Compare the role of women in different belief systems- Buddhism, Christianity, Confucianism, Hinduism Understand why and how the collapse of empire was more severe in the Mediterranean than in China Compare the caste system with other systems of social inequality Compare society and culture of civilizations with pastoral and nomadic societies Compare the development of traditions and institutions in major civilizations- India, China, Rome, Greece Describe the interregional trading systems Compare the political and social structures of two early civilizations: Mesopotamia, Egypt, Indus Valley, Shang, Mesoamerica and Andean South America 7 Period 3: Regional and Transregional Interactions c. 600 C.E. to c. 1450 Periodization Why 600? Why 1450? Continuities & breaks with the period Islamic World Geography and stages of expansion Impact on the Sudanese kingdoms Impact on East Africa Impact in India/ SE Asia 8 Islamic political structures (caliphate) Impact on arts, sciences, technologies Interregional networks and contacts-Development, shift, technology and cultural exchange Trans-Sahara trade Indian Ocean trade Silk routes 9 Missionary outreach Contacts between major religions Spread of Christianity Spread of Islam Impact of the Mongol empires 10 China’s internal and external expansion Tang and Song economic revolution early Ming initiatives Chinese influence Korea, Japan, Vietnam 11 Developments in Europe Restructuring economic, political, and social institutions Division of Christianity into eastern and western 12 The Americas - social, political, economic, cultural patterns Maya Inca Aztec 13 Demographic and environmental changes - Migrations and impact Aztecs Mongols Turks Vikings Arabs Bantu Europeans to east/central Europe Consequences of plagues in 14th century Growth and role of cities 14 Major Comparisons – Know, Understand, be able to Explain European and Japanese Feudalism political/social institutions in Eastern and Western Europe Analyze role and function of cities Islam and Christianity Analyze gender systems and changes (impact of Islam) Aztec and Incan empires European contacts and sub-Saharan contacts with Islamic world nomadic invasion and effects Period 4: Global Interactions, c. 1450 to c. 1750 PERIODIZATION Significance of 1450: Prince Henry of Navigator Christopher Columbus Vasco da Gama Ferdinand Magellan James Cook 1453Significance of 1750: Continuities and Breaks: Ex. Reformation Ex. Neo-Confucianism Causes of Changes from the Previous Period: 15 Causes of Changes within this period CHANGE Global interactions Trade (Triangular Trade, the Middle Passage, Indian ocean trade network) Technology KNOWLEDGE OF MAJOR EMPIRES AND OTHER POLITICAL UNITS AND SOCIAL SYSTEMS (include gender roles), Europe (include absolutism) Portugal Spain Russia France England 16 Middle East Ottoman India Mughal East Asia Tokugawa Japan Ming China New World Aztec Inca 17 Africa (know one of the following) Congo, Benin, Oyo, Songhay SLAVE SYSTEMS AND SLAVE TRADE DEMOGRAPHIC AND ENVIORMENTAL CHANGES Diseases, animals, new crops and comparative population trends 18 CULTURAL AND INTELLECTUAL DEVELOPMENTS Scientific Revolution Enlightenment Neo-Confucianism (Tokugawa Japan/ Ming / Qing China) Changes and continuities in Confucianism Major developments and exchanges in the arts Mughal Renaissance 19 DIVERSE INTERPRETATIONS What are the debates about the timing and extent of European predominance in the world economy? How does the world economic system of this period compare with the world economic network of the previous period? MAJOR COMPARISONS Imperial systems coercive labor systems Comparative knowledge of empire 20 Russia’s interaction with the West and the interaction of one of the following: Ottoman Empire, China, Tokugawa Japan, Mughal India) Period 5: Industrialization and Global Integration, c. 1750 to c. 1900 PERIODIZATION Why 1750? Why 1900? Causes of change from the previous period: Causes of change within the period: CHANGES IN PATTERNS OF WORLD TRADE, COMMUNICATION AND TECHNOLOGY 21 INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION: 1750 Causes in Great Britain Compare causes and early phases of the industrial revolution in Western Europe & Japan: SIMILARITIES: DIFFERENCES: Meiji Restoration, 1868 Industrial Revolution: Differential timing in different societies: 22 Mutual relationship of industrialization and scientific developments: Commonalities DEMOGRAPHIC AND ENVIORMENTAL CHANGES Migrations: End of the Atlantic slave trade: New birthrate patterns: 23 Changes in food supply: CHANGES IN SOCIAL AND GENDER STRUCTURE Industrial Revolution: Commercial and demographic development: Emancipation of serfs/slaves: Tension between work patterns and ideas about gender: 24 POLITICAL REVOLUTIONS AND INDEPENDENCE MOVEMENTS United States: France: 1789/ know Jacobins Haiti: Mexico 1911 China 1911 Latin America: Similarities and differences 25 Period 6: Accelerating Global Change and Realignments, c. 1900 to the Present Rise of nationalism, nation-states, and movements of political reform Rise of democracy and its limitations: reform, women, racism Overlaps between nations and empires RISE OF WESTERN DOMINANCE Economic: Social: 26 Cultural & Artistic Patterns of Expansion: Imperialism and Colonialism / SCRAMBLE for AFRICA Causes/motives/ Examples Cultural and Political reactions to imperialism and colonialism DEBATES: What is the utility of modernization as a framework for interpreting events in this time period? 27 Causes of serf and slave emancipation in this period? Nature of women’s roles in this period: industrialized areas v. colonial societies. COMPARISONS Causes and early phases of the industrial revolution in western Europe and Japan Compare two of the following Haitian, American, French, Mexican, or Chinese Revolution 28 Compare reaction to foreign domination in : the Ottoman Empire, China, India, and Japan Compare forms of western intervention in Latin America and in Africa Compare conditions of women in the upper/middle classes with peasantry/working class in Western Europe 29 Comparative Nationalism: China and Japan, Cuba and the Philippines, Egypt and Nigeria 30