Title: AP World Review
1AP World Review
2Test Format
- Exam last 3 Hours and 5 Minutes
- 55 Minutes for 70 Multiple Choice Questions
- Break
- 50 Minutes for Document Based Question (10
minutes for Reading and Evaluating Documents) - 40 Minutes for Change Over Time Essay
- 40 Minutes for Comparative Essay Question
3Grading
- 70 Multiple Choice Questions 1/2 Score
- Document Based Question 16.66 of Score
- Change Over Time Essay 16.66 of Score
- Comparative Essay 16.66 of Score
- Essays Graded on Scale of 0 to 9
4What do the questions look like
- The questions fall into 6 basic categories, which
are as follows - Identification (35-40 of the test) - simply test
whether you know a fact, or facts. - Analytical (20-25 of the test) - makes you think
about relationships, see connections, place in
order. - Quotation Based (10 or less of the test) - match
the quote with the appropriate person.
5- Image Interpretation (10 or less of the test) -
determine images relevance, purpose, or meaning. - Map Based Questions (10 or less of the test) -
identify what a map shows, or interpret it's
purpose. - Graph Chart Interpretation (10 or less of the
test) - interpret answer from data given in chart
form.
6Six Themes
- 1. The impact of interaction among major
societies. Such as Trade, International Exchange,
War, and Diplomacy - 2. The Relationship of Change and Continuity
across the periods of World History - 3. Impact of Technology and Demography on People
and the Environment Including Population change,
Manufacturing, Agriculture, etc.
7Six Themes
- 4. Systems of Organization and Gender Structure
- 5. Cultural and Intellectual Development and
Interactions among Societies - 6. Change over time in functions and structures
of Political States
8Time Frames
- Prehistory to 600 C.E 10 or less Questions
- 600 C.E-1450 C.E 22 of Questions
- 1450 C.E- 1750 C.E 19-20 of Questions
- 1750 C.E- 1914 C.E 19-20 of Questions
- 1914-Present 19-20 of Questions
9Bookends of Foundation Period8000 BCE 600 CE
- 8000 BCE marks the Neolithic civilization and
the development of four river valley
civilizations - 600 CE marks the time which classical empires fall
10Building Blocks of Civilization
- What is a Civilization?
- Economic System
- Political Organization
- Moral Code (Religion)
- Written Language and Intellectual Tradition
- Division of labor
11PreHistory History
- Presence of a written language
- Writing is essential for record keeping,
bureaucracy, commerce, and accumulating
knowledge - it makes possible more varied cultural forms.
- Writing also led to new social divisions based on
selective literacy. - Scribes
- Scholarly gentry
- Dark Age
- Art of writing has developed and been lost
12Environmental determinism
- Relationship between culture of a civilization,
success and stability - How does the culture react to the environment or
environmental change - Technology
- Movement of peoples into and out of the area
- Crossroads vs. isolation
13River Valley Civilizations
- China
- Yellow River valley
- Shang China first dynasty
- Develop in isolation w/ minimal contact with
India and Middle East
14River Valley Civilizations
- China
- Became the subject of many legends in later
Chinese history - Monarchy
- Bronze work, silk making, pottery, jade,
elaborate intellectual life, writing, interest in
science and technology
15Political structure tied to social order and
culture by Confucianism
- Confucianism emphasized order, hierarchy, and
deference, including specific injunctions to obey
the emperor. - Bureaucracy aimed to alleviate political
instability, difficulties of centrally
controlling outlying provinces, and related
competition among landed aristocrats for power
and influence.
16Classical Civilizations and great empires
- Mesoamerican
- Andean
- Han
- Gupta
17Change from River Valleys to Classical Civs
- 1000 BCE
- LocationChina, India, Mediterranean World
- New/renewed civs that were durable
- Left the most substantial impacts and legacies
- Set in motion key values and institutions that
extend well beyond the classical period - All 3 built on achievements of the River valley
civs.
18- Classical civs not a continuation of ancient
river valleys - Change political centers
- Improve technology
- Est. More elaborate philosophical and religious
traditions - Expand science and math
- Set up methods for territorial expansion and
embraced a diverse group of people - Integrated aspects of their institutions and
traditions - Each civ operated separately despite contacts
with each other - Greece/IndiaAlexander the Great
- Rome/ChinaSilk Road
19Mesoamerica
20Mesoamerica
- The area from north central Mexico to Nicaragua
- Beginning about 5,000 BCE, domesticated certain
plants beans, peppers, avocados, and squash. - Maize dominated the diet of these agricultural
peoples - Later innovations such as pottery took place
around 2000 BCE.
21Mesoamerica
- When Shang dynasty ruled in China, permanent
sedentary villages based on some agriculture
appeared. There were small, modest settlements
without much hierarchy or social differentiation
and a lack of craft specialization. - Numbers of villages rose proliferated and
population densities rose.
22Olmec
23Olmec
- 1400 BCE to 500 BCE
- Suddenly appeared
- They had irrigated agriculture, impressive
drainage systems, monumental sculpture, urbanism
and beginnings of calendar and writing systems
(carved inscriptions).
24Olmec
- Giant stone heads were found in ruins. No one
knows how the 40-ton sculptures were moved from
the quarries without wheeled vehicles or draft
animals. All of these attest to a high degree of
social organization and artistic skill. - Called the Mother Civilization of Mesoamerica
25Olmec
26Olmec
- They provided the basis of a state ruled by a
hereditary elite in which the ceremonialism of a
complex religious dominated life. - Powerful class of priests and aristocrats stood
at top of society - Most important tradition of priestly leadership
and religious devotion that became a basic part
of later Middle American civilization. - Did not build true cities built ceremonial
centers made of pyramid shaped temples and other
buildings
27Olmec
- People came for nearby farming villages to work
on the temples or attend religious ceremonies - Through trade, Olmec influence spread over a wide
area - Great carvers of jade and traded or conquered to
get it.
28Olmec
- Know one knows what happened to cause their
decline mystery. - Some scholars think they are ancestors to the
great Maya civilizations that followed.
29Andean World
- From the coast to the Andes Mountains
- Potatoes and maize grown grazing for llamas and
alpacas
30Chavin
31Chavin
- 850 BCE built a huge temple complex stone
carving and pottery show the Chavin people
worshipped a god that was a part jaguar and part
human with grinning catlike features - Artisans worked in ceramics, textiles, and gold
characterized. - Used animals as decorations, often along scenes
of war and violence.
32Chavin
- Some similarities with Olmecs (possible Amazonian
lowland origin for both) - Warfare seems to indicate a general process
with the development of agriculture and a limited
amount of arable land, it becomes necessary to
organize irrigation and create political
authority and eventually states that could
mobilize to protect or expand the available land. - Influenced later peoples of Peru
33Chavin
- By 300 BCE Chavin in decline
- Andean world became characterized by regional
centers without political unity but great art. - Wide variety of crops, domestication of the llama
and related animals, dense populations, and
hierarchal societies could be found in many
places.
34Nazca
35Nazca
- Weavers
- Great figures of various animals, which cover
100s of feet and can be seen only from the air - Also great straight lines or paths that cut
across plains and seem to go towards mountains or
celestial points no one know why they were
drawn
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38Mochica
39Mochica
- Skilled farmers developing terracing, irrigation,
and fertilization of the soil - Leaders built roads and organized networks of
relay runners to carry messages - To build one temple had to produce 130 million
bricks - Textile, goldworking, woodcarving
- Potters decorated with scenes of everyday life
including battle, music, and textile produced on
small looms.
40Mochica
41Mochica
42Mochica
43Han Dynasty
44Han Dynasty
- Strongest and longest dynasty
- Expansionist Empire
- Postal system
- Roads
- Defensive fortifications
- Had to protect the expanding borders some that
encouraged trade along the silk road - Silk road brought bandits that threatened the
outer borders of the Han dynasty
45Silk Road
46Han Decline
- 100 CE
- Nomadic tribes topple Han China
- Central government control diminished and corrupt
bureaucracy - Local landlords took up the slack by ruling their
own neighborhoods - People heavily taxed
- Increased social unrest
47Han Decline
- Daoist revolutionary effort 184 CE Yellow
Turbans promised a golden age that would come
via divine magic - 30,000 students demonstrated against decline of
government morality - Failed BUT decline continued into civil war.
48Factors of the Han Decline
- Political ineffectiveness
- Spread of devastating epidemic - killed ½ of
population leading to three centuries of chaos
49India
- Aryans
- Nomadic Group invaded India
- Earliest Europeans
- Conquered the Dravidians (Dark Skinned Indians)
- Established Warrior Aristocracy
- Established Sanskrit
- Vedic Era and Early Hindu faith
- Dont forget about the Caste System!!!
50Mauryan Empire
51India Continued
- India is Region
- 600BCE 16 Regional Empires
- Mauryan empire 322BCE
- Began by Chandragupta Maurya
- Ashoka famous Emperor
- Extended control to Southern tip of India
- Converted to Buddhism
- Collapsed from outside attacks
52Gupta Empire
53Gupta Empire
- 320 CE
- Greatest period of political stability
- Negotiated with local princes, intermarry with
their families and expand influence w/o constant
fighting
54Gupta Empire
- Created a demanding taxation system
- No bureaucracy and allowed regional leaders to
maintain control - There was a Gupta rep. at each local princes
court to ensure loyalty - Promoted Sanskrit
- Uniform law codes
- Golden Age
55Gupta Empire Political Culture
- Not elaborate
- Regional
- Buddhism provides ethnic code
- Tightly knit villages
- Caste system provided a way for conquered and
conquerors to live together - Caste system limited political development b/c of
strict social rules loyalty to caste above all
56Decline of Gupta Empire
- Between 200 and 600 CE suffered outside invasions
- Gupta overthrown by Huns b/c hadnt solved
tendency to dissolve into political fragmentation - Emperors having trouble controlling local princes
since 5th century
57Gupta Decline
- N. India affected by constant nomadic invasions
- Eventually push further into central India
destroying the empire - Nomads became integrated into the warrior caste
and regional control resumed
58Societal comparison
- China's society featured less rigid structure,
slightly more opportunity for mobility although
there was some mobility within castes - different rules and cultural enforcements
- Law of Manu vrs. Confucianism
- different regard for merchants and specific
contrasts in the definition and function of "mean
people" versus untouchables. - Dharma encouraged merchants in Gupta
- Merchants brought outside cultures and were not
socially accepted
59Environmental Determinism
- India was more open to contact and invasion and
less internally coherent (interior mountains
etc), which helps explain the differences in
openness to influence, and political stability - India absorbed other cultures while China remains
ethnically homogeneous (90 of all Chinese
trace their ancestry back to the Han dynasty)
60Post Classical Middle Ages600-1450
- Americas
- East to West
- Mongolians
- Connections
61The Bookends
- 600- great classical empires have fallen.
- 632- Coming of Islam
- 1000- trade increases both by land and sea.
- 1450- Fall of Constantinople and decline of Silk
roads - 1450- Europe looks westward toward the Atlantic
62Incas
63Incas
64Inca Government
- Government emperor is the Inca god-king owned
all the land, herds, mines, and people - Nobles ruled the provinces along with local
chieftains whom the Inca had conquered - Below them officials carried out taxes and laws
65Inca
- Own language and religion
- Great road system -12,000 miles, bridges, steps
(more impressive than Romes) - It moved armies and news using relay runners to
carry messages - Kept soldiers at outposts to crush rebels
66Inca capital
- Cuzco - Capital
- Temple of the Sun (no mortar, survived
earthquakes) is there
67Inca Daily Life
- Farming - terraces
- Metalworking
- Medical advances antiseptics and anesthesia
- Religion
- polytheistic linked to nature
- Inti Chief god - Sun god
68Maya
69Maya
- Influenced by the Olmec
- Yucatan in Mexico through much of Central America
- 600- 900
70Maya
- Farming cleared rainforest and built raised
fields and channels to drain excess water grew
corn and other crops - Temples and palaces - Very tall used for
sacrifices to gods carvings recorded history
71Maya
- Social classes each city had own ruling chief
- Nobles military and officials (collected taxes,
enforced laws) - Women occasionally governed on own or in name of
son - Priests great power only they could conduct
religious ceremonies - Farmers corn, beans, squash, fruit, cotton,
flowers paid taxes in food and helped build
temples
72Maya
- Hieroglyphic writing style scribes
- Expert mathematicians and astronomers
- 365-day calendar
- Numbering system and understood concept of zero
73Maya decline
- Around 900 CE, abandoned cities to be swallowed
up by jungles - Why??? Possibly warfare, overpopulation led to
soil exhaustion, revolts
74Aztecs
75Aztecs
- Toltecs 1000 1200
- In 1200s, band of nomadic people (the ancestors
to the Aztecs) migrated into the Valley of Mexico
from the north and destroyed Toltecs - Settled at Lake Texcoco due to legend (eagle on
a cactus with a snake in beak) - Aztecs 1200s-1521
76Aztecs
77Aztecs
- Shifted from hunting to farming and built
Tenochititlan (Mexico City) - used military and ideological force to dominate a
large part of ancient Mexico - actually multiethnic
- The Aztecs had a highly centralized, tribute
state based on the extraction of labor and goods
from conquered populations
78- Aztecs continue the culture of the classical
Mesoamerican civilization and the Toltecs - Toltecs considered givers of civilization
- shared same language
- use of human sacrifice
- establishment of empire centered on central
Mexico - militarism of society
- concept of nobility tied to Toltec lineage
initially - use of city-state organization
- temple complexes associated with state many
deities of pantheon of gods - tribute based on sedentary agricultural system
- cyclical view of history and calendar system
79Aztec
- Farming built chinampas artificial islands
that are anchored to the lake bed. Floating
gardens - corn, squash, and beans - Filled in parts of lake and made canals for
transportation
80Tenochtitlan
- Urban commercial center
- Central zone of palaces and temples surrounded by
residential districts, smaller palaces, and
markets - Heart of the empire and drew tribute and support
from allies and dependants
81Aztecs
- 1400s, greatly expanded territory through war and
alliances - By 1500 30 million people
82Aztec Government
- Single Ruler chosen by a council of nobles and
priests - Nobles served as officials, judges, and governors
- Warriors rise to noble status by killing or
capturing enemy soldiers - Commoners who farmed
- Slaves criminals or prisoners of war
83Aztec Religion
- Priests are a class apart
- Performed rituals for gods to keep away droughts
- Chief God sun god
- To give sun strength to rise massive human
sacrifices - Warfare is used to get sacrificial victims
84Aztec Human Sacrifices
- To give sun strength to rise massive human
sacrifices - greatly exaggerated by the Spanish as a means of
validating European conquest and cultural
superiority - religious act essential to the grant of rain,
sun, and other blessings of the gods - an intentional use of a widespread practice to
terrorize their neighbors and to keep the lower
classes subordinate - form of population control to lower population
density - response to a lack of protein and the absence of
large mammals associated with animal sacrifice.
85Aztec Learning
- Priests keepers of knowledge
- Ran schools for sons of nobles
- Accurate calendar
- Herbs and medicines
86Aztec
- 1519 Spanish reached Tenochtitlan with Cortes
- Allies from conquered people
- Defeated by Spanish
87Incas and Aztec EmpiresPolitical Structures
- Similarities
- each had emperor supported by nobility that
served as personnel of state - both based on tribute system with imperial
redistribution of goods - both were militaristic
- each recognized indigenous rulers in return for
recognition of imperial sovereignty - Differences
- Inca empire more integrated
- Aztec empire based more on concept of city-states
- Aztec empire more open to trade
- Inca empire almost entirely relied on state
redistribution of goods - Aztec use of human sacrifice as weapon of
political terror
88East Asia
- Era of Division (6 Dynasties Period)
- dominated by political division among many small
warring states often ruled by nomadic invaders - period of Buddhist dominance
- growth of monastic movement
- loss of imperial centralization
- loss of dominance of scholar-gentry in favor of
militarized aristocracy (dark age).
89Sui-Tang
- return to centralized administration, unified
empire - reconstruction of bureaucracy
- reconstruction of Confucian scholar-gentry at
expense of both Buddhists and aristocracy - restoration of Confucianism as central ideology
of state
90Tang and Song Dynasties
91Tang and Song China(Chinas Golden Age)
- Restoration of imperial government implied
strengthening of traditional schools of
Confucianism and resuscitation of scholar-gentry - Confucians attacked Buddhism as a foreign
innovation in China - convinced emperors that monastic control of land
represented an economic threat - persecution of Buddhists introduced in 840s.
92Elements of Tang-Song economic prosperity
- The full incorporation of southern China into the
economy as a major food-producing region, center
of trade - commercial expansion with West, southern Asia,
southeast Asia - establishment of Chinese merchant marine
- development of new commercial organization and
credit per acre - expanded urbanization throughout China
93Satellite Cultures of China
- Why was China unable to assimilate the Vietnamese
despite direct rule for almost a millennium? - Vietnamese culturally different from the outset
- different language
- tradition of local authority inherent in village
leaders - emphasis on nuclear family rather than typically
Chinese extended families - higher status accorded to women
94Satellite Cultures of China
- Chinese able to exert some influence on
- introduction of central administration based on
Confucian exam system - some introduction of extended family and ancestor
worship - use of Chinese military organization
- ultimate failure based on inability to impact
Vietnamese peasantry who remained significant on
local level - only Buddhism impacted peasantry
95- Chinese culture in relation to its satellite
civilizations - Chinese culture extended only within semi-closed
East Asian cultural system - unlike Islam that spread from the Middle East to
Africa and to South and Southeast Asia - unlike common cultural exchanges between Islam
and post-classical West - East Asian cultural exchange occurred in
semi-isolation from other global cultures.
96The Mongolian Empire
97Mongol expansion
- Khanates
- Ghengis
- brought all the nomadic tribes of Mongolia under
the rule of himself and his family - rigidly disciplined military state
- turned his attention toward the settled peoples
beyond the borders of his nomadic realm - began the series of campaigns of plunder and
conquest that eventually led to the establishment
of the great Mongol Empire.
98Mongol expansion
- The four most significant legacies of Chinggis
Khan are - tolerance of many religions
- creation of the Mongols' first script
- support for trade and crafts
- creation of a legal code specific to the Mongols'
pastoral-nomadic way of life
99- Khubilai
- Conquest of China Yuan Dynasty
- Grandson of Chinggis Khan
- Khubilai Khan was an important transitional
figure in Mongol history - sought to rule and not merely conquer the
vast domains that the Mongols had subjugated
100- Mongol Advances
- Stirrup
- A special wood-and-leather saddle allowed the
horses to bear the weight of their riders for
long periods - permitted the riders to retain a firm seat
- a sturdy stirrup enabled horsemen to be sturdier
and thus more accurate in shooting when mounted - Advance horse warfare
- the horses were fast and flexible
- Used hit-and-run raids
- The Mongols had developed a composite bow made
out of sinew and horn and were skilled at
shooting it while riding - gave them the upper hand against ordinary foot
soldiers - range of more than 350 yards, the bow was
superior to the contemporaneous English longbow,
whose range was only 250 yards
101- Inclusion of conquered peoples
- Included Muslim scholars in their courts
- Willingness to rely on advisers particularly
those who had worked with the Chinese - Fall of Mongols
- Became too Chinese and sedentaryremoved from
nomadic traditions - Tried to invade Japan--failed
- Golden Horde and Il Khan (Persia)
- Conflict over religion
- Islam the majority religion oppressed by the
Buddhist leaders - Eventually will convert to Islam
102- Mongol dynasty of China (the Yuan) attempt to
alter the traditional Chinese social structure - refused to reinstate the Confucian examination
system-- attempt to destroy the social and
political dominance of the scholar-gentry - seconded by dividing the Chinese social structure
ethnically - Mongols and Islamic allies on top
- northern Chinese second
- ethnic Chinese and minorities at bottom
- in addition Mongols promoted social advance of
artisans and merchants, who had been
discriminated against in traditional Chinese
society.
103- political impact of the Mongol conquests of
Russia and the Islamic heartland similarities - traditional political structure was removed and
the path was smoothed for new political
organization to take place - In Russia, Kievan superiority was forever
destroyed and Moscow was able to achieve
political dominance among the petty kingdoms
through its control of tribute and by becoming
the seat of Russian Orthodoxy - In Islam, the Abbasid dynasty was ended and the
Seljuk Turks who had ruled through its additions
was devastated opening the way for the rise of
the Mameluks in Egypt and the Ottoman Turks in
Asia Minor.
104Mongolians
- Territorial extent of the Mongol empire at its
largest. How did this affect inter-cultural
exchange? - permitted free exchange of goods and ideas
between global cultures along traditional routes
of trade.
105RenaissanceEntrance into Modern World1300 - 1600
- Cultural Developments
- Humanism
- Scientific Revolution
106Humanism vs. Enlightenment1280ish to late 1600s
vs. 1650 to 1750ish
- Humanism (Age of Questioning)
- Emphasis on individual
- Classical works
- Centered in N. Italian city-states and traveled
throughout world - Elements include voluntary participation in civic
affairs - Spurred questioning attitude cultural
advancements, scientific revolution, age of
exploration, reformation
107- Enlightenment (application of humanism) Age of
Reason - Belief in human perfectibility,
- application of scientific discoveries to
improvement of human condition - reason was key to truth, while religion was
afflicted with superstition - changes in economy reflected in mass consumerism
- growth of reading clubs, coffee houses, and
popular entertainment. - Voltaire father of Enlightenment
108Islamic Empires
- Ottoman Empire
- Major leader, Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent
- Took over Constantinople
- Long decline
- Safavid Empire
- Persia
- Shiite Muslim
- Mughal Empire
- India
- Hindu Majority ruled by Muslims
- All Three Gunpowder Empires came from
Mongols/Chinese
109JapanFrom Gempei Wars to Tokugawa Shogunate
- Gempei Wars - culmination of a decades-long
conflict between the two clans over dominance of
the Imperial court - marked dominance of provincial military
aristocracy over imperial court - Minamoto family established first dominance with
military government (or Bakufu) at Kamakura - decline of central administration and
scholar-gentry - Hojo family dominated Bakufu
110JapanFrom Gempei Wars to Tokugawa Shogunate
- finally Kamakura government overthrown by
Ashikaga Shogunate - all central authority dissipated during Onin War
from 1467-1477 - initiated a long, drawn-out struggle for
domination by individual daimyo, resulting in a
mass power-struggle between the various houses to
dominate the whole of Japan - country divided up into 300 small kingdoms ruled
by daimyos. - Introduction of Portuguese in 1400s
111Japanese Shogunate
- Japanese feudalism
- Shogun (leader)
- Daimyo (powerful lordsshogun usually chosen
from this group) - Samurai (warriors)
- Bushido (feudal law)
- Shogunates
- Most Famous is Tokugawa Shogunate
- Dictatorship, Highly centralizedgovernment
- Confucian Ideas
- Closed Ports to trade caused economic collapse
112- Japanese Contact with West
- First step taken was persecution of Christians,
then banning of Christianity in 1614 - after 1616 foreign merchants limited to few ports
- by 1640s, only Dutch and Chinese admitted at
Deshima (Nagasaki Bay)
113- in eighteenth century Neo-Confucian philosophy
abandoned in favor of school of "National
Learning" based on indigenous Japanese culture - differed from Chinese in adopting European
technological developments.
114East Asian Exploration and Isolation (Xenophobic)
- Ming
- returned to use of Neo-Confucian philosophy as
basis of culture - restored position of scholar-gentry
- reinstituted examination system as basis of civil
service. - Early emperors attempted to curtail power of
scholar-gentry - potential rivals to succession exiled to
provinces - greatest economic reform was Zhenghe voyages to
distant markets
115Women
- Different status for Elite and Working women
- Think noble versus serf/peasant
116Women
- During middle ages, new limits on the conditions
of women - In some respects, women in the west had higher
status than their sisters in Islam - Less segregated in religious services (although
could not lead them) - Less confined to the household
117Women
- Still womens voices in the family may have
declined in the Middle Ages - Urban women played important roles in local
commerce and even operated some craft guilds, but
found themselves increasingly hemmed in by
male-dominated organizations - Patriarchal structures take deeper root.
118World Economy
- During the postclassical millennium, 45-1450 CE,
a few areas contributed raw materials (including
labor power slaves) to more advanced societies
China and the Islamic world. - The supply areas included western Europe and
parts of Africa and southeast Asia
119World Economy
- Although economic relationships were unequal,
they did not affect the societies that produced
raw material too much since international trade
was not sufficient to do so.
120World Economy Middle Ages
- Population growth encouraged further economic
innovation new people new markets - Towns expanded and agriculture increased
- Crusades exposed west to new cultural and
economic influence from the Middle East. This
included a thirst for trade.
121East meets west
- Three major manufacturing zones
- Arab producing carpets, tapestry, glass
- Indian producing cotton textiles
- China producing porcelain, paper, silks.
122- No central control of Indian Ocean trade system,
no use of military force. - Portuguese brought use of military force into
system - added new routes including route around Cape of
Good Hope to Europe - introduction of concept of sea power and military
force - introduction of Christianity, tribute kingdoms
123Other Trade Routes
- Bantu peoples moved along Congo River and further
south and east in Africa. (Evidence-Bantu
languages) - Vikings moved along rivers and oceans into Europe
and even the new world. (Viking ships horses of
other nomads) - Turks and Mongols moved southward and westward
from the steps of Asia bringing bubonic plague to
China and Europe.
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125Global trade and core and peripheral nations
- Core areas were those areas of the world economy
typified by production of manufactured goods,
control of shipping, monopoly of banking and
commercial services. - Core areas were located primarily in northwestern
Europe Britain, France, and Holland. - Dependent zones (peripheral) were regions
typified by production of raw materials, supply
of bullion, plantation agriculture of cash crops
produced by coercive labor systems. - Dependent zones surrounded the European core
including southern and eastern Europe, Asia, and
the colonial discoveries of the European
explorers.
126Global Network
- East Asia, particularly China and Japan remained
outside of global trade network - Mughal India only minimally involved
- Ottoman Empire restricted trade to European
enclaves in cities - Russia also remained outside system outside of
slave regions, Africa not involved. - After 1600, India increasingly dominated by
France and England - Eastern Europe brought into system as supplier of
grain to West.
127 Changes and Continuities
- Change Classic empires have fallen and new ones
have been created. - Change Migrations of nomadic peoples cause major
international changes and diffusion of ideas and
diseases - Continuity Religion continues to be important
and continues to spread. - Continuity Trade routes continue to grow in
importance - Continuity Societies continue to be Patriarchal
1281450-1750
- European Atlantic Empires
- West becomes dominant
- Gunpowder
- Mughals
- Ottomans
- Neo-Confucianism
- African Contributions
129Bookends
- 1450- Beginning of European Atlantic empires
- 1450-Beginning of Global trade
- 1492- End of Islam in Europe
- 1433- end of Chinese treasure ship expeditions
- 1750- beginning of industrialization
- 1750-western hemisphere colonization peaks
130 Six things to Remember
- Americas are included in world trade for the
first time. - Improvements in shipping and gunpowder technology
continues - Populations are in transition
- New social structures emerge based on race and
gender - Traditional beliefs are threatened in Europe but
reinforced in China - Empires are both land-based and cross oceanic
131Changes in Weaponry
- Changes
- Calvary/mounted knights infantry
- Lance ? arquebus (portable long barreled gun
fired by a wheel and lock) and pike ? musket with
bayonet - Calvary charge ? rows/columns of uniformed
soldiers - Simple medieval wall with gates and towers ?
elaborate fortification systems designed to stop
canon fire - Military leaders as battle chiefs ?management
experts - Performance learned on a drill field
132Knights and Guns
- Infantry had already proven to be more successful
than cavalry - Ex. 1415 Agincourtlong bowsmow down knights of
France on horseback
133Origin of the Gun
- Chinese and Arabs used gunpowder since 8th
century - Mongols 13th century (1240) Poland and Hungary
1st experience gunfire - Ironworks in Europe soon learned how to make a
gun - Iron tube in which gunpowder is exploded to fire
a missile
134- 1400 Ottomans construct cannons to forge through
the Balkans - 1453 helped to take out Constantinople
- Gun becomes premiere tool for explorers,
conquerors and merchants - Knights couldnt withstand heavier armor to
survive gun shotdeath of knighthood - New formations and mass, unison, precise gunfire
could halt a charging army
135Big Guns
- Smaller at first inaccurate and bad for long
distance - Big gunscannonsbetter for breaking down walls
- Beasts of burden used to bring them to
town/castle walls to fire cannon after cannon to
break defenses - Soldiers then raped and pillaged town/castle
- 1st done by France Charles VII in 1450
136- Problem siege tactics cost many innocent lives
therefore, new type of fortification - Bastionsthicker walls that protected people and
town within - Very expensive to buildMichelangelo and da
Vinci some of the first designers
- Advent of professional armiesItaly, Sweden
Switzerland, England, France, Prussia
137Changes in War
- Wars no longer a test of strength, to be decided
by mere battles, rather they depend on losing
or gaining friends and allies, and it is to this
end that good states men turn all their attention
and energy - Rise of Diplomacy
- Ambassadors develop out of medieval heralds
and/or messengers - Enjoyed personal security from both parties
- Authorized to conduct negotiations, i.e. diplomacy
138- Expense
- Cost is hugeruler provided equipment
(ammunition, amour, weapons) - Wives and children, spare horses
- Armies sometimes 1600 strong
- Warfare on ships (river or sea)
- Cannons prove to be very effective on ships
139M U G H A L
E M P I R E
140Mughal Rulers
- all fabulously wealthy
- empire covered 2/3 of present-day India
- Babur 1526-1530
- Charismatic leader
- Related to Gengis Khan and Tamerlaine
- Took over Afghanistan
- Builder of gardens
- Brought the Persian culture to India
- Brought first cannons to India-helped him to
successfully invade
141- Humayan 1530-1556
- Underachiever, son of Babur
- Superstitious
- Loved books
- Spent entire reign consolidating the empire
- Akbar 1556-1605
- Statesman
- Encouraged religious tolerance
- Brought Muslim culture to India
- Married a Hindu princess
- Ran the country with a good infrastructure
- Came to power at 13 general who was loyal kept
the empire in tact for him until of age
142- Jahangir 1605-1627
- Drunkard
- Loved precious jewelsit was an obsession
- Hunter boasted about hunting abilities and
number of kills - Shah Jehan 1627-1658
- most famous to western world
- built Taj Mahal, Red Fort, and Friday Mosque
(largest in India) - ruthlesskilled male heirs of extended family
- imprisoned the last 9 years by his son
143Taj Mahal
144Friday Mosque
145Red Fort
146- Auranzeb 1658-1707
- religious fanatic required all to be Muslims
- enforced Muslim law which begins to break up the
empireHindus upset with the law - Eleven more rulers to follow, yet the empire
continues to decline
147Mughal Architecture
- formed from the Persian and Indian style of art
- consisted of archs, domes, towers, indentures,
and carvings - To show the greatness of the Mughal architecture,
the buildings tended to be tall and enormous.
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150The Ottoman Empire
151Ottoman empire (1289-1923)
- Founded by Osman Bey in 1289, who led Muslim
religious warriors (ghazi) - Ottoman expansion into Byzantine empire
- Seized city of Bursa, then into the Balkans
- Organized ghazi into formidable military machine
- Central role of the Janissaries (slave troops)
- Effective use of gunpowder in battles and sieges
152Ottoman Empire (1289-1923)
- Mehmed the Conqueror (reigned 1451-1481)
- Captured Constantinople in 1453 it became
Istanbul, the Ottoman capital - Absolute monarchy-- centralized state
- Expanded to Serbia, Greece,
Albania attacked Italy
Tokapi Palacemain residence in Istanbul
153Ottoman empire (1289-1923)
- Suleyman the Magnificent (1520-1566)
- Sultan Selim the Grim (1512-1520) occupied Syria
and Egypt - Suleyman the Magnificent expanded into southwest
Asia and central Europe - Suleyman also built a navy powerful enough to
challenge European fleets
154Ottoman empire (1289-1923)
- Dynasty endured for more than 600 years
- Too large to be maintained
- the empire's communication technology was not
developed enough to reach all territories - the circumstances surrounding the Ottoman
Empire's fall closely paralleled those
surrounding the fall of the Roman Empire - ongoing tensions between the empire's different
ethnic groups - various governments' inability to deal with these
tensions - Built on war and steady territorial expansion
- Possibilities for new lands ran out and lands
began to be lost to enemies - Means to maintain oversized bureaucracy and army
shrank
155Ottoman empire (1289-1923)
- Decline in effectiveness of the administrative
system corruption among officials - Poor regulated central govt allowed local
officials to be corrupt which sparked rebellions
further drain on resources - Other issue ?successors were not prepared to
ruled instead basically imprisoned weak rulers
pawns - Civil strife increased and the discipline and
leadership of the armies deteriorated
156Ottoman empire (1289-1923)
- Began to lose on the battle field (change to
light field artillery by European powers) - Not dominate on the sea (defeated by Spanish and
Italian navies at Battle of Lepanto) - Goods not going to Europe through Muslim trading
centers lost revenue for Ottoman Empire - Inflation caused by Spanish silver into Ottoman
Empire
157Ottoman empire (1289-1923)
- Long standing belief that little of what happened
in Europe was important not take seriously the
changes that transformed Europe - Ends up being Sick Man
- Independence movements in Balkans
- Defeated in 1918 and divided between Britain and
France
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159Neo-Confucianism
- the revival of the various strands of Confucian
philosophy and political culture that began in
the middle of the 9th Century and reached new
levels of intellectual and social creativity in
the 11th Century in the Northern Song Dynasty. - movement included speculative philosophers,
painters, poets, doctors, social ethicists,
political theorists, historians, local reformers
and government civil servants.
160- 14th C.--the teaching of the way or the teaching
of principle, became the standard curriculum for
the imperial civil service examination system - dominance of the civil service continued until
the whole system was abolished in 1905. - In the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) there was a
further reaction against the speculative
philosophy of the learning of Han arose to
combat what were taken to be the grave mistakes - also know as the school of evidential research
because of its commitment to historical and
philological research in contradistinction to
the Song and Ming fascination with speculative
metaphysics and personal moral self-cultivation.
161- Neo-Confucian masters where also teachers of
various forms of personal moral self-cultivation - sought to promote a unified vision of humane
flourishing that would end with a person becoming
a sage or worthy by means of various forms of
self-cultivation. - became an international movement and spread to
Korea, Japan, and Vietnam
162African Contributions to the Cultures of America
- Slavery
- Music Jazz gospel
- Religion - While the dominant religions on the
Caribbean islands are all variants of
Christianity, a few religions are the result of
African slaves combining their spiritual
practices with the beliefs of their captors. Most
common are voodoo and Santería.
163 Changes and Continuities
- Change The Americas are added to world trade
network - Change Europe becomes a Maritime area
- Continuity Trade is really important
- Continuity Religions continue to adapt to new
times, but very important - Continuity Diffusion of ideas and diseases as
people come into contact with each other.
164Age of Revolution1750-1914
- Mexican, Haitian, and Chinese Revolutions
165 Three Things to Remember
- Industrialization caused true world-wide
interdependence. Intensification of
core-periphery concept - Populations grew and people moved from the
country into the cities to work in factories. - Women gained some economic opportunities with the
rise of factory work, but they did not gain
political or economic parity.
166 Three more things to Remember
- Western culture influenced Asia and Africa,
especially because of imperialism - Rise of the Proletariat as a social force
- Revolutions were inspired because of the
Enlightenment ideals of the social contract and
natural rights.
167 The Bookends
- 1750- beginning of industrialization with the
water frame in Manchester England - 1776-First enlightenment revolution.
- 1800s nationalism
- 1800s Imperialism
- 1860 Emancipation of serfs and slaves
- 1914 Eve of World War I
168Classic Revolutions
- Haitian Revolution-August 22, 1791 - 1804
- Mexican Revolution -September 16, 1810 1821
- 2nd Revolution 1908
- Greek Revolution - 1821 - 1829
- French Revolution -1789-1799
- American Revolution 1775-1781 (how was this
revolution different) - Russian Revolution 1917-1921
- Chinese Revolution 1911 1921
- 2nd Revolution and civil war 1949
169Latin American Independence
- Sources of Discontent
- 1. Discontent among social hierarchy
- Peninsulars
- Creoles
- Mestizos
- Mulattoes
- Native Americans
- Enslaved Africans
170Latin American Independence
- Sources of Discontent
- Enlightenment ideas
- - read workers
- - North America creoles read Dec. of
Independence and Constitution - - Women hosted salon (tertulias) where
independence and revolution were discussed
171Latin American Independence
- 3. Napoleons invasion of Spain
- Joseph on throne
- Latin American leaders saw Spains weakness as an
opportunity to get rid of them.
172Mexican Independence
- Mexican Revolution -September 16, 1810 1821
- Creole Priest, Father Miguel Hidalgo raised cry
for freedom (Sept. 15, 1810) - Speech el Grito e Delores the cry of
Dolores - It called Mexican to fight for independence and
liberty
173Mexican Independence
- Ragged army of mestizos and Native Americans
marched to outskirts of Mexico City - 1st creoles supported but soon rejected his call
to end slavery and reforms for NA - Less than a year, Hidalgo was captured and
executed.
174Mexican Independence
- Father Jose Morelos mestizo called for wide
ranging social and political reform- improve
conditions, abolish slavery, give vote to all men
- For 4 years, led forces then captured and shot.
(1815)
175Mexican Independence
- Agustin de Iturbide conservative Creole who
fought revolutionaries worried about new
Spanish government in 1820 - In 1821, backed by creoles, mestizos, and Native
Americans, he overthrow the Spanish viceroy - Mexico independent
- Iturbide took title Emperor Agustin I
- Toppled and set up Republic of Mexico
176Mexican Independence
- New government but for most little changed
- Military leaders dominated government
- Next 100 years contains struggles to improve
conditions for Mexicans
177Mexican Revolution 2
- Dictator Porfiro Diaz ruled for almost 35 years
winning as president again and again - Prosperity for wealthy landowners, businessmen,
and foreign investors but most Mexicans were
peasants who lived in poverty - Factory workers, miners, and middle class
liberals opposed him.
178Mexico
- Francisco Madero demanded free elections in
1910. - He was imprisoned and by Diaz and then began
encouraging revolt - Diaz resigned in 1911
- Madero became president but was murdered within
2 years.
179Mexico
- Several leaders emerged including
- North -Francisco Pancho Villa personal power
- South - Emiliano Zapata peasant revolt
(Zapatistas) - Decade of fighting
- Women soldiers called soldaderas cooked, tended
wounded and even fought.
180Mexico
- 1917 Venustiano elected and approved a
constitution (today's) - Land broke up large estates, restricted
foreigners owning land and allowed
nationalization of natural resources - Religion Church land made the property of the
nation - Labor min. wage and protected right of workers
to strike - Suffrage only to men but gave women some
protection (equal pay, married women to draw up
contracts, take part in legal suits, equal
authority with men in spending family funds)
181Mexican Independence 2
- 1920s after government restored order finally
- Helped some Indian communities regain land
- Supported labor unions
- Schools and libraries set up
- Teachers spread ideas of nationalism
- Mexico became first LA to pursue reforms
182Revolutions in Haiti
- Slave Revolt
- Toussaint LOuverture
The Louisiana Territory and Napoleons Empire
Balanced Precariously on an ex-slave
183- Slave revolt because of brutal slave system
- St. Dominique (Haiti) whites decided to fight for
freedom from France b/c of a law passed that gave
all those of color with 2 free parents their
freedom. - 1793 Toussaint joined fight
- National Convention abolished slavery in St.
Dominique - 1794 Frances National Assembly abolished slavery
in colonies
184- After war with Britain and Spain, Toussaint
supported French govt - Toussaint was made lieutenant governor of St.
Dominique - He distrusted all foreigners, believing only
black leadership could assure autonomous St.
Dominique - Toussaint made commander-in-chief of island by
French Convention - Resolved to quickly establish autonomous black
state - After defeat of Spanish British began moving
toward independence from France - Wanted to be on equal footing with France and
other major powers
185- Toussaint was inspired by French US revolutions
- Some of his officers had fought with French army
in US War for Independence - 1799 Napoleons coup detat in France
- Wanted Toussaint out
- Wanted to reestablish slavery
- 1800 Toussaint became military dictator
- Re-imposed plantation system
186- Constitution gave Napoleon a reason for sending
French troops to take over - Technically a French colony, acting as an
independent state - Toussaint liberated St. Dominique from French
- Toussaint never formally severed its bond with
France - Toussaint defeated and sent to prison in France
- 1804 Toussaints successor (one of his
lieutenants) declared St. Dominique the
independent country of Haiti
1871911 Revolution in China
- Last emperor Pi Yu abdicates the throne
- Mutiny by imperial soldiers
- Scattered secret society upheavals
- Organized plots, etc.
- Republic 1912-1949
- January 1, 1912 is the first official day of the
Republic of China - Provisional president is Sun Yat-sen
- He is soon pushed aside which begins a 15 year
period of military strongmen designated as
Presidentwarlord period - Politically it resembled the last few years of
the Qing rule
188Meji Restoration
- Japanese Modernization
- New Constitution based on US
- Parliament formed (Diet)
- Mostly an Oligarchy
- Zaibatsu