Global review overview of 9th grade
Transcript of Global review overview of 9th grade
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2,500,000 BCE – 10,000 BCE2,500,000 BCE – 10,000 BCE
1. Hunting and gathering: Small bands of 20-30 people. Gender equality because both contributed
to survival
2. Mostly Nomadic but some Permanent settlements were established in areas with
abundant food resources (grains, fish).
3. Neanderthal Man: First fully modern human beings-physically and mentally. Belief in afterlife,
buried dead
4. Cro-Magnon man: Interested in fashion and art. Humans during this period found shelter in caves. Humans during this period found shelter in caves.
Cave paintings were left behind.Cave paintings were left behind.
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8000-3000 BCE
1. Food surplus lead to population boom
2. Permanent settlements and communities develop. Idea of private
property
3. Development on farming technology, art, architecture, language, job specialization,
irrigation, etc.
4. Development of cities: Catal Huyuk, Jericho.
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AdvancedCities
Specialized Workers/
Social Classes ComplexInstitutions:GovernmentPublic Works
Economic SystemsOrganized religion
Record-Keeping
AdvancedTechnology
Art and Architecture
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Mesopotamia: “The Cradle of Civilization”
“Fertile Crescent” and lack of natural barriers allowed many groups to control this
valuable area.
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Geography of Mesopotamia
Successful agriculture, irrigation systemsWriting, cuneiforms
Use of wheel12 month calendar
PolytheisticPolytheistic: The Gods were Anthropomorphic.
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Hammurabi, the Judge• “King of the four quarters of the world”
• Centralized bureaucratic government• System of taxation
• First written code of laws
The Babylonian Empires
Babylonian Achievements
12 Month Calendar
Mathematics
Babylonian Numbers
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The Hittites•Learned to
extract iron from ore and were the
first to make tools and
weapons of iron.
The Assyrians•Centralized bureaucratic government.•Built military roads to move troops quickly.•Founded first
libraries. The Phoenicians•Best known
for manufacturing
and trade•“Carriers of Civilization”•Created first
alphabet
The Hebrews
•Belief in Judaism, first monotheistic faith
• Ten commandments
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Geography of Egypt•Rich soil, gentle annual flooding• Led by Pharaoh – leader with total power•water management, pyramids, astronomy, hieroglyphs, mummification, calendar, gold•Polytheistic•Women rulers, buy, sell property, inherit, will property, dissolve marriages, still subservient to men• Hierarchy: pharaoh, priest, nobles, merchants, artisans, peasants, slaves•Conquered by (1100 BCE)
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Geography of China
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China:Shang: 1700-1100 BCE
• Stable agri-surplus, trade-centered• N. China, walled cities, strong army, chariots• “The Middle Kingdom” World View• Bronze, pottery, silk, decimal system, calendar• Patriarchal, polytheistic, ancestor veneration, oracle bones
Zhou: 1700-1100 BCE
Replaced Shang around 1100 BCERuled 900 years, kept customs,
traditionsMandate of HeavenFeudal system, nobles gained,
bureaucracies, war amongst feudal kingdoms, collapse 256 BCE
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Geography of India
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Indus Valley: 3300 – 1700 B.C.E.Outside contact more limited -
moutainsKyber Pass connection to
outsideTwin Cities of Harrappa,
Mohenjo-Daro Master-planned, water system,
strong central gov’t, polytheistic, written language
Pottery, cotton, clothCities abandoned, reason
unknownAryans arrive 1500 BCE
The Harappan Civilization
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From Caucasus Mtns. Black/Caspian Sea
Nomads who settledVedas, Upanashads basis for
HinduismCaste systemwarriors, priests, peasants later re-ordered: Brahmins
(priests), warriors, landowners-merchants, peasants, untouchables (out castes)
Aryans: The Vedic Age: 1500-500 B.C.E..
ShudrasShudras
VaishyasVaishyas
KshatriyKshatriyas as
Pariahs [Harijan] Untouchables
BrahminBrahminss
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Jerusalem FaithsJudaism
Christianity
ISLAMProtestantEastern Orthodox
Sunni
Shiite
Russian Orthodox
Anglican
Calvinist
Lutheran
Roman Catholic
Coptic
Sufi
3000 BCE
33 CE
622 CE
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South Asian ReligionsHinduism
BuddhismJainism
Zen
Mahayana
TherevedaSikhism
5000 BCE
500 BCE800 BCE
Tibetan (Tantric)
1469 CE
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Diffusion of Belief Systems
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Hinduism
Beliefs, Practices, Holy Books Significance India
3000 B.C.E.Spread
throughout India
Stationary Religion
Brahman-supreme force: Gods are manifestations of Brahman (Vishnu-preserver, Shiva-destroyer)Reincarnation. Dharma: rules and obligations. Karma: fate based on how dharma was met.Moshka: highest state of being, release of soulVedas and Upanishads
Caste System: Rigid social structure, born into caste, must perform certain job, or Jati.Ganges is sacred river, performance of ritualsSpawned Buddhism
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Caste System
ShudrasShudras
VaishyasVaishyas
Kshatriyas Kshatriyas
Pariahs [Harijan] Untouchables
BrahminsBrahmins
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Buddhism
Beliefs, Practices, Holy Books Significance
India, Nepal563 B.C.E.
Spread throughout
India, China, Japan, S.E.
AsiaMissionary
Religion
Founded by Siddhartha GuatamaNo Supreme Being– Buddha “Enlightened one”Four Noble Truths – Life is suffering caused by desire, follow Eight Fold PathNirvana, state of perfect peace and harmony path may take several lifetimes: Reincarnation, Dharma, KarmaTheraveda: meditation, harmony, Buddha not a god (Lesser Vehicle)Mahayana: more complex, greater ritual, reliance on priests. Buddha a diety
No Caste system, appealed to lower classes.Not attached to social structure, spread rapidly to other cultures.Ashoka adopted Buddhism. Force of cultural diffusion via trade, Silk Road, missionary Religion
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Judaism
Beliefs, Practices, Holy Books Significance Middle East,
Caanan Jerusalem
3000 B.C.E.
Founded by Abraham, MosesHebrews were chosen by God, special statusPersonal relationship with God – a covenantAfterlife, tradition, doctrines, philosophy, personal salvation.To honor, serve God, promote prophets – Wailing WallA religion & culture – Torah, Talmud10 Commandments, waiting for messiah
The First Monotheistic Belief SystemLed to Christianity and IslamForced migration – Exodus, Diaspora, HolocaustLike Hinduism – Stationary faith
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Christianity
Beliefs, Practices, Holy Books Significance Middle East,
Jerusalem 30 C.E.Spread
north and west
throughout Europe,
Americas
Founded by Jesus of Nazareth - BibleSplinter group of Jews, quickly spread throughout Roman Empire despite persecutionJesus, son of God, Messiah of Jewish prophecyDevotion to God, love of fellow man - monotheisticJesus sent to redeem man from sinSalvation by faith in divinity, death, and resurrection of Jesus.Crucified by Roman gov’t 30 CE
Emphasis on salvation, eternal life after death appealed to lower classes, womenCombo of religion & empire = huge impact on political, social development of Europe Missionary Religion
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Islam
Beliefs, Practices, Holy Books Significance Middle East,
Mecca, Medina,
Jerusalem622 C.E.
Spread North Africa,
S.E.Asia, U.S.
Founded by Muhammad- Prophet – KoranFive Pillars of Faith:Allah is one true God, Prophet is MuhammadPray Five times a day facing MeccaAlmsgiving – give to the poorRamadan – FastingHajj – Pilgrimage to MeccaCan not eat pork, gamble, drink alcohol, smokeJihad – Struggle in God’s service
Led to Islamic Empires Umayyad Caliphate, Abbasids, Ottoman, MughalShiite-Sunni SplitCrusades – Holy warsMissionary religion
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Legalism
Beliefs, Practices, Holy Books Significance China
500 B.C.E.
Founded by Han FeiziThe Q’in Dynasty- Shi HuangdiPeace & order through centralized, tightly controlled stateMistrust of human nature; reliance on tough lawsPunish those who break laws, reward those who follow2 most worthy jobs: farmer, soldier
Accomplished swift reunification of China.Completion of projects like the Great Wall.Caused widespread resentment among common people, led to wider acceptance of Confucianism-Daoism.
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Confucianism
Beliefs, Practices, Holy Books Significance
China500
B.C.E.Spread to
Japan, S.E. Asia
Founded by Confucius (Kong Fu Tse)Political-social philosophy, not religionMoral, ethical, also practical – The AnalectsFive Right relationships = right society: Parent to Child (Filial Piety), Ruler to Subject, Older to Younger, Husband to Wife, Friend to Friend.Education is valuable and everyone should be able to get one. Become a gentleman.Put aside personal ambition for good of state
As a ethical, social, political belief system it was compatible with other religions, could practice Buddhism and ConfucianismEmbraced by Han, Tang, Song, Ming Dynasties. Civil Service Exam
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Daoism-Taoism
Beliefs, Practices, Holy Books Significance China500
B.C.E.
Founded by Lao-tzu, philosopherDao = “The Way” (of nature/cosmos)Wu wei- non-doing, harmony with natureEternal principles, passive, yielding. Like water, yet strong, shaping.Yin-Yang – symbol of balance in nature
Self-sufficient communitiesCounter to Confucian activismEmphasis on harmony w/ nature leads gains: astronomy, botany, chemistryCo-existed w/Confucianism, Buddhism, LegalismAdded to complexity of Chinese culture
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Animism
Beliefs, Practices, Holy Books Significance Africa,
Latin AmericaNo Founder
No holy book – mostly oral traditionsAll things in nature have a soul (Trees, stones, rivers, etc.)Use of Shaman or Diviners who conducted ceremonies and rituals and used fetishesAncestor Veneration – Your ancestor’s spirits watch over you and can protect you.
Found among many pastoral nomadic tribal villages.Tribal masks inspired Cubist art movement
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Shintoism
Beliefs, Practices, Holy Books Significance Japan
500BCENo
founder
God in all of us and in all of nature. Our body is the visible temple for the soul.Anaterasu is the Sun Goddess and main god or kami. Emperor is descendant and was seen as divine“Tori” is the symbol of prosperity in Shintoism and the sacred gates that are found in front of all Shinto temples in Japan. People write wishes on the Tori gates wishing for good health, wealth and prosperity. There are no written doctrinesThere are gods in every object in nature (Kami)Animist - Ancestor veneration
Justified power of EmperorDuring Meiji Restoration, Shintoism was used to unite JapaneseDuring WWII, Kamikaze pilots sacrificed themselves for their Emperor
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Classical Age: Greek Achievements
Age of Pericles;
Direct Democracy, Golden age
Art, architecture, sculpture, amphitheaters, dramas,
math, astronomy, medicine
Philosophy: Socrates, Plato,
Aristotle.
Mythology – polytheistic
humanistic gods
Ideal beauty, Sports,
Olympics
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Alexander the Great!Peloponnesian War with Sparta
(431 BCE) Athens loses powerMacedonians from north
conquer And unites Greek Peninsula
Followed by son, Alexander, unified Greece, invaded Persia
What was Alexander’s Greatest Accomplishment?
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Alexander’s Empire
Which four major civilizations did Alexander briefly unite?
Hellenic
Persian
Egyptian Indian
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Geography of Rome
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Professional army,
citizenship for
conquered people, Pax
Romana
Art, architecture, arch, dome, aqueducts, roads
Coliseum, Bread and
Circus, Gladiators, christianity
Centralized government: Republic, Dictator,
Empire, Civil Service, Senate, Patricians,
Plebeians
Equal under Law, justice, 12 tables of
law
Roman Achievements
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Q’in EmpireLed by Emperor
Shi Huangdi
Unified China: Centralized Government
Connected Great Wall of China, terra
cotta warriors
Unified monetary system, weights
and measurements
Legalist government – burned Confucian
books
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The Han Dynasty!
Emperor Han Wudi – Confucian
style government
Expanded Empire, developed a bureaucracy, Silk Road Trade –
spread of Buddhism
Civil Service Exams – Social
classes: Nobles,
Scholar-gentry, Farmers,
Merchants
Paper, Ship Rudders, Wheelbarrow, Hot air balloons, sundials, metallurgy
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Mauryan Empire
Rock & Pillar edicts, Buddhism spread, Big
time traders: silk, cotton, elephants (much more) to
the west
Strong military, Ashoka converts to Buddhism:
non-violence, moderation
Centralized government with bureaucracy, tax collection 321 BCE – 185 BCE321 BCE – 185 BCE
Founded by Chandragupta MauryaUnified smaller Aryan kingdoms
Greatest extent under Ashoka
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Rise of Gupta: 220 BCE – 550 CE220 BCE – 550 CE
Achievements in mathematics –pi, zero, numerals, astronomy,
medicine, literature
Hinduism resurgentWomen lost rights; own property, study religion, child marriages common
Profitable trade Profitable trade withwith the the
MediterraneanMediterranean world. world.
375-415 CE, revival under Chandra Gupta
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Extensive Trade:Extensive Trade:Land Route = Silk Road Water Route = Land Route = Silk Road Water Route = Indian Indian
OceanOcean
spices
spices
spicesspices
gold & gold &
ivoryivorygold & gold & ivoryivory
rice & rice & wheatwheathorseshorses
cotton goodscotton goods
cotton goodscotton goodssilkssilks
PearlsPearls
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Decline of Empire
Roman Empire Han ChinaDecline in Morals and Values that have upheld
society togetherPublic Health
and Urban Decay
Political Corruption
Unemployment and Inflation
Military Spending- too
costly
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Period 3: 600-1450Big Picture Themes!
Sui, Tang, Song Dynasties in China After the Fall of the Han
I. Rebuilding of Declining Empires – Post-Classical Empires
The Byzantine Empire after the fall of the Roman Empire
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“New Empires”: Recovery from Fall of Han Dynasty
China: The Tang and Song Dynasties
Political Development
• Centralized Rule via Confucian bureaucracy and meritocracy – civil service exams.
• Tang extended territory into Tibet and Korea.
• Weak military of the Song succumbed to the
Mongols in 1279.
Rebuilding of Declining Empires – Post-Classical Empires
Tang Dynasty (618-907 C.E.)
Song Taizu united China and moved capital to Huangzhou.
Song Dynasty (907-1279 C.E.)
Tang Taizong united China and created capital in Chang’an.
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China: The Tang and Song Dynasties
The Tang at its peak, c.750
The Song Dynasty
Silk Road – connected to outside world – ran through Central Asia and to Middle East and beyond.
Rebuilding of Declining Empires – Post-Classical Empires
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Economic Development
•Grand Canal completed under Tang. Transport of southern rice to the north.
•Urbanization increased dramatically with improved food supplies and fast-ripening
rice (Song) combined with a growing merchant and manufacturing economy. Capital of Changan was largest city in world w/ over 2 million people by 640.
• Distribution of land – Equal-field system, only 1/5th of property was the
hereditary possession of a familyCultural Development
•Tang: State sponsored anti-Buddhist policy resulted in development of Neo-Confucianism.
Footbinding
•Gunpowder developed in late 1000s.
•Compass aided maritime navigation.
China: The Tang and Song DynastiesRebuilding of Declining Empires – Post-Classical Empires
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The Golden AgeArtistic, Technological and Industrial Developments
Gunpowder and Rockets
Moveable Type Chinese junks
Porcelain - Chinaware
Landscape art
Compass
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Political Development
Off-shoot of the Roman Empire. “Eastern Roman Empire.”
Centralized State: Hereditary Monarchy. Autocratic Rule – Ruler of the government and the Church – had absolute power - Emperor
Justinian
Preserved Greco-Roman ideals, literature, arts, and law:
Justinian’s Law Code was based on the Roman 12 Tables.
Replaced Latin with Greek as official language.
Military
Civil Bureaucrats
Clergy
HaloByzantium during Justinian’s reign.
Byzantine Empire, 4th century to 1453
“New Empires”: Recovery from Fall of Roman EmpireRebuilding of Declining Empires – Post-Classical Empires
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Economic DevelopmentConstantinople was center for Silk Road and Mediterranean Sea imports and exports.
Smuggled silk worms out of China and started their own silk industry.
Byzantium by 814.
Byzantine Empire, 4th century to 1453Rebuilding of Declining Empires – Post-Classical Empires
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Cultural Development
Beautified Constantinople – Built Hagia Sophia, government buildings, roads, walls, public baths, law courts, underground reservoirs, supported art,
sculptures, mosaics, etc.
Eastern Orthodox Church emerged. Pope and Patriarch mutually excommunicated each other in 1054.
Eastern Orthodoxy later spread to Russia and the Slavic peoples of Eastern Europe.
Byzantine Empire, 4th century to 1453
Rebuilding of Declining Empires – Post-Classical Empires
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Period 3: 600-1450Big Picture Themes!
Beliefs of Islam
II. Rise and Spread of Islam
The Dar-al-Islam
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Beginnings of Islam• 610 C.E. – Muhammad in Mecca begins to preach monotheism, seen as a threat, flees to Medina in 622 C.E. - the ________________________
• Muhammed and the Muslims conquer Mecca in 630 C.E. – soon almost all of Arabia under Muslim control
Beliefs of Islam
• Holy book – _____________
• Five Pillars of Faith:
1. ________________________________________________
2. ________________________________________
3. ________________________________________
4. ________________________________________
5. ________________________________________
Hijra – Hajj (pilgimage)
Qur’an/Koran
Faith – there is one god and that god is AllahPrayer – 5x a day facing MeccaFasting – during RamadanPilgrimage – Hajj to Mecca at least onceAlms – Give to charity, help the poor
Rise and Spread of Islam: 600-1450.
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Unifying Forces of Islam
Shariah - System or code of laws Regulated moral behavior, family life, business, govt. etc. Helps followers to interpret the Koran and to apply it to everyday life
No separation of church and state Applied Koran to all aspects of life
(secular and religious) Theocracy
Arabic languageKoran and prayer in Arabic only
Rise and Spread of Islam: 600-1450.
Islam spread through two main avenues: Military conquest, and Trade/Missionary activity.
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Why was Islam so attractive?
The Byzantine and Persian empires (especially the Byzantine) were considered oppressive and cruel. To such an extent that during
the Byzantine-Persian wars the Jews sided with the Persians.
•Orthodox Christianity had become so identified with Greek culture that it seemed totally foreign
and unrelated to the life of the Arabs.
•Zoroastrianism was also too closely associated with Persian culture and so was not considered a real option for the Arabs.
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Islam spread to __________________
__________________
__________________
the Middle East,
Northern Africa,
and to South Asia
The Dar-al-Islam
IV. Split of Islam into Sects
• After Muhammad’s death, successors led Islamic Empires –________
• Sunni: Largest sect. Believe that any righteous Muslim can be Caliph
• Shia: believe caliph must be __________________________
• Sufi: Mystical, encouraged followers to show devotion to Allah in own way.
Caliphs
a descendant of Muhammad
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The Umayyad Dynasty
Sunni, capital at Damascus, codified
Islamic law
The Arabic Caliphates: The Dar al-Islam
Rise and Spread of Islam: 600-1450.
The Abbasid Dynasty
Shia, overthrew the Umayyads in 750 C.E. Capital moved to
Baghdad
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Economic Development
Traded along the Silk Road, Indian Ocean, Mediterranean Sea, Trans-
Saharan Trade
Abbasids traded w/ Vikings and Russians via routes in Southern and
Eastern Europe
Camel caravans crossed desert to trade w/ West Africa in Gold/Salt trade
Used coins
Baghdad became a hub of learning and commerce. By the 800's it had nearly half a million people and was
the largest city in the world outside of China.
The Arabic Caliphates: The Dar al-Islam
Rise and Spread of Islam: 600-1450.
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Abbasid Art and Architecture
Great Mosque at Samarra
Calligraphy
Paintings
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VI. Development of other Civilizations
Spread of Civilization to Russia, West African, and Japan
Mayans, Aztecs, Incas in Americas
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Early Russia• Vikings colonized Eastern Europe, area populated by Slavic peoples
• First king of Kiev, Dane named Rurik
• Traded with Byzantium, Prince Vladimir converted to Eastern Orthodox
• Decline – Mongols conquered
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Ghana (500-1200) Commercially based empire. Center
of trade in gold from the south. Controlled and secured trade
routes. Also traded in ivory, slaves, horses,
cloth, salt. Conversion by emperors to Islam
improved diplomatic and economic relations between West Africa and the Islamic World.
Mali (1235 – late 1400s)
Controlled and taxed gold salt trade.
Timbuktu became economic, Islamic, and scholarly focal point of Kingdom.
Mansa Musa: The Hajj Ibn Battuta: The Traveler. Absorbed into Songhai.
Mosque @ TimbuktuMusa’s Hajj
West Africa
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Maya (c. 300 to 900)Borrowing from Olmec traditions, the Mayans developed large domain and lived in scattered
settlements on the Yucatan peninsula in southeastern Mexico. Archaeologist have discovered the following features of their regional culture
An agricultural economyLack of large
domesticated animals for labor
A ritualistic polytheismUrban areas with
thousands of peopleIndependent city-states,
linked by tradeA staple diet of maize
(corn) and beans
American Civilizations
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Also known as the Mexica people, the Aztecs were the last great Mesoamerican culture before the arrival of the Europeans. Taking advantage of the Toltecs decline, the Aztecs used their fighting
skills to take control off the Lake Texcoco region. The Aztec culture was characterized by:
A militant warrior tradition to subdue tributary city-states. Present day central Mexico.
Rule by severe despotsA priestly class to oversee rituals, including
human sacrificeA ritualistic polytheistic religion with an
extensive pantheonA large urban capital, Tenochtitlan, with 150,000
inhabitants built on an island in Lake TexcocoA decentralized network of city-states that paid
tribute.Aztecs fell due to contact with the Spanish
(Cortes). Warfare and disease played major roles in the extinction of the Aztec people.
Aztecs 1400-1521American Civilizations
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In the South American highlands, clans developed an Andean culture which led to the rise of an empire in the 1300s CE. These people-the Incas-conquered a large area and absorbed many tribes in
central-western South America. In 90 years, the Incan empire grew into a stretch of land that covered over 3,000 miles from north to south. History remembers the Inca for:
Centralized empire with its capital at Cuzco (present day Peru)
An extensive, irrigated agricultural economy that adapted to the rugged terrain of the Andes Mts. By
building terraces for farming and extensive network of roads
Polytheistic religion: Sun worshipPatriarchal society
Privileged class of nobles, headed by a king, in which royal ancestors were revered and worshipped
No written language. Used quipu, a system of colored, knotted ropes to keep records.
Fell to the Spanish conquistador, Pizarro
Incas 1400-1540
American Civilizations
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Period 3: 600-1450Big Picture Themes!
Western Europe
III. Decentralized Civilizations
Japan
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Political Developments•Feudalism prevailed.
•Weak central authority: lords and vassals ruled through feudal obligations.
•The Catholic Church was single strongest unifying factor across Western Europe
Decentralized States: Feudalism
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Economic Developments•Serfdom and the manor system prevailed.
•Serfs gave crops to lord in exchange for a plot of land and protection.•Manors operated as self-sufficient communities.
•Lord of the manor determined what was to be grown and how much. •Serfs were peasants bound to the land for life.
MANORIALISM
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WESTERN EUROPECultural Developments
•Nobility of birth = one’s social status.
•Honor, loyalty, and duty were stressed under the knight’s code of chivalry.
•Religious and moral authority rested in the hands of the Catholic Church
and the Pope.
•Women could join convent
Decentralized States
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•Universities were created
•Monks developed monasteries and illuminated the bible in scriptoriums
•Gothic Architecture – Cathedrals, stained glass, flying buttress, gargoyles
•Art – frescoes, panel paintings, tapestries
AchievementsDecentralized States
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Political Developments:
•Geography: Island configuration of Japan led to the development of isolated communities
•Attempts at centralizing the Japanese state were relatively unsuccessful
•Japanese attempted to create bureaucracy in Chinese Confucian model. Emissaries and
scholars were sent to China to study.
•The Rise of Feudalism:
•Feudalism developed in which a central figure, the Shogun, reigned as supreme military
general and political authority over Japan.
•The power of the shogun was depended on the loyalties of the local daimyos and samurais.
Japan 600-1450Decentralized States
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Cultural Developments: •Traditional religion is Shintoism.
Traditional customs combined with Buddhism produced Zen Buddhism.
•Contacts with China were halted during the Heian Period (794-1185) as the
Japanese were encouraged to express traditional culture.
•Women dominated literature. The Tale of Genji was written by Lady Murasaki.
Women enjoyed considerable legal and economic rights compared to later
periods.
Economic Development:
•Japan was a predominantly agrarian society with a local
artisan class of weavers, carpenters, and iron workers.
•Most people worked on land that was owned by other people and
had to pay an in-kind tax on their harvests on a yearly basis.
Japan 600-1450Decentralized States
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The Vikings
The Turks
The Mongols
Period 3: 600-1450Big Picture Themes!
IV. Golden Age of Nomads
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Nomadic group from Scandinavia Conducted seasonal raids to
supplement farm production Ransacked towns and villages
across Europe Use of small maneuverable boats
combined with ruthlessness in battle facilitated their success.
Nomadic Empires: The Vikings (c. 800-1100)
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Explored north Atlantic Ocean, including Iceland, Greenland, Newfoundland Canada, and Northeast coast of United States (c. 1000).
Established settlements in Scotland, Northern France, and Eastern Europe. Overtime, the Vikings adopted Christianity and were absorbed into the
larger European feudal order (William the Conqueror).
Nomadic Empires: The Vikings (c. 800-1100)
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The Seljuk Turks Pastoral nomadic group from central Asian steppes.
Often hired by Muslim leaders as mercenaries. The Seljuk Turks invaded Baghdad in 1055 and took over
the Abbasid Caliphate. By 1071, they were able to push the Byzantine Empire out of most of Anatolia.
Nomadic Empires: The Turks, c. 1000-1450
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The Afghan TurksBegan series of raids into India in the 10th century.
Gold, Jewels, and destruction of Hindu temples.By the late12th century, the Afghan Turks settled in
northern India and began the Delhi Sultanate which lasted from 1206-1526.
Nomadic Empires: The Turks, c. 1000-1450
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Nomadic Empires: The Mongols, 1200-1550
Pastoral Nomadic Group of the Asian Steppe Genghis Khan united the tribes of the steppe under the Mongol
banner. Horsemanship, archery, terror, and military strategy were keys
to the Mongols quick rise to power. Established the largest continual land empire in history. GREATEST STRENGTH: Mobility via horses and mandatory
military conscription of all men during times of war (ages 15-70).
Resist and die. Submit and live.
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Before his death, Genghis Khan divided his empire into administrative states called Khanates to be ruled by his sons and their descendants.
Ilkhan Khanate
Khanate of the Golden Horde
Great Khanate
Chagatai Khanate
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Before his death, Genghis Khan divided his empire into administrative states called Khanates to be ruled by his sons and their descendants.
China: The Yuan Dynasty
Established by Kublai Khan who defeated the Song
Dynasty.
Established centralized rule via the use of Persian
bureaucrats.
Confucianism outlawed, civil service eliminated.
Chinese were segregated from Mongol population.
Nomadic Empires: The Mongols, c. 1000-1450
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For a century, the continent of Asia was united under Mongol rule resulting in peace and an increase in trade and cultural interaction.
The benefit of this “peace” is debatable when contrasting it the loss of human life during the initial Mongol reign of terror.
The Pax Mongolia: The Mongol Peace
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The Mongol DeclineWhat factors do you think caused the decline
of the Mongol Empire?
1. Despite great military accomplishments the Mongol Empire only lasted three to four generations.
2. They were great conquerors, but horrible administrators.
3. Overexpansion (as seen in the failed invasion of Japan) and over spending
4. Rivalries among Mongol leaders
5. By 1350, most Mongol territories had been conquered by other armies.
Nomadic Empires: The Mongols, c. 1000-1450
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Period 3: 600-1450Big Picture Themes!
Impact of Crusades
V. Increased Trade and MovementExpanded Trade Routes
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• The Crusades were a series of holy wars between the Christians and Muslims over the holy lands
• Pope Urban II launched the Crusades in 1095 when he called for Christians to fight against the Muslims.
Results:
• Quest for the Holy Land was a failure
• Encouraged trade with Muslim merchants and created an increase in European demand for Asian goods.
• Italian merchants (capitalizing on the weakened condition of Constantinople) greatly profited.
• New merchant class emerges
Increased Trade and MovementThe Crusades
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Fight for the Holy Land…
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Renewed contact with the Islamic world created new opportunities for trade.
Merchant guilds provided greater security and less risk of losses than did individual action.
Craft guilds determined quality, quantity and price of the goods that they produced.
Provided social safety nets for funeral expenses and pensions for widows and family members.
The Guild System: A hierarchy of people who make up the work force or play an important role in the economy of a trade or trades.
Purpose of Guilds
Increased Trade and Movement
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Medieval Guilds
Bootmaker guild
Carpenter guild
Bakers guild
Stone mason guild
Metal worker guild
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Europe during the High Middle Ages (c.1000-1450)
•Increased trade began to stimulate the growth of commercial sites in Europe.
•The Hanseatic League regulated taxes and created rules for fair trade.
•Italian city-states (Florence and Venice) controlled flow of goods into Europe.
•New economic wealth helped spark the Italian Renaissance.
Increased Trade and Movement
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Results:- population decreased significantly, causing labor shortages. - In W. Europe, workers demanded higher wages and peasants rebelled, leading to a decrease in serfdom and a weakening of the feudal system. - Anti-Semitism also increased as Jews, used as scapegoats were accused
of poisoning the wells. - Some Christians, questioned their faith amid all of the death and seemingly senseless destruction.
Deadly disease that was thought to be carried from
Asia on ships
Increased Trade and MovementThe Black Death 1340s to late 1600s
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Marco Polo
Increased Trade and Movement
Ibn Battuta
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Marco Polo and Ibn Battuta
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Ming ChinaPolitical Development
Mongols collapsed in 1368.
Hongwu established the Ming Dynasty.
Erase memory of Mongol occupation.
Confucian education and civil service reinstated.
Private merchants traded and manufactured porcelain,
silk, and cotton.
Ming “Brilliant” lasted until 1644.
Intellectual Development
Neo-Confucianism promoted
Yongle Encyclopedia promoted Chinese traditions.
Jesuit missionaries (Mateo Ricci) introduce European
technology. Clock.
Wider production of printed materials.
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Exploration“Comeback Back” Tours (7 between 1405 -1433).
Massive naval and trade fleet headed by Zheng He, a Chinese Muslim eunuch.
Established tributary relations with regions throughout the eastern hemisphere.
Voyages ended in 1433 as Confucian bureaucrats claimed foreign interests had no value to China and
military resources should be directed towards protecting northern frontier from attack.
Recovery and Renaissance in Asia and Europe, 1450
Ming China
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Zheng He
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Political Developments
By 1400, regional states were developing into powerful monarchies.
Taxed citizens directly and maintained standing armies.
Spanish Reconquista put Spain back in the hands of Iberian Catholics and
not the Moors.
Italian city states grew wealthy from trade. Florence, Milan, Venice.
Competition between nations led to innovative weapons, ships, and other technology that would allow Europe
to exert its influence world wide.
The stage was being set for a GLOBAL SHIFT IN POWER STILL
FELT TODAY.
Reconquista de Granada
Europe
Recovery and Renaissance in Asia and Europe, 1450
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Intellectual Development
The Renaissance / “Rebirth”
Sparked by renewed contact with classical Greek and Roman
heritage via the Islamic world and trade.
Increased wealth led to more resources begin devoted to the
arts.
Humanism: Stressed the importance of human existence. Reflected in art and literature.
Italy’s favorable trading location gave rise to the Renaissance.
Medici family of Florence.
Painting, science, and sculpture flourished.
Michelangelo
Davinci
Recovery and Renaissance in Asia and Europe, 1450
Europe
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European Exploration
Questioning spirit of Renaissance inspired Europeans to look outward and
explore.
Major Motivations: GLORY, GOLD, GOD.
Portuguese: Find a trade route bypassing the Middle East and middlemen. Prince
Henry the Navigator promoted expeditions along African coast.
Portugal was first European nation to sail around tip of Africa and into Indian
Ocean for trade.
Spanish: Ferdinand and Isabella and Columbus’ journey. Western Route to
Asia, 1492.
Columbus at the court of Ferdinand and Isabella
EuropeRecovery and Renaissance in Asia and Europe, 1450