AP World Midterm

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Transcript AP World Midterm

AP World Midterm
Classical Civ’s
• India/South Asia = GUPTA
• International trade flourished
• Sanskrit- many Hindu religious works were
committed to writing which promoted literacy and
questioning.
• Fostered education esp. mathematics and
astronomy (numerals, zero, algebra)
• Literature (Tamil), art, and architecture
flourished.
• Merchants from all over the world settled in
India.
Sumer
• Mesopotamia
• Ziggurats = dwelling places for the gods
and kings, not places of worship.
• Hieroglyphs – cuneiform
• Wheel, military technology, irrigation,
hammers, daggers, bronze.
Indus
• Mohenjo-Daro = well advanced, at its
height maybe 5 million people, grids of
streets, social organization, hot and cold
water, indoor plumbing, sewage system
pumped into river.
• Harrappa = well laid out streets, cotton
woven and died, wheat and rice cultivated,
sewage systems.
China
• Shang = Yellow River Valley, created pictoral
and ideographic writing system that China still
uses today, bronze, oracle bones, followed by
Zhou Dynasty ( Chinese Philosophies:
Confucius, Daoism)
• Han Dynasty: silk was woven, Silk Road, clocks,
calenders, military prowess, constant invasion
and need for protection led to crisis (similar to
Roman Empire)
Belief Systems
Hinduism
• Polytheistic- 3,000 gods and goddesses
• Passed on for centuries by oral tradition= no single
written source
• Veda= collection of prayer, hymns
• Ramayana = Sanskrit epic, nature of relationships
• Caste system- Brahmins (priests), kshatriyas (warriors,
princes), vaisyas (merchants, small landowners),
shudras (landless peasants and artisans), untouchables.
• Dharma, karma right conduct
• Sati- gender status in society?
Buddhism
• Siddhartha Gautama – Buddha
“enlightened one”
• Four Noble Truths: nature of suffering,
eliminate all desire, follow the Eightfold
Path.
• Extinguish all desire = nirvana
• Launched the first large scale missionary
efforts in the history of world religions.
Monotheistic Religion
• Judaism: Torah
• Christianity: Bible, Old and New Testament, Missionary
(Europeans spread to all parts of world through trade,
conquest) Africa: Egypt and Ethiopia
• Islam: Mohammad, Allah (same GOD), Q’uran, Five
Pillars of Faith (Hajj = pilgrimmage to Mecca),quickly
spread and became a world religion: missionary. Dar Al
Islam = “world of Islam) belief of a united Islamic Empire,
part of a larger Islamic World.
• Sunni, Shi’a, Ulama (more conservative approach to law
(sharia) and text), Sufi (mysticism)
Religions and Beliefs
• Confucianism: hierarchies, ancestor
worship, education, family, filial piety.
• Neo-confucianism: Song and Qing
Dynasty, attempt to merge Confucian,
Daoist and Buddhist Beliefs.
• Sikhism: north India, rejects caste system,
blending of new and Hindu beliefs.
• Protestant Reformation: Protestants,
Luther, Christian disunity.
Silk Road and Religion
• Carried more than Silk
• Buddhism and Zoroastrianism (Persian
based) traveled to China. Means of
diverse cultures and religions entering
China.
Mongols
• Conquered Persia, China, Russia, India, and
much of the Middle East.
• Too large to be ruled by one person, split into
four khanates. Most famous was Kublai Khan.
• Khan and Marco Polo: many special missions to
China, Burma, India. Amazed by the use of
paper currency replacing gold and silver,
efficient communication system and bathhouses
(3x a week, almost everyday in winter, men of
rank in own homes)
West Africa
• Ghana: the Gold Coast, gold, metal,
cotton, leather exchanged for salt, horses,
textiles.
• Swahili: language developed for people of
mixed tongue to communicate for trade
purposes.
Do you know?
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Fall of the Roman Empire- Western falls but Eastern half (Byzantium)
survives. Why?
Patriarchal v. Matriarchal society
Crusades: What were the motives and impact?
Impact of Gunpowder- trade, India, Arabs, Europeans.
Columbian Exchange: What went where? Eastern and Western
Hemisphere. Slaves, food, flora, disease
Impact of Columbian Exchange on world population. China 100 million in
1500, 225 million people by 1750 (largest).
Impact of Portuguese bringing sugar production to Americas (Brazil) in 16th
c – previously been produced mainly by Arabs in South and Southeast Asia.
Very labor intensive: need for labor.
Impact of the slave trade on Africa. Most slaves captured and traded in
West Africa. Gender ratios, tribal rivalries, slave raids in exchange for
European weaponry
Impact of Potosi and silver: led to rise of Europe, became part of trade in
Asia, SEast Asia and Indian Ocean Basin.
Do you know?
• Abbasid Dynasty at its height and why did it fall?
• Why was Cortes able to defeat Aztecs? Yes they had more advance
weapons and horses….think Dona Marina and alliances.
• Renaissance in Italy: Impact on Church and politics
• Absolutism: Louis XIV (Sun King, Versailles), Louis XVI (French
Revolution), Peter the Great (Westernization, army and navy, shave
beards), Catherine the Great (enlightened despot, expanded
borders, goal to aid oppressed serfs, Pugachev’s Rebellion,
abandoned all reform attempts after the rebellion, partition of
Poland)
• French Revolution causes and effects; Napoleon, Congress of
Vienna- Radical phase = fear of outside rebellion that Louis XVI was
conspiring with other monarchs to invade and squash the
Revolution, levee en masse to increase army to protect from outside
invasion.
Do you know?
• China ready to dominate world trade??? Voyages of
Zheng He to Indian Ocean Basin..Why were they
stopped? Successful?
• Italian city states like Venice and the Ottomans
dominated Mediterranean trade during 16th c.
• What a janissary is? Catholics from Balkan nations who
were forced to convert to Islam. What job or service did
they perform?
• Concept of Social Darwinism and its impact on
Imperialism (White Mans Burden)
• Purpose of Chinese foot binding?..What are harems?
Do You know?
• Japan and its reactions to Imperialism: Tokugawa shoguns isolation
until about 1850, Impact of Matthew Perry, Treaty of Kanagawa,
Shogun overthrow in 1868, from shoguns to Emperor (previously
been a figure head), willingness to sponsor reform Meiji Restoration
(what reforms made?), Japanese Imperialism (Sino- Japanese War,
Russo-Japanese War)
• China and its reaction to Imperialism of West: Qing Dynasty, trade
surplus until Opium, Opium War, Treaty of Nanjing (open ports, lost
Hong Kong, extraterritoriality (following laws of your country not one
living in)), Spheres of Influence, Self-Strengthening Movement
(success or failure?), Taiping Rebellion, Boxer Rebellion, Fall of
Qing Dynasty, Sun Yat Sen President (Three Principles: Democracy,
Nationalism, Livelihood)
Do You Know?
• Both Russia (Sergei Witte) and Japan (Meiji) were similar in that by
1914 the had both underwent state sponsored industrialization.
Fought in a war vs. each other 1904-05.
• Industrial Revolution: Impact on imperialism and “Scramble for
Africa”, middle class women withdrew from formal jobs and into the
home, most working women of the time were single, eliminated the
slave trade, search for colonies, markets, missionary work and raw
materials
• Impact of urbanization, population growth due to reforms and
Agricultural Rev, formation of labor unions, rise in overall standard of
living and expansion of middle class.
• Karl Marx and the Communist Manifesto: socialism over evils of
capitalism, history of class struggle, revolution and dictatorship of
the proletariat (working class).