The Early Modern Period 1450-1750 CE
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Transcript The Early Modern Period 1450-1750 CE
The Early Modern Period
1450-1750 CE
UNIT 4
APWH EXAM REVIEW
MAJOR CHANGES
World becomes global - exploration;
technological innovations; political
organizations; trade
Domination of Maritime trade - shift from
land based trade in Classical and PostClassical Periods
Decline of nomadic groups and their power
Shift in labor systems
Gunpowder Empires
Major Early Modern Empires
Spain
Portugal
England
France
The Netherlands
Russia
Gunpowder
Empires:
Ottoman Empire
Tokugawa Japan
Safavid Persia
Ming China
Mughal India
The Ottoman Empire
1299-1923
Founded by Osman
1453: take Constantinople and end Byz.
Empire
Take control of land on 3 continents - From
Iraq in the east, North Africa to the South;
Balkans to the East
Sultan (supreme leader) w/ a bureaucracy
Strong army (Janissaries); Slave labor
Religiously and culturally tolerant
Emphasized Merchant class
Women have right to own property
Mughal India
1526-1858
Descendants of Mongol
invaders and Muslim
merchants in Northern India
Included India, Pakistan and
Afghanistan
Strong military, funded by
high taxes
Those in military earn pieces
of land, which makes regional
princes upset
Muslim leaders over Hindu
majority - religiously tolerant
(they have to be!)
Creation of new religion:
Sikhism (Islam and Hinduism)
Great architectural feats - Taj
Mahal
Tokugawa Japan
1600-1868
Tokugawa family unite regional daimyos under
one government
Capital: Edo (Tokyo)
Opposed to European presence in Asia (after
seeing Spanish take over Philippines; did not
want Europeans to appeal to daimyos to
overthrow gov’t)
1630s: close Japan from European influences
No travel to Europe; no Europeans in Japan except
Dutch traders (limited)
Ming China
1368-1644
Follow Yuan dynasty (Mongols)
Promote initial exploration - Zheng He;
eventually recalled to deal with internal
problems
Neo-Confucianism
Silk Road begins to decline b/c of maritime
trade
Cultural contributions: porcelain; paintings
At end of dynasty, very inept rulers; prone to
rebellions and outside attacks
Qing China
Overthrown Ming Dynasty in 1644 (last until
1911)
Led by Manchus (from Manchuria) – viewed
as outsiders by rest of China
Pre-1750: very strong empire; promote
Mandate of Heaven; forbid intermarriage
between Manchus and Chinese
Golden Age of Chinese civilization - good,
long-serving rulers; promotion of
Confucianism, education and military might
React favorably to Catholic missionaries;
increase trade with Europeans and open ports
for trade
Safavid Persia
1501-1736
Shi’a Islam
Founded by Ismail
Lack of religious tolerance – goes to war with
Ottomans to convert them; Safavids lose
Capital: Isfahan - great city planning; mosques
Difficult to expand due to being surrounded by
other empires - Arab empires, Ottomans,
Mughals
Age of Exploration
Portugal - exploration and colonization – Prince
Henry the Navigator; important in early slave trade;
first to set up trading centers in Africa’s coast
(factories)/ trade directly with India and China;
Brazil
Spain - Isabella and Ferdinand; exploration and
colonization; expelled Muslims and Jews from Spain
(Inquisition); control most of Latin America and
southern North America; crucial in beginning of
slave trade
Treaty of Tordesillas – divides South America
between Spain and Portugal
Age of Exploration
England
Power from trade and
colonization
British East India Company
Mercantilism
Strong naval force - defeat
Spanish Armada
Colonies on Eastern seaboard
of N.America
Strong limited government
(monarchy) with Parliament
Queen Elizabeth I
France
Power through trade
and colonization
(Northern parts of
North America)
Traders; Trappers
Louis XIV - absolute
monarch; Palace of
Versailles
Social and Gender Change in
Early Modern Europe
Major cities develop - Paris, London, Amsterdam
Rise of small middle class (much bigger in
Industrial Revolution)
Rising gap between rich and poor
Later marriage ages; decline in arranged
marriage
Some women become educated
Renaissance and Reformation change views of
European society
Early Modern Russia
Post-Classical Mongol control of Russia hurts most of
the region, except for Moscow, which benefits from
the tax collection; feudalism increases; behind in
trade and technological development
Romanov Family dominates
Expansion east – use of Cossacks
Peter the Great - Westernization; St. Petersburg;
warm water port
Catherine the Great; appeal to upper classes
(boyars); likes idea of Westernization, but doesn’t
implement it as well as Peter
Both treat peasants terribly
Exploration and Colonization of the
Americas - Consequences
Decimation of indigenous peoples - Aztecs,
Incas, Native Americans (90%)
Spread of Disease - smallpox, tuberculosis
Columbian Exchange: animals and crops
Rise in coercive labor – Encomiendas; Slave
labor
European access to raw materials (silver,
sugar, cotton, tobacco)
Coercive or Forced Labor Systems
Type of labor
system
Location
Slave Trade
(Trans-Saharan
and East Africa)
East Africa
Plantation
System (Atlantic
Slave Trade)
Caribbean;
North and South
America
Janissaries
Serfdom
Demographic
Impact
Treatment of
Slaves
Status of Slaves
Mostly women
and lower-class
women
Part of property
Middle Passage;
silver mining;
agricultural and
domestic work
Not much social mobility in
early modern period
Ottoman Empire;
young boys from
Eastern Europe
Military Service;
forced
conversion to
Islam
Some social mobility
Eastern Europe
Russia
Japan
Becomes very
similar to slavery
Some mobility
15-25 million
slaves to the
Americas
Early Modern Demographic
Changes
Rise in population in Europe
Decrease in population in Americas
15th century: 67 million living in North, Central
and south America
1700: 13 million in all of western hemisphere
Africa: slave trade hurt, but not decimate
African demographics
By 1700: doubled population in 1000 CE
Western Africa only area really impacted by ST
Asia: between 1000 and 1700 CE - population
almost doubles
Major European Cultural and
Intellectual Developments
Renaissance (15th
and 16th centuries)
Starts in Italy
(humanism; less
focus on church;
Machiavelli; secular
paintings;
architecture)
Spreads to Northern
Europe (still focused
on religion)
Reformation
1517: Martin Luther
posts 95 Theses
Question of authority of
Catholic Church
Religion should be
personal; not corrupt
Speaks out against
Indulgences
Many religious wars
(Thirty Years War)
Counter-Reformation
(Catholic Church’s
attempt to stop
conversion)
Scientific Revolution
World could be
explained through
natural, rather than
religious, laws
Sun center of the
universe (heliocentric
theory - Copernicus,
Galileo)
Scientific Method
Diffuses throughout
Europe and Americas
Enlightenment
Social Contract Theorypeople have a say in
government (John Locke)
Natural Rights - life,
liberty and property
(John Locke)
Right to revolution and
overthrow of government
Freedom of speech,
press, and religion
(Voltaire)
Challenges idea of divine
right of kings
Diffuses through Europe
and American colonies