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AP World History - Chapters 8, 9, 10 Flashcards

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11465054750American webA term used to describe the network of trade that linked parts of the pre-Columbian Americas; although less intense and complete than the Afro-Eurasian trade networks, this web nonetheless provided a means of exchange for luxury goods and ideas over large areas.0
11465054751Black DeathThe name given to the massive epidemic that swept Eurasia in the fourteenth century C.E.; it may have been bubonic plague, anthrax, or a collection of epidemic diseases.1
11465054752Borobudur (pron. BORE-ahboo-DOOR)The largest Buddhist monument ever built, Borobudur is a mountainous ten-level monument with an elaborate carving program, probably built in the ninth century C.E. by the Sailendras rulers of central Java; it is an outstanding example of cultural exchange and syncretism.2
11465054753bubonic plagueA highly fatal disease transmitted by fleas; it devastated the Mediterranean world between 534 and 750 C.E. and again in the period 1346-1350 C.E.3
11465054754Ghana, Mali, Songhay (pron. GAH-nah, MAHlee, song-GAH-ee)A series of important states that developed in western and central Sudan in the period 500-1600 C.E. in response to the economic opportunities of trans-Saharan trade (especially control of gold production).4
11465054755Great ZimbabweA powerful state in the African interior that apparently emerged from the growing trade in gold to the East African coast; flourished between 1250 and 1350 C.E.5
11465054756Ibn Battuta (pron. ibn bat-TOOT-ah)A famous Muslim traveler who visited much of the Islamic world in the fourteenth century and wrote a major account of what he saw.6
11465054757Indian Ocean trading networkThe world's largest sea-based system of communication and exchange before 1500 C.E., Indian Ocean commerce stretched from southern China to eastern Africa and included not only the exchange of luxury and bulk goods but also the exchange of ideas and crops.7
11465054758Jie people (pron. jyeh)A nomadic people who controlled much of northern China in the third and fourth centuries; many converted to Buddhism.8
11465054759MalaysiansSpeakers of Austronesian languages from what is now Indonesia who became major traders in Southeast Asia and Madagascar.9
11465054760monsoonsAlternating wind currents that blew eastward across the Indian Ocean in the summer and westward in the winter, facilitating trade.10
11465054761oasis cities of Central AsiaCities such as Merv, Samarkand, Khotan, and Dunhuang that became centers of trans-Eurasian trade.11
11465054762pochtecaProfessional merchants among the Aztecs.12
11465054763Sailendras (pron. sigh-LEN-drahs)A kingdom of central Java that flourished from the eighth century to the tenth century C.E.; noted for being deeply influenced by Indian culture.13
11465054764Sand RoadsA term used to describe the routes of the trans-Sahara trade in Africa.14
11465054765Silk RoadsLand-based trade routes that linked Eurasia.15
11465054766Srivijaya (pron. sree-vih-JUH-yah)A Malay kingdom that dominated the Straits of Malacca between 670 and 1025 C.E.; noted for its creation of a native/Indian hybrid culture.16
11465054767SudanFrom the Arabic term for "land of black people," a large region of West Africa that became part of a major exchange circuit.17
11465054768Swahili civilization (pron. swah-HEE-lee)An East African civilization that emerged in the eighth century C.E. from a blending of Bantu, Islamic, and other Indian Ocean trade elements.18
11465054769third-wave civilizationsCivilizations that emerged between 500 and 1500 C.E. and were typified by intensifying trade networks.19
11465054770trans-Saharan slave tradeA fairly small-scale trade that developed in the twelfth century C.E., exporting West African slaves captured in raids across the Sahara for sale mostly as household servants in Islamic North Africa; the difficulty of travel across the desert limited the scope of this trade.20
11465054771VeniceAn Italian city that by 1000 C.E. emerged as a major center of Mediterranean trade.21
11465054772An LushanForeign-born general who led a major revolt against the Tang dynasty in 755-763, perhaps provoking China's turn to xenophobia.22
11465054773bushidoThe "way of the warrior," referring to the military virtues of the Japanese samurai, including bravery, loyalty, and an emphasis on death over surrender.23
11465054774Chinese BuddhismChina's only large-scale cultural borrowing before the twentieth century; it entered China from India in the first and second centuries C.E. but only became popular in 300-800 C.E. through a series of cultural accommodations. At first supported by the state, it suffered persecution during the ninth century but continued to play a role in Chinese society.24
11465054775chu nomA variation of Chinese writing developed in Vietnam that became the basis for an independent national literature; "southern script."25
11465054776foot bindingChinese practice of tightly wrapping girls' feet to keep them small, begun in the Tang dynasty; an emphasis on small size and delicacy was central to views of female beauty.26
11465054777hangulA phonetic alphabet developed in Korea in the fifteenth century27
11465054778HangzhouChina's capital during the Song dynasty, with a population of more than a million people.28
11465054779HeianJapan's second capital city (now known as Kyoto), modeled on the Chinese capital of Chang'an; also used to describe the period of Japanese history from 794 to 1192 C.E.29
11465054780JurchenA nomadic people who established a state that included parts of northern China (1115-1234).30
11465054781kamiSacred spirits of Japan, whether ancestors or natural phenomena; their worship much later came to be called Shinto.31
11465054782KhitanA nomadic people who established a state that included parts of northern China (907-1125).32
11465054783KoryoKorean dynasty (918-1392).33
11465054784KumsongThe capital of Korea in the medieval era, modeled on the Chinese capital of Chang'an.34
11465054785Murasaki ShikibuPerhaps Japan's greatest author, a woman active at the Heian court who is best known for The Tale of Genji, which she wrote around 1000 C.E.35
11465054786NaraJapan's first capital city, modeled on the Chinese capital of Chang'an.36
11465054787Neo-ConfucianismA philosophy that emerged in Song-dynasty China; it revived Confucian thinking while adding in Buddhist and Daoist elements.37
11465054788Pure Land BuddhismA school of Buddhism that proved to be immensely popular in China; emphasized salvation by faith in the Amitabha Buddha.38
11465054789samuraiMembers of Japan's warrior class, which developed as political power became increasingly decentralized.39
11465054790Shotoku TaishiJapanese statesman (572-622) who launched the drive to make Japan into a centralized bureaucratic state modeled on China; he is best known for the Seventeen Article Constitution, which lays out the principles of this reform.40
11465054791Silla dynastyThe first ruling dynasty to bring a measure of political unity to the Korean peninsula (688-900).41
11465054792Song dynasty economic revolutionA major economic quickening that took place in China under the Song dynasty (960-1279); marked by rapid population growth, urbanization, economic specialization, the development of an immense network of internal waterways, and a great increase in industrial production and innovation.42
11465054793Sui dynastyRuling dynasty of China (581-618) that effectively reunited the country after several centuries of political fragmentation.43
11465054794Tang dynastyRuling dynasty of China from 618 to 907; noted for its openness to foreign cultural influences.44
11465054795tankaHighly stylized form of Japanese poetry that has been a favored means of expression for centuries.45
11465054796tribute systemChinese method of dealing with foreign lands and peoples that assumed the subordination of all non-Chinese authorities and required the payment of tribute—produce of value from their countries—to the Chinese emperor (although the Chinese gifts given in return were often much more valuable).46
11465054797Trung sistersTwo Vietnamese sisters who launched a major revolt against the Chinese presence in Vietnam in 39 C.E.; the rebellion was crushed and the sisters committed suicide, but they remained symbols of Vietnamese resistance to China for centuries.47
11465054798UighursTurkic empire of the steppes; flourished in the eighth century C.E.48
11465054799Emperor WendiSui emperor (r. 581-604) who particularly patronized Buddhism.49
11465054800XiongnuMajor nomadic confederacy that was established ca. 200 B.C.E. and eventually reached from Manchuria to Central Asia.50
11465054801YiKorean dynasty (1392-1910).51
11465054802Aristotle and classical Greek learningSome works of the Greek philosopher Aristotle (384-322 B.C.E.) had always been known in Western Europe, but beginning in the eleventh century, medieval thought was increasingly shaped by a great recovery of Aristotle's works and a fascination with other Greek authors; this infusion of Greek rationalism into Europe's universities shaped intellectual development for several centuries.52
11465054803Byzantine Empire (pron. BIZ-an-teen)Term used by modern historians to refer to the surviving eastern Roman Empire during the medieval centuries; named after the ancient Greek city Byzantium, on the site of which the Roman emperor Constantine founded a new capital, Constantinople, in 330 C.E.53
11465054804caesaropapism (pron. SEEZ-ar-oh-PAPE-ism)A political-religious system in which the secular ruler is also head of the religious establishment, as in the Byzantine Empire.54
11465054805Charlemagne (pron. SHAHR-leh-mane)Ruler of the Carolingian Empire (r. 768-814) who staged an imperial revival in Western Europe.55
11465054806Christianity, Eastern OrthodoxBranch of Christianity that developed in the eastern part of the Roman Empire and gradually separated, mostly on matters of practice, from the branch of Christianity dominant in Western Europe; noted for the subordination of the Church to political authorities, a married clergy, the use of leavened bread in the Eucharist, and insistence on church councils as the ultimate authority in Christian belief and practice.56
11465054807Christianity, Roman CatholicWestern European branch of Christianity that gradually defined itself as separate from Eastern Orthodoxy, with a major break in 1054 C.E.. that has still not been healed; "Roman Catholic" was not commonly used until after the Protestant Reformation, but the term is just since, by the eleventh century, Western Christendom defined itself in centralized terms, with the bishop of Rome (the pope) as the ultimate authority in matters of doctrine.57
11465054808Constantinople (pron. con-stan-tih-NO-pul)New capital for the eastern half of the Roman Empire, established by Emperor Constantine in 330 C.E. on the site of the ancient Greek city of Byzantium; Constantinople's highly defensible and economically important site helped assure the city's cultural and strategic importance for many centuries.58
11465054809CrusadesModern term meaning "ventures of the cross," used to describe the "holy wars" waged by Western Christendom from 1095 until the end of the Middle Ages and beyond; Crusades could only be declared by the pope and were marked by participants swearing a vow and receiving an indulgence in return.59
11465054810Cyril and Methodius (pron. SIR-uhl, meth-ODE-ee-us)Ninth-century Byzantine missionaries to the Slavs whose development of Cyrillic script made it possible to write Slavic languages.60
11465054811Cyrillic (pron. sih-RIL-ik)Alphabet based on Greek letters that was developed by two Byzantine missionaries, Cyril and Methodius, to write Slavic languages.61
11465054812European citiesWestern Europe saw a major process of urbanization beginning in the eleventh century, with towns that created major trade networks and that were notable for the high degree of independence they often enjoyed.62
11465054813Greek fireForm of liquid fire that could be sprayed at the enemy; invented by the Byzantines and very important in their efforts to halt the Arab advance into Byzantine territory.63
11465054814guildAn association formed by people pursuing the same line of work that regulated their professions; it also provided a social and religious network for members.64
11465054815Holy Roman EmpireTerm invented in the twelfth century to describe the Germany-based empire founded by Otto I in 962 C.E.65
11465054816the West as a "hybrid civilization"The distinctive path of Western Europe in the centuries following the fall of the western Roman Empire, leading to a society that included elements of ancient Rome, the practices of Germanic invaders who formed new states, Christianity, and elements of pre-Roman culture that still survived.66
11465054817iconoclasm (pron. eye-KON-oh-klasm)The destruction of holy images; a term most often used to describe the Byzantine state policy of image destruction from 726 to 843.67
11465054818indulgenceA remission of the penalty (penance) for confessed sin that could be granted only by a pope, at first to Crusaders and later for a variety of reasons.68
11465054819JustinianByzantine emperor (r. 527-565 C.E.), noted for his short-lived reconquest of much of the former western Roman Empire and for his codification of Roman law.69
11465054820Kievan Rus (pron. key-YEV-an ROOS)State that emerged around the city of Kiev in the ninth century C.E.; a culturally diverse region that included Vikings as well as Finnic and Baltic peoples. The conversion of Vladimir, the grand prince of Kiev, to Orthodox Christianity in 988 had long-term implications for Russia.70
11465054821natural philosophyThe scientific study of nature, which developed, especially in Europe, in the later Middle Ages.71
11465054822Otto IKing of Germany (r. 936-973) who built a consolidated German-northern Italian state and was crowned emperor in 962, creating what became known in time as the "Holy Roman Empire."72
11465054823system of competing statesThe distinctive organization of Western European political life that developed after the fall of the western Roman Empire in the fifth century C.E. in which the existence of many small, independent states encouraged military and economic competition.73
11465054824VikingsScandinavian raiders who had an impact on much of Western Europe in the late eighth to eleventh centuries; their more peaceful cousins also founded colonies, including Newfoundland, Greenland, and Iceland.74
11465054825Vladimir, prince of Kiev (pron. vlad-IH-mir)Grand prince of Kiev (r. 978-1015 C.E.) whose conversion to Orthodox Christianity led to the incorporation of Russia into the sphere of Eastern Orthodoxy.75

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