7053214030 | Paleolithic Age | the Old Stone Age ending in 12,000 B.C.E.; typified by use of evolving stone tools and hunting and gathering for subsistence. | 0 | |
7053214031 | Homo sapiens sapiens | the species of humanity that emerged as most successful at the end of the Paleolithic. | 1 | |
7053214032 | Neolithic Age | the New Stone Age between 8000 and 5000 B.C.E.; period in which adaptation of sedentary agriculture occurred; domestication of plants and animals accomplished. | 2 | |
7053214033 | Neolithic revolution | the succession of technological innovations and changes in human organization that led to the development of agriculture, 8500-3500 B.C.E. | 3 | |
7053214034 | Hunting and gathering | means of obtaining subsistence by humans before the mastery of sedentary agriculture; normally typical of tribal social organization. | 4 | |
7053214035 | Çatal Hüyük | early urban culture based on sedentary agriculture; located in modern southern Turkey; larger in population than Jericho, had greater degree of social stratification. | 5 | |
7053214036 | Bronze Age | from 4000 to 3000 B.C.E.; increased use of plow, metalworking; development of wheeled vehicles, writing. | 6 | |
7053214037 | Nomads | cattle- and sheep-herding societies normally found on the fringes of civilized societies; commonly referred to as "barbarian" by civilized societies. | 7 | |
7053214038 | Shi Huangdi | first emperor of China; founder of Qin dynasty. | 8 | |
7053214039 | Qin | dynasty (221-207 B.C.E.) founded at the end of the Warring States period. | 9 | |
7053214040 | Han | dynasty succeeding the Qin ruled from 202 B.C.E. to 220 C.E. | 10 | |
7053214041 | Zhou | originally a vassal family of the Shang; possibly Turkic-speaking in origin; overthrew Shang and established 2nd Chinese dynasty (1122-256 B.C.E.). | 11 | |
7053214042 | Great Wall | Chinese defensive fortification built to keep out northern nomadic invaders; began during the reign of Shi Huangdi. | 12 | |
7053214043 | Confucius | major Chinese philosopher born in 6th century B.C.E.; sayings collected in Analects; philosophy based on the need for restoration of social order through the role of superior men. stateless societies: societies of varying sizes organized through kinship and lacking the concentration of power found in centralized states. | 13 | |
7053214044 | Ifriqiya | Roman name for present-day Tunisia. | 14 | |
7053214045 | Maghrib | Arabic term for northwestern Africa. | 15 | |
7053214046 | Almohadis | a later puritanical Islamic reform movement among the Berbers of northwest Africa; also built an empire reaching from the African savanna into Spain. | 16 | |
7053214047 | juula | Malinke merchants who traded throughout the Mali Empire and west Africa. | 17 | |
7053214048 | Sundiata | created a unified state that became the Mali empire; died in 1260. | 18 | |
7053214049 | griots | professional oral historians who served as keepers of traditions and advisors to kings within the Mali Empire. | 19 | |
7053214050 | Ibn Batuta | Arab traveler throughout the Muslim world. | 20 | |
7053214051 | Timbuktu | Niger River port city of Mali; had a famous Muslim university. | 21 | |
7053214052 | Songhay | successor state to Mali; dominated middle reaches of the Niger valley; capital at Gao. | 22 | |
7053214053 | Hausa | peoples of northern Nigeria, formed states following the demise of Songhay Empire that combined Muslim and pagan traditions. | 23 | |
7053214054 | Muhammad the Great | extended the boundaries of Songhay in the mid-16th century. | 24 | |
7053214055 | Sharia | Islamic law, defined among other things the patrilineal nature of Islamic inheritance. | 25 | |
7053214056 | Zenj | Arabic term for the east African coast. | 26 | |
7053214057 | Benin | powerful city-state (in present-day Nigeria) that came into contact with the Portuguese in 1485 but remained relatively free of European influence; important commercial and political entity until the 19th century. | 27 | |
7053214058 | demography | the study of population. | 28 | |
7053214059 | demographic transition | shift to low birth rate, low infant death rate, stable population, first emerged in western Europe and United States in late 19th century. | 29 | |
7053214060 | Kongo | large agricultural state on the lower Congo River; capital at Mbanza Congo. | 30 | |
7053214061 | Great Zimbabwe | with massive stone buildings and walls, incorporates the greatest early buildings in sub-Saharan Africa. | 31 | |
7053214062 | Hagia Sophia | great domed church constructed during reign of Justinian. | 32 | |
7053214063 | Belisarius | (c. 505-565); one of Justinian's most important military commanders during the attempted reconquest of western Europe. | 33 | |
7053214064 | Greek fire | Byzantine weapon consisting of mixture of chemicals that ignited when exposed to water; used to drive back the Arab fleets attacking Constantinople. | 34 | |
7053214065 | Bulgaria | Slavic kingdom in Balkans; constant pressure on Byzantine Empire; defeated by Basil II in 1014. | 35 | |
7053214066 | icon | images of religious figures venerated by Byzantine Christians. | 36 | |
7053214067 | Cyril and Methodius | Byzantine missionaries sent to convert eastern Europe and Balkans; responsible for creation of Slavic written script called Cyrillic. | 37 | |
7053214068 | Kiev | commercial city in Ukraine established by Scandinavians in 9th century; became the center for a kingdom that flourished until the 12th century. | 38 | |
7053214069 | Rurik | legendary Scandinavian, regarded as founder of Kievan Rus' in 855. | 39 | |
7053214070 | Kievan Rus' | the predecessor to modern Russia; a medieval state that existed from the end of the 9th to the middle of the 13th century; its territory spanned parts of modern Belarus, Ukraine, and Russia. | 40 | |
7053214071 | Vladimir I | ruler of Kiev (980-1015); converted kingdom to Orthodox Christianity. | 41 | |
7053214072 | Russian Orthodoxy | Russian form of Christianity brought from Byzantine Empire. | 42 | |
7053214073 | Yaroslav | (975-1054); Last great Kievan monarch; responsible for codification of laws, based on Byzantine codes. | 43 | |
7053214074 | boyars | Russian landholding aristocrats; possessed less political power than their western European counterparts. | 44 | |
7053214075 | Tatars | Mongols who conquered Russian cities during the 13th century; left Russian church and aristocracy intact. | 45 | |
7053214076 | Axum | a state in the Ethiopian highlands; received influences from the Arabian peninsula; converted to Christianity. | 46 | |
7053214077 | Ethiopia | kingdom located in Ethiopian highlands; replaced Meroë in first century C.E.; received strong influence from Arabian peninsula; eventually converted to Christianity. | 47 | |
7053214078 | Sahara | desert running across northern Africa; separates the Mediterranean coast from southern Africa. | 48 | |
7053214079 | Shintoism | religion of the early Japanese court; included the worship of numerous gods and spirits associated with the natural world. | 49 | |
7053214080 | Teotihuacan | site of classic culture in central Mexico; urban center with important religious functions; supported by intensive agriculture in surrounding regions; population of as many as 200,000. | 50 | |
7053214081 | Maya | classic culture emerging in southern Mexico and Central America contemporary with Teotihuacan; extended over broad region; featured monumental architecture, written language, calendrical and mathematical systems, highly developed religion. | 51 | |
7053214082 | Inca | group of clans centered at Cuzco that were able to create an empire incorporating various Andean cultures; term also used for leader of empire. | 52 | |
7053214083 | Polynesia | islands contained in a rough triangle with its points at Hawaii, New Zealand, and Easter Island. | 53 | |
7053214084 | Yellow Turbans | Chinese Daoists who launched a revolt in 184 C.E., promising a golden age to be brought about by divine magic. | 54 | |
7053214085 | Sui | dynasty succeeding the Han; grew from strong rulers in northern China; reunited China. | 55 | |
7053214086 | Tang | dynasty succeeding the Sui in 618 C.E. | 56 | |
7053214087 | Harsha | ruler who followed Guptas in India; briefly constructed a loose empire in northern India between 616 and 657 C.E. | 57 | |
7053214088 | Rajput | regional military princes in India following the collapse of the Gupta Empire. | 58 | |
7053214089 | Devi | mother goddess within Hinduism; devotion to her spread widely after the collapse of the Gupta and encouraged new emotionalism in religious ritual. | 59 | |
7053214090 | Islam | major world religion having its origins in 610 C.E. in the Arabian peninsula; meaning literally "submission"; based on prophecy of Muhammad. | 60 | |
7053214091 | Diocletian | Roman emperor (284-305 C.E.); restored later empire by improved administration and tax collection. | 61 | |
7053214092 | Constantine | Roman emperor (321-337 C.E.); established his capital at Constantinople; used Christianity to unify the empire. | 62 | |
7053214093 | Byzantine Empire | eastern half of the Roman Empire; survived until 1453; retained Mediterranean, especially Hellenistic, culture. | 63 | |
7053214094 | Augustine (Saint) | North African Christian theologian; made major contributions in incorporating elements of classical philosophy into Christianity. | 64 | |
7053214095 | Coptic | Christian sect in Egypt, later tolerated after Islamic takeover. | 65 | |
7053214096 | Mahayana | version of Buddhism popular in China; emphasized Buddha's role as a savior. | 66 | |
7053214097 | Bodhisattvas | Buddhist holy men who refused advance toward nirvana to receive prayers of the living to help them reach holiness. | 67 | |
7053214098 | Jesus of Nazareth | prophet and teacher among the Jews; believed by Christians to be the Messiah; executed c. 30 C.E. | 68 | |
7053214099 | Paul | one of the first Christian missionaries; moved away from insistence that adherents of the new religion follow Jewish law; use of Greek as language of Church. | 69 | |
7053214100 | Pope | Bishop of Rome; head of the Catholic church in western Europe. Council of Nicaea: Christian council that met in 325 C.E. to determine orthodoxy with respect to the | 70 | |
7053214101 | Trinity; insisted on divinity of all persons of the Trinity. | 71 | ||
7053214102 | Benedict of Nursia | founder of monasticism in the former western half of the Roman Empire; established the Benedictine rule in the 6th century. | 72 | |
7053214103 | Civilization | societies with reliance on sedentary agriculture, ability to produce food surpluses, and existence of nonfarming elites, along with merchant and manufacturing groups. | 73 | |
7053214104 | Mesopotamia | literally "between the rivers"; the civilizations that arose in the alluvial plain of the Tigris Euphrates river valleys. | 74 | |
7053214105 | Sumerians | people who migrated into Mesopotamia circa 4000 B.C.E.; created the first civilization within the region; organized area into citystates. | 75 | |
7053214106 | Cuneiform | a form of writing developed by the Sumerians using a wedge shaped stylus and clay tablets. | 76 | |
7053214107 | Ziggurats | massive towers usually associated with Mesopotamian temple connections. | 77 | |
7053214108 | City-state | a form of political organization typical of Mesopotamian civilization; consisted of agricultural hinterlands ruled by an urban based king. | 78 | |
7053214109 | Babylonians | unified all of Mesopotamia circa 1800 B.C.E.; collapsed due to foreign invasion circa 1600 B.C.E. | 79 | |
7053214110 | Hammurabi | the most important Babylonian ruler; responsible for codification of the law. | 80 | |
7053214111 | Pharaoh | the term used to denote the kings of ancient Egypt; the term, "great house" refers to the palace of the pharaohs. | 81 | |
7053214112 | Pyramids | monumental architecture typical of Old Kingdom Egypt; used as burial sites for pharaohs. | 82 | |
7053214113 | Kush | African state that developed along the upper reaches of the Nile circa 1000 B.C.E.; conquered Egypt and ruled it for several centuries. | 83 | |
7053214114 | Indus River | river sources in Himalayas to mouth of Arabian Sea; location of Harappan civilization. | 84 | |
7053214115 | Harappa | along with Mohenjodaro, major urban complex of the Harappan civilization; laid out on planned grid pattern. | 85 | |
7053214116 | Aryans | Indo-European nomadic, warlike, pastoralists who replaced Harappan civilization; militarized society. | 86 | |
7053214117 | Vedas | Aryan hymns originally transmitted orally but written down in sacred books from the 6th century B.C.E. | 87 | |
7053214118 | Mahabharata | Indian epic of war, princely honor, love, and social duty; written down in the last centuries B.C.E.; previously handed down in oral form. | 88 | |
7053214119 | Ramayana | one of the great epic tales from classical India; traces adventures of King Rama and his wife, | 89 | |
7053214120 | Sita; written 4th to 2nd centuries B.C.E. | 90 | ||
7053214121 | Upanishads | later books of the Vedas; contained sophisticated and sublime philosophical ideas; utilized by Brahmans to restore religious authority. | 91 | |
7053214122 | Yellow River | also known as the Huanghe; site of the development of sedentary agriculture in China. | 92 | |
7053214123 | Ideographs | pictograph characters grouped together to create new concepts; typical of Chinese writing. | 93 | |
7053214124 | Shang | first Chinese dynasty for which archaeological evidence exists; capital located in Ordos bulge of the Huanghe; flourished 1600 to 1046 B.C.E. | 94 | |
7053214125 | Olmecs | people of a cultural tradition that arose at San Lorenzo and La Venta in Mexico c. 1200 B.C.E.; featured irrigated agriculture, urbanism, elaborate religion, beginnings of calendrical and writing systems. | 95 | |
7053214126 | Chavín de Huanter | Chavín culture appeared in the highlands of the Andes between 1800 and 1200 B.C.E.; typified by ceremonial centers with large stone buildings; greatest ceremonial center was Chavín de Huantar; characterized by artistic motifs. | 96 | |
7053214127 | Phoenicians | seafaring civilization located on the shores of the eastern Mediterranean; established colonies throughout the Mediterranean. | 97 | |
7053214128 | Monotheism | the exclusive worship of one god; introduced by Jews into Middle Eastern civilization. | 98 | |
7053214129 | Buddha | creator of a major Indian and Asian religion; born in the 6th century B.C.E.; taught that enlightenment could be achieved only by abandoning desires for earthly things. | 99 | |
7053214130 | Alexander the Great | successor of Philip II; successfully conquered the Persian empire prior to his death in 323 B.C.E.; attempted to combine Greek and Persian cultures. | 100 | |
7053214131 | Himalayas | mountain region marking the northern border of the Indian subcontinent. | 101 | |
7053214132 | monsoons | seasonal winds crossing Indian subcontinent and southeast Asia; during summer bring rains. | 102 | |
7053214133 | Sanskrit | the classical and sacred Indian language. | 103 | |
7053214134 | Varnas | clusters of caste groups in Aryan society; four social castes—brahmans (priests), warriors, merchants, and peasants; beneath four Aryan castes was group of socially untouchable Dasas. | 104 | |
7053214135 | Indra | chief deity of the Aryans; depicted as a colossal, hard-drinking warrior. | 105 | |
7053214136 | Chandragupta Maurya | founder of the Mauryan dynasty, the first empire in the Indian subcontinent; first centralized government since Harappan civilization. | 106 | |
7053214137 | Mauryan | dynasty established in Indian subcontinent in 4th century B.C.E. following the invasion of Alexander the Great. | 107 | |
7053214138 | Ashoka | grandson of Chandragupta Maurya; extended conquests of the dynasty; converted to Buddhismand sponsored its spread throughout his empire. | 108 | |
7053214139 | dharma | the caste position and career determined by a person's birth; Hindu culture required that one accept one's social position and perform their occupation to the best of one's ability in order to have a better situation in the next life. | 109 | |
7053214140 | Guptas | dynasty that succeeded the Kushans in the 3rd century C.E., which included all but southern Indian regions; less centralized than Mauryan Empire. | 110 | |
7053214141 | Kautilya | political advisor to Chandragupta Maurya; wrote political treatise. | 111 | |
7053214142 | gurus | originally referred to as brahmans, who served as teachers for the princes of the imperial court of the Guptas. | 112 | |
7053214143 | Vishnu | the brahman, later Hindu, god of sacrifice; widely worshipped. | 113 | |
7053214144 | Shiva | Hindu god of destruction and reproduction; worshipped as the personification of cosmic forces of change. | 114 | |
7053214145 | reincarnation | the successive rebirth of the soul according to merits earned in previous lives. | 115 | |
7053214146 | nirvana | the Buddhist state of enlightenment; a state of tranquility. | 116 | |
7053214147 | Kamasutra | written by Vatsayana during Gupta era; offered instructions on all aspects of life for higher-caste males, including grooming, hygiene, etiquette, selection of wives, and lovemaking. | 117 | |
7053214148 | stupas | stone shrines built to house relics of the Buddha; preserved Buddhist architectural forms. | 118 | |
7053214149 | scholar-gentry | Chinese class created by the marital linkage of the local land-holding aristocracy with the office-holding shi; superseded shi as governors of China. | 119 | |
7053214150 | lateen | triangular sails attached to the masts of dhows by long booms or yard arms; which extended diagonally high across the fore and aft of the ship. | 120 | |
7053214151 | al-Mahdi | third Abbasid caliph (775-785); failed to reconcile Shi'a moderates to his dynasty and to resolve the succession problem. | 121 | |
7053214152 | Harun al-Rashid | most famous of the Abbasid caliphs (786-809); renowned for sumptuous and costly living recounted in The Thousand and One Nights. | 122 | |
7053214153 | Buyids | Persian invaders of the 10th century; captured Baghdad; and as sultans, throughAbbasid figureheads. | 123 | |
7053214154 | Seljuk Turks | nomadic invaders from central Asia; staunch Sunnis; ruled from the 11th centuryin the name of the Abbasids. | 124 | |
7053214155 | Crusades | invasions of western Christians into Muslim lands, especially Palestine; captured Jerusalem and established Christian kingdoms enduring until 1291. | 125 | |
7053214156 | Saadin | (1137-1193); Muslim ruler of Egypt and Syria; reconquered most of the crusader kingdoms. | 126 | |
7053214157 | Ibn Khaldun | great Muslim historian; author of The Muqaddimah; sought to uncover persisting patterns in Muslim dynastic history. | 127 | |
7053214158 | Shah-Nama | epic poem written by Firdawsi in the late 10th and early 11th centuries; recounts the history of Persia to the era of Islamic conquests. | 128 | |
7053214159 | ulama | Islamic religious scholars; pressed for a more conservative and restrictive theology; opposed to non-Islamic thinking. | 129 | |
7053214160 | al-Ghazali | brilliant Islamic theologian; attempted to fuse Greek and Qur'anic traditions. | 130 | |
7053214161 | Mongols | central Asian nomadic peoples; captured Baghdad in 1258 and killed the last Abbasid caliph. | 131 | |
7053214162 | Chinggis Khan | (1162-1227); Mongol ruler; defeated the Turkish Persian kingdoms. | 132 | |
7053214163 | Hulegu | grandson of Chinggis Khan; continued his work, taking Baghdad in 1258. | 133 | |
7053214164 | Mamluks | Rulers of Egypt, descended from Turkish slaves. | 134 | |
7053214165 | Muhammad ibn Qasim | Arab general who conquered Sind and made it part of the Umayyad Empire. | 135 | |
7053214166 | Mahmud of Ghazni | ruler of an Afghan dynasty; invaded northern India during the 11th century. | 136 | |
7053214167 | Muhammad of Ghur | Persian ruler of a small Afghan kingdom; invaded and conquered much of northern India. | 137 | |
7053214168 | Qutb-ud- din Aibak | lieutenant of Muhammad of Ghur; established kingdom in India with the capital at Delhi. | 138 | |
7053214169 | bhaktic cults | Hindu religious groups who stressed the importance of strong emotional bonds between devotees and the gods or goddesses—especially Shiva, Vishnu, and Kali. | 139 | |
7053214170 | Mir Bai | low-caste woman poet and songwriter in bhaktic cults. | 140 | |
7053214171 | Kabir | 15th-century Muslim mystic who played down the differences between Hinduism and Islam. | 141 | |
7053214172 | Shrivijaya | trading empire based on the Malacca straits; its Buddhist government resisted Muslim missionaries; when it fell, southeastern Asia was opened to Islam. | 142 | |
7053214173 | Malacca | flourishing trading city in Malaya; established a trading empire after the fall of Shrivijaya. | 143 | |
7053214174 | Demak | most powerful of the trading states on the north Java coast; converted to Islam and served as a dissemination point to other regions. | 144 | |
7053214175 | Cyrus the Great | (c. 576 or 590-529 B.C.E.); founded Persian Empire by 550 B.C.E.; successor state to Mesopotamian empires. | 145 | |
7053214176 | Zoroastrianism | Persian religion that saw material existence as a battle between the forces of good and evil; stressed the importance of moral choice; a last judgment decided the eternal fate of each person. | 146 | |
7053214177 | Olympic Games | one of the pan-Hellenic rituals observed by all Greek citystates; involved athletic competitions and ritual celebrations. | 147 | |
7053214178 | Pericles | Athenian political leader during 5th century B.C.E.; guided development of Athenian Empire. | 148 | |
7053214179 | Peloponnesian War | war from 431 to 404 B.C.E. between Athens and Sparta for domination in Greece; the Spartans won but failed to achieve political unification in Greece. | 149 | |
7053214180 | Philip of Macedonia | ruled Macedon from 359 to 336 B.C.E.; founder of centralized kingdom; conquered Greece. | 150 | |
7053214181 | Hellenistic | culture associated with the spread of Greek influence and intermixture with other cultures as a result of Macedonian conquests. | 151 | |
7053214182 | Roman Republic | the balanced political system of Rome from circa 510 to 47 B.C.E.; featured an aristocratic senate, a panel of magistrates, and popular assemblies. | 152 | |
7053214183 | Punic Wars | three wars (264-146 B.C.E.) between Rome and the Carthaginians; saw the transformation of Rome from a land to a sea power. | 153 | |
7053214184 | Carthage | founded by the Phoenicians in Tunisia; became a major empire in the western Mediterranean; fought the Punic wars with Rome for Mediterranean dominance; defeated and destroyed by the Romans. | 154 | |
7053214185 | Hannibal | Carthaginian general during the second Punic War; invaded Italy but failed to conquer Rome. | 155 | |
7053214186 | Julius Caesar | general responsible for the conquest of Gaul; brought army back to Rome and overthrew republic; assassinated in B.C.E. by conservative senators. | 156 | |
7053214187 | Caesar Augustus | (63 B.C.E.-14 C.E.) name given to Octavian following his defeat of Mark Antony and Cleopatra; first emperor of Rome. | 157 | |
7053214188 | Diocletian | Roman emperor from 284 to 305 C.E.; restored later empire by improved administration and tax collection. | 158 | |
7053214189 | Constantine | Roman emperor from 312 to 337 C.E.; established second capital at Constantinople; attempted to use religious force of Christianity to unify empire spiritually. | 159 | |
7053214190 | Polis | city-state form of government typical of Greek political organization from 800 to 400 B.C.E. | 160 | |
7053214191 | Direct democracy | literally, rule of the people—in Athens, it meant all free male citizens; all decisions emanated from the popular assembly without intermediation of elected representatives. | 161 | |
7053214192 | Senate | assembly of Roman aristocrats; advised on policy within the republic; one of the early elements of the Roman constitution. | 162 | |
7053214193 | Consuls | two chief executives of the Roman republic; elected annually by the assembly dominated by the aristocracy. | 163 | |
7053214194 | Aristotle | Greek philosopher; teacher of Alexander; taught that knowledge was based upon observation of phenomena in material world. | 164 | |
7053214195 | Cicero | conservative senator and Stoic philosopher; one of the great orators of his day. | 165 | |
7053214196 | Stoics | Hellenistic philosophers; they emphasized inner moral independence cultivated by strict discipline of the body and personal bravery. | 166 | |
7053214197 | Socrates | Athenian philosopher of later 5th century B.C.E.; tutor of Plato; urged rational reflection in moral decisions; condemned to death for corrupting minds of Athenian young. | 167 | |
7053214198 | Sophocles | Greek writer of tragedies; author of Oedipus Rex. | 168 | |
7053214199 | Iliad and Odyssey | Greek epic poems attributed to Homer; defined relations of gods and humans that shaped Greek mythology. | 169 | |
7053214200 | Doric, Ionic, Corinthian | three distinct styles of Hellenic architecture; listed in order of increasing ornate quality. | 170 | |
7053214201 | bedouin | nomadic pastoralists of the Arabian peninsula with a culture based on herding camels and goats. | 171 | |
7053214202 | shaykhs | leaders of tribes and clans within bedouin society; usually possessed large herds, several wives, and many children. | 172 | |
7053214203 | Mecca | Arabian commercial center; dominated by the Quraysh; the home of Muhammad and the future center of Islam. | 173 | |
7053214204 | Umayyad | clan of the Quraysh that dominated Mecca; later an Islamic dynasty. | 174 | |
7053214205 | Quaraysh | tribe of bedouins that controlled Mecca in the 7th century C.E. | 175 | |
7053214206 | Ka'ba | revered pre-Islamic shrine in Mecca; incorporated into Muslim worship. | 176 | |
7053214207 | Medina | town northeast of Mecca; asked Muhammad to resolve its intergroup differences; Muhammad's flight to Medina, the hijra, in 622 began the Muslim calendar. | 177 | |
7053214208 | Muhammad | (570-632); prophet of Allah; originally a merchant of the Quraysh. | 178 | |
7053214209 | Khadijah | the wife of Muhammad. | 179 | |
7053214210 | Qur'an | the word of god as revealed through Muhammad; made into the holy book of Islam. | 180 | |
7053214211 | Ali | cousin and son-in- law of Muhammad; one of the orthodox caliphs; focus for the development of shi'ism. | 181 | |
7053214212 | umma | community of the faithful within Islam. | 182 | |
7053214213 | zakat | tax for charity obligatory for all Muslims. | 183 | |
7053214214 | five pillars | the obligatory religious duties for all Muslims: confession of faith, prayer, fasting during Ramadan, zakat, and hajj (pilgrimage to Mecca). | 184 | |
7053214215 | Ramadan | Islamic month of religious observance requiring fasting from dawn to sunset. | 185 | |
7053214216 | hajj | a Muslim's pilgrimage to the holy city of Mecca to worship Allah at the Ka'ba. | 186 | |
7053214217 | caliph | the successor to Muhammad as head of the Islamic community. | 187 | |
7053214218 | Ridda wars | wars following Muhammad's death; the defeat of rival prophets and opponents restored the unity of Islam. | 188 | |
7053214219 | jihads | Islamic holy war. | 189 | |
7053214220 | Copts, Nestorians | Christian sects of Syria and Egypt; gave their support to the Arabic Muslims. | 190 | |
7053214221 | Uthman | third caliph; his assassination set off a civil war within Islam between the Umayyads and Ali. | 191 | |
7053214222 | Battle of Siffin | battle fought in 657 between Ali and the Umayyads; led to negotiations that fragmented Ali's party. | 192 | |
7053214223 | Mu'awiya | first Umayyad caliph; his capital was Damascus. | 193 | |
7053214224 | Sunnis | followers of the majority interpretation within Islam; included the Umayyads. | 194 | |
7053214225 | Shi'a | followers of Ali's interpretation of Islam. | 195 | |
7053214226 | Karbala | site of the defeat and death of Husayn, the son of Ali. | 196 | |
7053214227 | Damascus | Syrian city that was capital of Umayyad caliphate. | 197 | |
7053214228 | mawali | non-Arab converts to Islam. | 198 | |
7053214229 | jizya | head tax paid by all non-Muslims in Islamic lands. | 199 | |
7053214230 | dhimmis | "the people of the book," Jews, Christians; later extended to Zoroastrians and Hindus. | 200 | |
7053214231 | hadiths | "traditions" of the prophet Muhammad; added to the Qur'an; form the essential writings of Islam. | 201 | |
7053214232 | Abbasid | dynasty that succeeded the Umayyads in 750; their capital was at Baghdad. | 202 | |
7053214233 | Battle of the River Zab | 750; Abbasid victory over the Umayyads, near the Tigris. Led to Abbasid ascendancy. | 203 | |
7053214234 | Baghdad | Abbasid capital, close to the old Persian capital of Ctesiphon. | 204 | |
7053214235 | wazir | chief administrative official under the Abbasids. | 205 | |
7053214236 | dhows | Arab sailing vessels; equipped with lateen sails; used by Arab merchants. | 206 | |
7053214237 | ayan | the wealthy, landed elite that emerged under the Abbasids. | 207 | |
7053214238 | Indians | misnomer created by Columbus when referring to indigenous New World peoples; still used to describe Native Americans. | 208 | |
7053214239 | Toltec culture | succeeded Teotihuacan culture in central Mexico; strong militaristic ethic including human sacrifice; influenced large territory after 1000 C.E.; declined after 1200 C.E. | 209 | |
7053214240 | Topiltzin | religious leader and reformer of the Toltecs in 10th century; dedicated to god Quetzalcoatl; after losing struggle for power, went into exile in the Yucatan peninsula. | 210 | |
7053214241 | Quetzalcoatl | Toltec deity; feathered serpent; adopted by Aztecs as a major god. | 211 | |
7053214242 | Tenochtitlan | founded circa 1325 on a marshy island in Lake Texcoco; became center of Aztec power. | 212 | |
7053214243 | Tlaloc | major god of Aztecs; associated with fertility and the agricultural cycle; god of rain. | 213 | |
7053214244 | Huitcilopochtli | Aztec tribal patron god; central figure of human sacrifice and warfare; identified with old sun god. | 214 | |
7053214245 | Nezhualcoyotl | leading Aztec king of the 15th century. | 215 | |
7053214246 | chinampas | beds of aquatic weeds, mud, and earth placed in frames made of cane and rooted in lakes to create "floating islands"; system of irrigated agriculture used by Aztecs. | 216 | |
7053214247 | pochteca | merchant class in Aztec society; specialized in longdistance trade in luxury items. | 217 | |
7053214248 | calpulli | clans in Aztec society; evolved into residential groupings that distributed land and provided labor and warriors. | 218 | |
7053214249 | Pachacuti | Inca ruler (1438-1471); began the military campaigns that marked the creation ofan Inca empire. | 219 | |
7053214250 | ayllus | households in Andean societies that recognized some form of kinship; traced descent from a common, sometimes mythical ancestor. | 220 | |
7053214251 | Twantinsuyu | Inca word for their empire; region from Colombia to Chile and eastward into Bolivia and Argentina. | 221 | |
7053214252 | split inheritance | Inca practice of ruler descent; all titles and political power went to successor, but wealth and land remained in hands of male descendants for support of dead Inca's mummy. | 222 | |
7053214253 | Temple of the Sun | Inca religious center at Cuzco; center of state religion; held mummies of past Incas. | 223 | |
7053214254 | tambos | way stations used by Incas as inns and storehouses; supply centers for Inca armies; relay points for system of runners used to carry messages. | 224 | |
7053214255 | mita | labor extracted for lands assigned to the state and the religion; all communities were expected to contribute; an essential aspect of Inca imperial control. | 225 | |
7053214256 | Inca socialism | an interpretation describing Inca society as a type of utopia; image of the Inca empire as a carefully organized system in which every community collectively contributed to the whole. | 226 | |
7053214257 | yanas | a class of people within Inca society removed from their ayllus to serve permanently as servants, artisans, or workers for the Inca or the Inca nobility. | 227 | |
7053214258 | quipu | system of knotted strings utilized by the Incas in place of a writing system; could contain numerical and other types of information for censuses and financial records. | 228 | |
7053214259 | Zheng He | Muslim Chinese seaman; commanded expeditions throughout the India Ocean. | 229 | |
7053214260 | Renaissance | cultural and political elite movement beginning in Italy circa 1400; rested on urban vitality and expanding commerce; produced literature and art with distinctly more secular priorities than those of the European Middle Ages. | 230 | |
7053214261 | Francesco Petrarch | Italian author and humanist; a major literary figure of the Renaissance. | 231 | |
7053214262 | Castile and Aragon | regional Iberian kingdoms; participated in reconquest of peninsula from | 232 | |
7053214263 | Muslims; developed a vigorous military and religious agenda. | 233 | ||
7053214264 | Vivaldi | Genoese explorers who attempted to find a western route to the "Indies"; precursors of European thrust into southern Atlantic. | 234 | |
7053214265 | Taika reforms | attempt to remake Japanese monarch into an absolutist Chinese-style emperor; included attempts to create professional bureaucracy and peasant conscript army. | 235 | |
7053214266 | Tale of Genji | written by Lady Murasaki; first novel in any language; evidence for mannered style of Japanese society. | 236 | |
7053214267 | Fujiwara | mid-9th- century Japanese aristocratic family; exercised exceptional influence over imperial affairs; aided in decline of imperial power. | 237 | |
7053214268 | bushi | regional warrior leaders in Japan; ruled small kingdoms from fortresses; administered the law, supervised public works projects, and collected revenues; built up private armies. | 238 | |
7053214269 | samurai | mounted troops of the bushi; loyal to local lords, not the emperor. | 239 | |
7053214270 | seppuku | ritual suicide in Japan; also known as hari-kiri; demonstrated courage and was a means to restore family honor. | 240 | |
7053214271 | Taira | powerful Japanese family in 11th and 12th centuries; competed with Minamoto family; defeated after Gempei Wars. | 241 | |
7053214272 | Minamoto | defeated the rival Taira family in Gempei Wars and established military government (bakufu) in 12th-century Japan. | 242 | |
7053214273 | Gempei wars | waged for five years from 1180 on Honshu between the Taira and Minamoto families; ended in destruction of Taira. | 243 | |
7053214274 | bakufu | military government established by the Minamoto following Gumpei wars; centered at Kamakura; retained emperor, but real power resided in military government and samurai. shoguns: military leaders of the bakufu. | 244 | |
7053214275 | Hojo | a warrior family closely allied with the Minamoto; dominated Kamakura regime and manipulated Minamoto rulers; ruled in name of emperor. | 245 | |
7053214276 | Ashikaga Takuaji | member of Minamoto family; overthrew Kamakura regime and established Ashikaga shogunate (1336-1573); drove emperor from Kyoto to Yoshino. | 246 | |
7053214277 | Ashikaga Shogunate | replaced the Kamakura regime and ruled from 1336 to 1573; destroyed rival Yoshino center of imperial authority. | 247 | |
7053214278 | daimyos | warlord rulers of small states following Onin war and disruption of Ashikaga | 248 | |
7053214279 | shogunate; holdings consolidated into unified and bounded mini-states. | 249 | ||
7053214280 | Choson | earliest Korean kingdom; conquered by Han in 109 B.C.E. | 250 | |
7053214281 | Koguryo | tribal people of northern Korea; established an independent kingdom in the northern half of the peninsula; adopted cultural Sinification. | 251 | |
7053214282 | Silla | Korean kingdom in southeast; became a vassal of the Tang and paid tribute; ruled Korea from 668. | 252 | |
7053214283 | Paekche | independent Korean kingdom in southwestern part of peninsula; defeated by rival Silla kingdom and its Chinese Tang allies in 7th century. | 253 | |
7053214284 | Sinification | extensive adaptation of Chinese culture in other regions. | 254 | |
7053214285 | Yi | dynasty (1392-1910); succeeded Koryo dynasty after Mongol invasions; restored aristocratic dominance and Chinese influence. | 255 | |
7053214286 | Khmers | Indianized Vietnamese peoples defeated by northern government at Hanoi. | 256 | |
7053214287 | Trung sisters | leaders of a rebellion in Vietnam against Chinese rule in 39 C.E.; demonstrates importance of women in Vietnamese society. | 257 | |
7053214288 | Chams | Indianized rivals of the Vietnamese; driven into the highlands by the successful Vietnamese drive to the south. | 258 | |
7053214289 | Nguyen | southern Vietnamese dynasty with capital at Hue that challenged northern Trinh dynasty with center at Hanoi. | 259 | |
7053214290 | Trinh | dynasty that ruled in north Vietnam at Hanoi, 1533 to 1772; rivals of Nguyen family in south. | 260 | |
7053214291 | Factories | trading stations with resident merchants established by the Portuguese and other Europeans. | 261 | |
7053214292 | El Mina | important Portuguese factory on the coast of modern Ghana. | 262 | |
7053214293 | Nzinga Mvemba | ruler of the Kongo kingdom (1507-1543); converted to Christianity; his efforts to integrate Portuguese and African ways foundered because of the slave trade. | 263 | |
7053214294 | Luanda | Portuguese settlement founded in the 1520s; became the core for the colony of Angola. | 264 | |
7053214295 | Royal African Company | chartered in Britain in the 1660s to establish a monopoly over the African trade; supplied slaves to British New World colonies. | 265 | |
7053214296 | Indies piece | a unit in the complex exchange system of the west African trade; based on the value of an adult male slave. | 266 | |
7053214297 | triangular trade | complex commercial pattern linking Africa, the Americas, and Europe; slaves from Africa went to the New World; American agricultural products went to Europe; European goods went to Africa. | 267 | |
7053214298 | Asante | Akan state among the Akan people of Ghana and centered at Kumasi. | 268 | |
7053214299 | Osei Tutu | important ruler who began centralization and expansion of Asante. | 269 | |
7053214300 | Asantehene | title, created by Osei Tutu, of the civil and religious ruler of Asante. | 270 | |
7053214301 | Benin | African kingdom in the Bight of Benin; at the height of its power when Europeans arrived; famous for its bronze casting techniques. | 271 | |
7053214302 | Dahomey | African state among the Fon peoples; developed in the 17th century centered at | 272 | |
7053214303 | Abomey; became a major slave trading state through utilization of Western firearms. | 273 | ||
7053214304 | Luo | Nilotic people who migrated from the Upper Nile regions to establish dynasties in the lakes region of central Africa. | 274 | |
7053214305 | Usuman Dan Fodio | Muslim Fulani leader who launched a great religious movement among the Hausa. | 275 | |
7053214306 | Great Trek | movement inland during the 1830s of Dutch-ancestry settlers in South Africa seeking to escape their British colonial government. | 276 | |
7053214307 | Shaka | ruler among the Nguni peoples of southeast Africa during the early 19th century; developed military tactics that created the Zulu state. | 277 | |
7053214308 | Mfecane | wars among Africans in southern Africa during the early 19th century; caused migrations and alterations in African political organization. Swazi and Lesotho: African states formed by people reacting to the stresses of the Mfecane. | 278 | |
7053214309 | Middle Passage | slave voyage from Africa to the Americas; a deadly and traumatic experience. | 279 | |
7053214310 | Saltwater slaves | name given to slaves born in Africa; distinguished from American-born descendants, the creoles. | 280 | |
7053214311 | obeah | African religious practices in the British American islands. | 281 | |
7053214312 | candomble | African religious practices in Brazil among the Yoruba. | 282 | |
7053214313 | vodun | African religious practices among descendants in Haiti. | 283 | |
7053214314 | Palmares | Angolan-led, large runaway slave state in 17th-century Brazil. | 284 | |
7053214315 | Surinam Maroons | descendants of 18th-century runaway slaves who found permanent refuge in the rainforests of Surinam and French Guiana. | 285 |
AP World History (complete) Flashcards
Primary tabs
Need Help?
We hope your visit has been a productive one. If you're having any problems, or would like to give some feedback, we'd love to hear from you.
For general help, questions, and suggestions, try our dedicated support forums.
If you need to contact the Course-Notes.Org web experience team, please use our contact form.
Need Notes?
While we strive to provide the most comprehensive notes for as many high school textbooks as possible, there are certainly going to be some that we miss. Drop us a note and let us know which textbooks you need. Be sure to include which edition of the textbook you are using! If we see enough demand, we'll do whatever we can to get those notes up on the site for you!