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AP World History Period 1 & 2 Review Flashcards

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10798110105Agriculturepractice of raising crops or livestock on a continual and controlled basis.0
10798110106ArtisanA skilled craftsperson.1
10798110107DomesticationThe taming of animals and plants for human use, such as for labor or food.2
10798110108EurasiaThe large landmass that includes both Europe and Asia.3
10798110109AnimismThe belief that animals, Rivers, and other elements of nature embody spirits.4
10798110110Hunter-foragersPeople who survived by hunting animals and foraging for seeds, nuts, fruits, and edible roots.5
10798110111IrrigationA way of supplying water to an area of land, the people would use water from the rivers to irrigate their crops.6
10798110112MetallurgyThe science of the study of metals.7
10798110113MigrationA movement from one country or region to another.8
10798110114MonotheismThe belief in one God.9
10798110115Paleolithic PeriodOld Stone Age, where humanos used stone tools and weapons.10
10798110116Specialization of laborThe division of labor that aids the development of skills in a particular type of work.11
10798110117SurplusHaving more resources than needed for themselves.12
10798110118TextileItems made of cloth, would be weaved by women and then decorated, usually all at home.13
10798110119UrbanizationAn increase in the percentage and in the number of people living in urban settlements.14
10798110120OvergrazingThe continual eating of grasses or their roots, without allowing them to regrow.15
10798110121OverfarmingLand loosing its fertility unless it is left fallow or it was fertilized usually by spreading of animal manure.16
10798110122ArtifactsObjects made and used by early humans, usually dug up by archaeologists.17
10798110123Neolithic RevolutionThe switch from nomadic lifestyles to a settled agricultural lifestyle.18
10798110124Bronze AgeThe period in ancient human culture when people began to make and use bronze.19
10798110125CivilizationThe stage of human social development and organization that is considered most advanced.20
10798110126JerichoOne of the oldest first human cities that was built on the West Bank of the Jordan river.21
10798110127Catal HuyukAncient city in present dat Turkey that was founded in 7500 B.C.E. along a river that has since dried up.22
10798110128Nomadic PastoralismPeople moving herds of animals from pasture to pasture.23
10798110129Kinship GroupSeveral related families that moved together in search of food.24
10798110130ClanGroup of families with a common ancestor.25
10798110131TribeA group of people who share a common ancestry, language, name, and way of living.26
10798110132PatriarchalRelating to a society in which men hold the greatest legal and moral authority.27
10798110133MerchantsPeople who buy and sell goods also known as traders.28
10798110134Social StratificationThe division of society into groups arranged in a social hierarchy. Some people accumulated wealth in the form of jewelry and others coveted items by building larger and better decorated houses.29
10798110135Priests and PriestessesPeople who performed religious ceremonies.30
10798110136Tigris and Euphrates RiversFlow south from modern day Turkey through what is now Iraq to empty into the Persian Gulf.31
10798110137MesopotamiaLand between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers where many ancient civilizations arose from.32
10798110138Fertile CrescentAn arc of fertile land from the Mediterranean Sea to the Persian Gulf .33
10798110139SumeriansGroup of nomadic pastoralists that migrated into Mesopotamia and created a civilization of Sumer that provided the core and the foundation of several other civilizations.34
10798110140ZigguratsTemples built by Sumerians to honor the gods and goddesses they worshipped.35
10798110141DesertificationThe spread of desert like conditions.36
10798110142Indus River ValleyDeveloped near water and became the core and foundation of later civilizations in the region.37
10798110143Environmental DegradationCaused the gradual decline and eventual disappearance of the Harappan and Mohenjo-Daro civilizations by soil eroding.38
10798110144DeforestationThe removal of trees faster than forests can replace themselves.39
10798110145LoessA wind-formed deposit made of fine particles of clay and silt.40
10798110146MesoamericaAn area of ancient civilization in what is now Central America.41
10798110147GlyphsThe first writing system in the Americas that used pictures and symbols of real ojects.42
10798110148BarterTrading system in which people exchange goods directly without using money.43
10798110149PolytheisticBelief in many gods.44
10798110150ZigguratsTemples built by Sumerians to honor the gods and goddesses they worshipped.45
10798110151AstronomyThe study of the moon, stars, and other objects in space.46
10798110152AstrologyTheory of the influence of planets and stars on human events.47
10798110153AbrahamFounder of Judaism.48
10798110154MosesLed the Exodus of the Hebrews from Egypt; received the 10 commandments.49
10798110155Ten CommandmentsLaws given by God to Moses that tell Jews how to behave in their daily lives.50
10798110156Jewish DiasporaThe scattering of the Jewish people outside their homeland beginning about 586 B.C.E.51
10798110157The Huang He and The Chiang JiangWhere Chinas first civilizations developed.52
10798110158MummificationInvolved removing the body's internal organs, drying the body with salts, and packing its insides and wrapping it with chemically treated cloth.53
10798110159HieroglyphicsEgyptian writing that involved using pictures to represent words.54
10798110160PapyrusA type of plant that grew along the Nile River, used its fibers to create a type of paper.55
10798110161VedasA collection of Aryan religious hymns, poems, and songs.56
10798110162Vedic AgeAryans growing awareness of Dravidian beliefs.57
10798110163BrahmaOverarching, universal soul that connects all creatures on Earth.58
10798110164DharmaIn Hindu belief, a person's religious and moral duties.59
10798110165KarmaThe effects that good or bad actions have on a person's soul.60
10798110166MokshaThe Hindu concept of the spirit's 'liberation' from the endless cycle of rebirths.61
10798110167Ancestor VenerationThe believe of making offerings to their ancestors in hope to win their favor.62
10798110168Golden AgeA period in which a society or culture is at its peak.63
10798110169Mandate of HeavenA just rulers power was bestowed by the gods.64
10798110170UpanishadsA foundational text for the set of religious beliefs that later became known as Hinduism.65
10798110171PictographsA graphic symbol that represents an idea, concept, or object, rather than representing a single sound, as letter systems do.66
10798110172ShamansPeople who believed to have special abilities to cure the sick and influence the future.67
10798110173Core and Foundational civilizationsCivilizations that developed ways of life, such as language, religious beliefs, and economic practices, that would heavily influence successor civilizations in their regions.68
10798110174City-StateTypically covered several hundred square miles and were independent each with its own government.69
10798110175KingsSumerian military leaders became more important than priests and ruled over a territory known as a kingdom.70
10798110176CuneiformSumerians created it to keep records which consisted of marks carved onto wet clay tablets.71
10798110177ScribesIndividuals who were charged first with record-keeping and later with the writing of history and myths.72
10798110178The Epic of GilgameshAn epic poem from Mesopotamia, is among the earliest surviving works of literature.73
10798110179EmpireLarge territory that included diverse cultural groups.74
10798110180BabyloniansPersians who took control of Mesopotamia and built a new capital city called Babylon.75
10798110181HammurabiBabylonian king who codified the laws of Sumer and Mesopotamia (died 1750 BC), and created a set of laws called the Code of Hammurabi.76
10798110182Code of HammurabiLaw code introduced when Hammurabi of Babylon took over Sumer in 1760 BC, that dealt with topics such as property rights, wages, contracts, marriage, and various crimes.77
10798110183PhoeniciansMost powerful traders along the Mediterranean, that occupied parts of present day Lebanon, Israel, and Jordan around 3000 B.C.E.78
10798110184CarthageA Phoenician colony on the coast of North Africa, that became a significant outpost in the region.79
10798110185Alphabetic scriptA system of symbols (letters) that represent the sounds of speech, as an alternative to cuneiform around 1000 B.C.E.80
10798110186Sahara and Kalahari DesertsTwo desert zones one in Northern Africa and the other in Southern Africa.81
10798110187Nile RiverThe river in which early kingdoms in Egypt were centered around.82
10798110188Old KingdomA period in Egyptian history that lasted from about 2700 BC to 2200 BC.83
10798110189Middle KingdomA period of order and stability that lasted until about 1750 BC.84
10798110190New KingdomThe period during which Egypt reached the height of its power and glory.85
10798110191PharaohA king of ancient Egypt, considered a god as well as a political and military leader.86
10798110192TheocracyRulers holding both religious and political power. A government controlled by religious leaders87
10798110193HyksosA group of nomadic invaders from southwest Asia who ruled Egypt from 1640 to 1570 B.C.88
10798110194AkhenatonThe pharaoh that tried to change Egypts religion and called for the worship of a sun god called Aten.89
10798110195Ramses the GreatTook the throne around 1290 B.C.E. who expanded the empire into Southwest Asia and built more temples and erected more statues than any other pharaoh.90
10798110196HittitesHad military advantage over the Egyptians because they were beginning to use iron tools and weapons.91
10798110197DravidiansIndigenous peoples of the Indian subcontinent.92
10798110198Xia DynastyLasted for about 400 years, little is known because early Chinese had no writing system.93
10798110199Shang DynastyRuled for 600 years, conquered neighboring peoples and established an empire, wielded tremendous economic and religious power.94
10798110200Zhou DynastyThe longest lasting Chinese dynasty, during which the use of iron was introduced.95
10798110201FeudalismThe network of regional rulers with relationships based on mutual defense agreements.96
10798110202MaizeOne of the first important plants to be grown by the indigenous Americans.97
10798110203Chavin CivilizationExisted from around 1000 to 200 B.C.E, and centered at Chavin de Huantar.98
10798110204OlmecThe foundation or core of Mesoamerica advanced civilizations.99
10798110205AboriginalsPeople in Australia who remained hunter-foragers.100
10798110206Easter IslandDivided into clans, with a chief for each clan and one chief over all clans.101
10798110207Ahura MazdaIn Zoroastrianism, the good god who rules the world.102
10798110208Alexander the GreatAlexander III of Macedon (356-323 B.C.E.), conqueror of the Persian Empire and part of northwest India.103
10798110209Ancestral PuebloFormerly known as the Anasazi, this people established a mixed agricultural and gathering/hunting society in the southwestern part of North America.104
10798110210Angra MainyuIn Zoroastrianism, the evil god, engaged in a cosmic struggle with Ahura Mazda.105
10798110211AristotleA Greek polymath philosopher (384-322 B.C.E.); student of Plato and teacher of Alexander the Great.106
10798110212AryansIndo-European pastoralists who moved into India about the time of the collapse of the Indus Valley civilization; their role in causing this collapse is still debated by historians.107
10798110213AshokaThe most famous ruler of the Mauryan Empire (r. 268-232 B.C.E.), who converted to Buddhism and tried to rule peacefully and with tolerance.108
10798110214Athenian democracyA radical form of direct democracy in which much of the free male population of Athens had the franchise and officeholders were chosen by lot.109
10798110215AtmanThe human soul, which in classic Hindu belief seeks union with Brahman.110
10798110216AxumClassical-era kingdom of East Africa, in present-day Eritrea and northern Ethiopia; flourished111
10798110352from 100 to 600 C.E.112
10798110217Bantu expansionGradual migration of peoples from their homeland in what is now southern Nigeria and the Cameroons into most of eastern and southern Africa, a process that began around 3000 B.C.E. and continued for several millennia. The agricultural techniques and ironworking113
10798110218Ban ZhaoA major female Confucian author of Han dynasty China (45-116 C.E.) whose works give insight into the implication of Confucian thinking for women.114
10798110219Battle of MarathonAthenian victory over a Persian invasion in 490 B.C.E.115
10798110220Bhagavad GitaA great Hindu epic text, part of the much larger Mahabharata, which affirms the performance of caste duties as a path to religious liberation.116
10798110221bhakti movementAn immensely popular development in Hinduism, advocating intense devotion toward a particular deity.117
10798110222BrahmanThe "World Soul" or final reality in upanishadic Hindu belief.118
10798110223BrahminsThe priestly caste of India.119
10798110224BuddhismThe cultural/religious tradition first enunciated by Siddhartha Gautama120
10798110225Caesar AugustusThe great-nephew and adopted son of Julius Caesar who emerged as sole ruler of the Roman state at the end of an extended period of civil war (r. 31 B.C.E.-14 C.E.).121
10798110226CahokiaThe dominant center of an important Mississippi valley mound-building culture, located near present-day St. Louis, Missouri; flourished from about 900 to 1250 C.E.122
10798110227caste as varna and jatiThe system of social organization in India that has evolved over millennia; it is based on an original division of the populace into four inherited classes, with the addition of thousands of social distinctions based on occupation, which became the main cell of social life in India.123
10798110228ChavinAndean town that was the center of a large Peruvian religious movement from around 900 to 200 B.C.E.124
10798110229ConfucianismThe Chinese philosophy first enunciated by Confucius, advocating the moral example of superiors as the key element of social order.125
10798110230ConfuciusThe founder of Confucianism (551-479 B.C.E.); an aristocrat of northern China who proved to be the greatest influence on Chinese culture in its history.126
10798110231ConstantineRoman emperor (r. 306-337 C.E.) whose conversion to Christianity paved the way for the triumph of Christianity in Europe.127
10798110232Coptic ChristianityThe Egyptian variety of Christianity, distinctive in its belief that Christ has only a single, divine nature.128
10798110233Cyrus (the Great)Founder of the Persian Empire (r. 557-530 B.C.E.); a ruler noted for his conquests, religious tolerance, and political moderation.129
10798110234DaodejingThe central text of Daoism; translated as The Way and Its Power.130
10798110235DaoismA Chinese philosophy/popular religion that advocates simplicity and understanding of the world of nature, founded by the legendary figure Laozi.131
10798110236Darius IGreat king of Persia (r. 522-486 B.C.E.) following the upheavals after Cyrus's death; completed the establishment of the Persian Empire.132
10798110237dharmaIn Indian belief, performance of the duties appropriate to an individual's caste; good performance will lead to rebirth in a higher caste.133
10798110238Empress WuThe only female "emperor" in Chinese history (r. 690-705 C.E.); patronized scholarship, worked to elevate the position of women, and provoked a backlash of Confucian misogynist invective.134
10798110239Filial pietyThe honoring of one's ancestors and parents, a key element of Confucianism.135
10798110240Greco-Persian WarsTwo major Persian invasions of Greece, in 490 B.C.E. and 480 B.C.E., in which the Persians were defeated on both land and sea.136
10798110241Greek rationalismA secularizing system of scientific and philosophic thought that developed in classical Greece in the period 600 to 300 B.C.E.; it emphasized the power of education and human reason to understand the world in nonreligious terms.137
10798110242Gupta EmpireAn empire of India (320-550 C.E.).138
10798110243Han dynastyDynasty that ruled China from 206 B.C.E. to 220 C.E., creating a durable state based on Shihuangdi's state-building achievement.139
10798110244Hellenistic eraThe period from 323 to 30 B.C.E. in which Greek culture spread widely in Eurasia in the kingdoms ruled by Alexander's political successors.140
10798110245helotsThe dependent, semi-enslaved class of ancient Sparta whose social discontent prompted the militarization of Spartan society.141
10798110246HerodotusGreek historian known as the "father of history" (ca. 484-ca. 425 B.C.E.). His Histories enunciated the Greek view of a fundamental divide between East and West, culminating in the Greco-Persian Wars of 490-480 B.C.E.142
10798110247HinduismA word derived from outsiders to describe the vast diversity of indigenous Indian religious traditions.143
10798110248HippocratesA very influential Greek medical theorist (ca. 460-ca. 370 B.C.E.); regarded as the father of medicine.144
10798110249Hopewell CultureNamed from its most important site (in present-day Ohio), this is the most elaborate and widespread of the North American mound building cultures; flourished from 200 B.C.E. to 400 C.E.145
10798110250hopliteA heavily armed Greek infantryman. Over time, the ability to afford a hoplite panoply and to146
10798110353fight for the city came to define Greek citizenship.147
10798110251IoniaThe territory of Greek settlements on the coast of Anatolia; the main bone of contention between the Greeks and the Persian Empire.148
10798110252IsiahOne of the most important prophets of Judaism, whose teachings show the transformation149
10798110354of the religion in favor of compassion and social justice (eighth century B.C.E.).150
10798110253Jenne-jenoLargest and most fully studied of the cities of the Niger Valley civilization151
10798110254Jesus of NazarethThe prophet/god of Christianity(ca. 4 B.C.E.-ca. 30 C.E.).152
10798110255KarmaIn Hinduism, the determining factor of the level at which the individual is reincarnated, based153
10798110355on purity of action and fulfillment of duty in the prior existence.154
10798110256karmaIn Indian belief, the force generated by one's behavior in a previous life that decides the level at which an individual will be reborn.155
10798110257KsatriyaThe Indian social class of warriors and rulers.156
10798110258LaoziA legendary Chinese philosopher of the sixth century B.C.E.; regarded as the founder of Daoism.157
10798110259latifundiaHuge estates operated by slave labor that flourished in parts of the Roman Empire158
10798110260LegalismA Chinese philosophy distinguished by an adherence to clear laws with vigorous punishments.159
10798110261Mahayana"Great Vehicle," the popular development of Buddhism in the early centuries of the Common Era, which gives a much greater role to supernatural beings and proved to be more popular than original (Theravada) Buddhism.160
10798110262Mandate of HeavenThe ideological underpinning of Chinese emperors, this was the belief that a ruler held authority by command of divine force as long as he ruled morally and benevolently.161
10798110263Mauryan EmpireA major empire (322-185 B.C.E.) that encompassed most of India.162
10798110264MayaThe major classical civilization of Mesoamerica; flourished from 250 to 900 C.E.163
10798110265MocheAn important regional civilization of Peru, governed by warrior-priests; flourished from around 100 to 800 C.E.164
10798110266MokshaIn Hindu belief, liberation from separate existence and union with Brahman.165
10798110267Mound BuildersMembers of any of a number of cultures that developed east of the Mississippi River in what is now the United States and that are distinguished by their large earthen mounds, built during the period 2000 B.C.E.-1250 C.E.166
10798110268NazcaA civilization of southern coastal Peru, the Nazca became famous for their underground irrigation channels and their gigantic and mysterious lines in the desert in the form of monkeys, birds, spiders, and other designs.167
10798110269Niger Valley CivilizationDistinctive city-based civilization that flourished from about 300 B.C.E. to about 900 C.E. in the floodplain of the middle Niger and that included major cities like Jenne-jeno; the Niger Valley civilization is particularly noteworthy for its apparent lack of centralized state structures, having been organized instead in clusters of economically specialized settlements.168
10798110270NirvanaThe end goal of Buddhism, in which individual identity is "extinguished" into a state of serenity and great compassion.169
10798110271Olympic GamesGreek religious festival and athletic competition in honor of Zeus; founded in 776B.C.E. and celebrated every four years.170
10798110272PatriciansWealthy, privileged Romans who dominated early Roman society.171
10798110273Pax RomanaThe "Roman peace," a term typically used to denote the stability and prosperity of the early Roman Empire, especially in the first and second centuries C.E.172
10798110274Peloponnesian WarGreat war between Athens (and allies) and Sparta (and allies), lasting from 431 to 404 B.C.E. The conflict ended in the defeat of Athens and the closing of Athens's Golden Age.173
10798110275PericlesA prominent and influential statesman of ancient Athens (ca. 495-429 B.C.E.); presided over Athens's Golden Age.174
10798110276PersepolisThe capital and greatest palace-city of the Persian Empire, destroyed by Alexander the Great.175
10798110277Persian EmpireA major empire that expanded from the Iranian plateau to incorporate the Middle East from Egypt to India; flourished from around 550 to 330 B.C.E.176
10798110278PlatoA disciple of Socrates whose Dialogues convey the teachings of his master while going beyond them to express Plato's own philosophy; lived from 429 to 348 B.C.E.177
10798110279PlebiansPoorer, less privileged Romans who gradually won a role in Roman politics.178
10798110280Pueblo"Great house" of the Ancestral Pueblo people; a large, apartment building-like structure that could house hundreds of people.179
10798110281Punic WarsThree major wars between Rome and Carthage in North Africa, fought between 264 and 146 B.C.E., that culminated in Roman victory and control of the western Mediterranean.180
10798110282PythagorasA major Greek philosopher (ca. 560-ca. 480 B.C.E.) who believed that an unchanging mathematical order underlies the apparent chaos of the world.181
10798110283Qin DynastyA short-lived (221-206 B.C.E.) but highly influential Chinese dynasty that succeeded in reuniting China at the end of the Warring States period.182
10798110284Qin ShihuangdiLiterally "first emperor" (r. 221-210 B.C.E.) forcibly183
10798110356reunited China and established a strong and repressive state.184
10798110285"ritual purity" in Indian social practiceIn India, the idea that members of higher castes must adhere to strict regulations limiting or forbidding their contact with objects and members of lower castes to preserve their own caste standing and their relationship with the gods.185
10798110286Saint PaulThe first great popularizer of Christianity (10-65 C.E.).186
10798110287scholar-gentry classA term used to describe members of China's landowning families, reflecting their wealth from the land and the privilege that they derived as government officials.187
10798110288Semi-sedentaryTerm frequently used to describe the peoples of the eastern woodlands of the United States, Central America, the Amazon basin, and the Caribbean islands who combined partial reliance on agriculture with gathering and hunting.188
10798110289Siddhartha Gautama (the Buddha)The Indian prince turned ascetic (ca. 566-ca. 486 B.C.E.) who founded Buddhism.189
10798110290SocratesThe first great Greek philosopher to turn rationalism toward questions of human existence (469-399 B.C.E.).190
10798110291SolonAthenian statesman and lawmaker (fl. 594-560 B.C.E.) whose reforms led the Athenians toward democracy.191
10798110292SudraThe lowest Indian social class of varna; regarded as servants of their social betters; eventually included peasant farmers192
10798110293TeotihuacánThe largest city of pre-Columbian America, with a population between 100,000 and 200,000; seemingly built to a plan in the Valley of Mexico, flourished between 300 and 600 C.E., during which time it governed or influenced much of the surrounding region. The name is an Aztec term meaning "city of the gods."193
10798110294TheodosiusRoman emperor (r. 379-395 C.E.) who made Christianity the official religion of the194
10798110357Roman state, banning all polytheistic rituals.195
10798110295Theravada"The Teaching of the Elders," the early form of Buddhism according to which the Buddha as a wise teacher but not divine and which emphasizes practices rather than beliefs.196
10798110296the "three obediences"In Chinese Confucian thought, the notion that a woman is permanently subordinate to male control: first that of her father, then of her husband, and finally of her son.197
10798110297TikalMajor Maya city, with a population of perhaps 50,000 people.198
10798110298UntouchablesAn Indian social class that emerged below the Sudras and whose members performed the most unclean and polluting work.199
10798110299UpanishadsIndian mystical and philosophical works, written between 800 and 400 B.C.E.200
10798110300VaisyaThe Indian social class that was originally defined as farmers but eventually comprised merchants.201
10798110301VedasThe earliest religious texts of India, a collection of ancient poems, hymns, and rituals that were transmitted orally before being written down ca. 600 B.C.E.202
10798110302Wang MangA Han court official who usurped the throne and ruled from 8 C.E. to 23 C.E.; noted for his reform movement that included the breakup of large estates.203
10798110303Warring States PeriodPeriod in China from 403 to 221 B.C.E. that was typified by disorder and political chaos.204
10798110304WudiHan emperor (r. 141-86 B.C.E.) who began the Chinese civil service system by establishing an academy to train imperial bureaucrats.205
10798110305XiongnuNomadic peoples to the north of the Great Wall of China who were a frequent threat to the stability of the Chinese state.206
10798110306YahwehThe monotheistic religion developed by the Hebrews, emphasizing a sole personal god (Yahweh) with concerns for social justice.207
10798110307Yellow Turban RebellionA major Chinese peasant revolt that began in 184 C.E. and helped cause the fall of the Han dynasty.208
10798110308Yin and YangExpression of the Chinese belief in the unity of opposites.209
10798110309ZarathustraA Persian prophet, traditionally dated to the sixth or seventh century B.C.E. (but perhaps much older), who founded Zoroastrianism.210
10798110310ZoroastrianismPersian monotheistic religion founded by the prophet Zarathustra.211
10798110311Roman Empirestretched from modern day Britain to modern day Iran.212
10798110312AcupunctureChinese medical practice of inserting needles into certain areas of the body influenced by Daoism213
10798110313filial pietyThe honoring of one's ancestors and parents, a key element of Confucianism.214
10798110314plaguea disease that spreads quickly and kills many people215
10798110315HanChinese dynasty that ruled from 202 B.C.E.-220 C.E, embraced Confucianism.216
10798110316Cyrus the GreatFirst emperor of Persia--was good to conquered people.217
10798110317Rock Pillar EdictsMoral and legal codes established by Ashoka, influenced by Buddhism218
10798110318Julius Caesarancient roman general whose murder led to the end of the roman republic219
10798110319Roman roadswere built throughout the empire for trade and transportation; over 50,000 miles220
10798110320Silk RoadsWhich trade route is indicated by the map?221
10798110321monsoonsseasonal wind patterns that cause wet and dry seasons222
10798110322Babylonian Captivity50-year period in which the Israelites were exiled from their homeland and eventually freed by the Persians223
10798110323sanskritPrimary sacred language of hinduism224
10798110324reincarnationHindu and Buddhist belief that souls are reborn into new bodies over and over.225
10798110325Four Noble Truthsas taught by the Buddha, the four basic beliefs that form the foundation of Buddhism226
10798110326Eightfold PathIn Buddhism, the basic rules of behavior and belief leading to an end of suffering227
10798110327sutrasBuddhists sacred writings.228
10798110328Five Basic Relationshipsruler/subject; father/son; husband/wife; older brother/younger brother; friend/friend229
10798110329Daoist architectureChinese building style influenced by one of the main philosophies that emerged during the period of Warring States230
10798110330ancestor venerationThey don't worship ancestors, but they pray to them out of respect.231
10798110331AthensA Greek city-state and the birthplace of democracy.232
10798110332Spartaa greek city-state known for its strength and trained warriors233
10798110333Peloponnesian War30 year conflict between Sparta and Athens that ended with a Spartan victory but left Greece weak234
10798110334HellenismCultural syncretism that blended five of the greatest classical civilizations after Alexander the Great235
10798110335bureaucraciesranked authority structure that operates according to specific rules and procedures developed in earnest by the classical empires236
10798110336Great Wall of ChinaFirst stages built by Qin Shihuangdi237
10798110337Hadrian's WallNorthern border of the Roman Empire in Britannia238
10798110338PataliputraThe capital of both Mauryan and Gupta empires239
10798110339AlexandriaAn ancient city in Egypt built by Alexander the Great; center of Hellenism240
10798110340ConstantinopleThe capital of the eastern Roman Empire and later of the Byzantine Empire241
10798110341corveeLabor tax; peasants had to work for free for part of the year242
10798110342slaveryA system of enforced servitude in which some people are owned by other people.243
10798110343satithe Hindu ritual requiring a wife to throw herself on her deceased husband's funeral pyre244
10798110344HunsA tribe originating north of China; one of the last barbarian groups to invade Western Europe; helped bring an end to the Han, Gupta, and Romans245
10798110345Conrad-Demorest ModelCan be used to describe the rise and fall of every empire in history246
10798110346camelincreased trade between Africa and Asia; important domesticated pack animal of the classical age247
10798110347dhowName of this type of ship248
10798110348lateen sailtriangular sail that made it possible to sail against the wind249

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