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AP World History Period 2 Flashcards

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7693804058city-statea city that with its surrounding territory forms an independent state0
7693804059tributepayment made periodically by one state or ruler to another1
7693804060Huaca de Sola stepped pyramid (meaning: Temple of the Sun)2
7693804061Huaca de la Lunaa terraced platform (meaning: Temple of the Moon)3
7693804062ayllussmall communities based on the idea of communal work4
7693804063Mesoamericaa region and cultural area in the Americas, extending approximately from central Mexico to Belize, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, and northern Costa Rica5
7693804064Olmecthe first major civilization in present-day Guatemala and Mexico6
7693804065obsidianhard glass rock7
7693804066slash-and-burn-agriculturea type of agriculture that requires cutting down trees and plants in a patch of forest and then burning them, which fertilizes the soil8
7693804067Rock and Pillar edictsPolicies and law written for the public9
7693804068Chandragupta MauryaFounded first Indian empire of the chapter10
7693804069White HunsNomads from Northwest India11
7693804070Pax SinicaPeriod of Wudi's rule, golden age of China12
7693804071Civil Service ExaminationSystem of hiring based on abilities instead of family13
7693804072AsceticOne who rejects pleasures and lives in self-denial14
7693804073Four Noble TruthsThe Buddhist Doctrines listed15
7693804074ReincarnationRebirth16
7693804075MonasteriesBuddhist buildings of worship17
7693804076InoculationsInjecting diseases to develop immunities18
7693804077Arabic NumeralsInvented by Indians, 0-919
7693804078JatisSubcastes20
7693804079Indian Ocean Sea LanesShip routes from West Coast to East Africa and Indonesia21
7693804080Silk RoadTrade routes connecting from Kushans to Rome22
7693804081RepublicA state in which supreme power is held by the people and their elected representatives.23
7693804082SenateAny legislative or governing bodies.24
7693804083ConsulsOne of 2 annually elected chief magistrates who ruled the republic.25
7693804084Checks and BalancesCounterbalancing influences by which an organization or system is regulated26
7693804085Edict of MilanA letter signed by the Roman Emperors that proclaimed religious toleration27
7693804086Direct democracyIt is where the people vote directly for their officials.28
7693804087EmpiricismA theory that all knowledge originates in experience.29
7693804088MerchantsA person involved in trade or commerce.30
7693804089MonarchyA government controlled by a monarch.31
7693804090Polls/PoleisIt was an ancient Greek city-state32
7693804091Representative DemocracyCitizens elect leaders to represent them and give those leaders power to make laws and govern.33
7693804092Royal roadThe Royal Road was an ancient highway reorganized and rebuilt by the Persian king Darius the Great of the first Persian Empire in the 5th century BCE.34
7693804093SatrapA governor of a province under the ancient Persian monarchy.35
7693804094Socratic MethodEmphasis on continually asking questions to systematically clarify another person's ideas and to identify core ideas.36
7693804095Syncretic/SyntheticSyncretism is a union or attempted fusion of different religions, cultures, or philosophies37
7693804096Ahura MazdaIn Zoroastrianism, the good god who rules the world.38
7693804097Alexander the GreatAlexander III of Macedon (356-323 B.C.E.), conqueror of the Persian Empire and part of northwest India.39
7693804098AryansIndo-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.40
7693804099AshokaThe 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.41
7693804101Caesar 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.).42
7693804102Darius IGreat king of Persia (r. 522-486 B.C.E.) following the upheavals after Cyrus's death; completed the establishment of the Persian Empire.43
7693804103Greco-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.44
7693804104Gupta EmpireThe final Classical Empire to fall; a centralized empire of India (320-550 C.E.).45
7693804105Han dynastyDynasty that ruled China from 206 B.C.E. to 220 C.E., creating a durable state based on Shihuangdi's state-building achievement of the Qin Dynasty.46
7693804106Hellenistic eraThe period from 323 to 30 B.C.E. in which Greek culture spread widely in Eurasia in the kingdoms ruled by Alexander the Great and his political successors.47
7693804107HerodotusGreek 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.48
7693804108hopliteA heavily armed Greek infantryman. Over time, the ability to afford a hoplite panoply and to fight for the city came to define Greek citizenship.49
7693804109Mandate 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.50
7693804110Mauryan EmpireA major, centralized empire (322-185 B.C.E.) that encompassed most of India. It's most impactful leader was Ashoka. No other leader will ever unify India to the extent that Ashoka did.51
7693804111Olympic GamesGreek religious festival and athletic competition in honor of Zeus; founded in 776B.C.E. and celebrated every four years.52
7693804112PatriciansWealthy, privileged Romans who dominated early Roman society.53
7693804113Pax 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.54
7693804114Peloponnesian 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.55
7693804115Persian 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.56
7693804116PlebiansPoorer, less privileged Romans who gradually won a role in Roman politics.57
7693804117Punic 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. These wars illustrate Rome as an empire.58
7693804118Qin 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. Adopted legalism and a merit based bureaucracy.59
7693804119Qin ShihuangdiLiterally "first emperor" (r. 221-210 B.C.E.) forcibly reunited China and established a strong and repressive state.60
7693804120WudiHan emperor (r. 141-86 B.C.E.) who began the Chinese civil service system by establishing an academy to train imperial bureaucrats.61
7693804121XiongnuNomadic peoples to the north of the Great Wall of China who were a frequent threat to the stability of the Chinese state.62
7693804122Yellow Turban RebellionA major Chinese peasant revolt that began in 184 C.E. and helped cause the fall of the Han dynasty.63
7693804123AristotleA Greek polymath philosopher (384-322 B.C.E.); student of Plato and teacher of Alexander the Great.64
7693804124Ban 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.65
7693804125Bhagavad GitaA great Hindu epic text, part of the much larger Mahabharata, which affirms the performance of caste duties as a path to religious liberation.66
7693804126BrahminsThe priestly caste of India.67
7693804127BuddhismThe cultural/religious tradition first enunciated by Siddhartha Gautama. Aided in its spread by Ashoka and was very popular among lower classes. It rejected the Caste System and spread easily to East Asia.68
7693804128ConfucianismThe Chinese philosophy first enunciated by Confucius, advocating relationships as a moral example of superiors being the key element of social order.69
7693804129ConfuciusThe 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.70
7693804130ConstantineRoman emperor (r. 306-337 C.E.) whose conversion to Christianity paved the way for the triumph of Christianity in Europe.71
7693804131DaodejingThe central text of Daoism; translated as The Way and Its Power.72
7693804132DaoismA Chinese philosophy/popular religion that advocates simplicity and understanding of the world of nature, founded by the legendary figure Laozi.73
7693804133Filial pietyThe honoring of one's ancestors and parents, a key element of Confucianism.74
7693804134HinduismA word derived from outsiders to describe the vast diversity of indigenous Indian religious traditions. A polytheistic religion that reinforced the Caste System.75
7693804135IsiaihOne of the most important prophets of Judaism, whose teachings show the transformation of the religion in favor of compassion and social justice (eighth century B.C.E.).76
7693804136Jesus of NazarethThe prophet/god of Christianity(ca. 4 B.C.E.-ca. 30 C.E.).77
7693804137KarmaIn Hinduism, the determining factor of the level at which the individual is reincarnated, based on purity of action and fulfillment of duty in the prior existence.78
7693804138LaoziA legendary Chinese philosopher of the sixth century B.C.E.; regarded as the founder of Daoism.79
7693804139LegalismA Chinese philosophy distinguished by an adherence to clear laws with vigorous punishments.80
7693804140NirvanaThe end goal of Buddhism, in which individual identity is "extinguished" into a state of serenity and great compassion.81
7693804141PythagorasA major Greek philosopher (ca. 560-ca. 480 B.C.E.) who believed that an unchanging mathematical order underlies the apparent chaos of the world.82
7693804142Saint PaulThe first great popularizer of Christianity (10-65 C.E.).83
7693804143Siddhartha Gautama (the Buddha)The Indian prince turned ascetic (ca. 566-ca. 486 B.C.E.) who founded Buddhism.84
7693804144SocratesThe first great Greek philosopher to turn rationalism toward questions of human existence (469-399 B.C.E.).85
7693804145UpanishadsIndian mystical and philosophical works, written between 800 and 400 B.C.E.86
7693804146VedasThe 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.87
7693804147Warring States PeriodPeriod in China preceding the Qin Dynasty from 403 to 221 B.C.E. that was typified by disorder and political chaos.88
7693804148Yin and YangExpression of the Chinese belief in the unity of opposites.89
7693804149ZarathustraA Persian prophet, traditionally dated to the sixth or seventh century B.C.E. (but perhaps much older), who founded Zoroastrianism.90
7693804150ZoroastrianismPersian monotheistic religion founded by the prophet Zarathustra. Represents the ideas of good and evil.91
7693804151caste 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.92
7693804152dharmaIn Indian belief, performance of the duties appropriate to an individual's caste; good performance will lead to rebirth in a higher caste.93
7693804153helotsThe dependent, semi-enslaved class of ancient Sparta whose social discontent prompted the militarization of Spartan society.94
7693804154KsatriyaThe Indian social class of warriors and rulers.95
7693804155latifundiaHuge estates operated by slave labor that flourished in parts of the Roman Empire96
7693804156"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.97
7693804157scholar-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.98
7693804158SudraThe lowest Indian social class of varna; regarded as servants of their social betters; eventually included peasant farmers99
7693804159the "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.100
7693804160UntouchablesAn Indian social class that emerged below the Sudras and whose members performed the most unclean and polluting work.101
7693804161VaisyaThe Indian social class that was originally defined as farmers but eventually comprised merchants.102
7693804162Wang 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.103
7693804163Empress 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.104
7693804164ChavinAndean town that was the center of a large Peruvian religious movement from around 900 to 200 B.C.E.105
7693804165MayaThe major classical civilization of Mesoamerica; flourished from 250 to 900 C.E.; descendants of the Olmec and practiced human sacrifice.106
7693804166MocheAn important regional civilization of Peru, governed by warrior-priests; flourished from around 100 to 800 C.E.107
7693804167TeotihuacánThe 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."108
7693826462Ancestor VenerationThe respect of the dead, including one's ancestors, is based on love and respect for the deceased.109

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