8023049282 | Baltic Sea | ![]() | 0 | |
8023049283 | Congo River | ![]() | 1 | |
8023049284 | Dnieper River | ![]() | 2 | |
8023049285 | Java Sea | ![]() | 3 | |
8023049286 | Lake Victoria | ![]() | 4 | |
8023049287 | Mekong River | ![]() | 5 | |
8023049288 | North Sea | ![]() | 6 | |
8023049289 | Sea of Japan | ![]() | 7 | |
8023049290 | Volga River | ![]() | 8 | |
8023049291 | Byzantine Empire | ![]() | 9 | |
8023049292 | Western Europe | ![]() | 10 | |
8023049293 | Mayan civilization delete | ![]() | 11 | |
8023049294 | Ghana Empire | ![]() | 12 | |
8023049295 | Mali Empire | ![]() | 13 | |
8023049296 | Songhai Empire | ![]() | 14 | |
8023049297 | Sui dynasty | ![]() | 15 | |
8023049298 | Tang dynasty | ![]() | 16 | |
8023049299 | Song dynasty | ![]() | 17 | |
8023049300 | Rashidun caliphate (Four Rightly-Guided Caliphs) | ![]() | 18 | |
8023049301 | Umayyad Empire | ![]() | 19 | |
8023049302 | Abbasid Empire | ![]() | 20 | |
8023049303 | Aztec Empire | ![]() | 21 | |
8023049304 | Inca Empire | ![]() | 22 | |
8023049306 | the americas | 23 | ||
8023049307 | africa | 24 | ||
8023049308 | europe | 25 | ||
8023049309 | ural mountains | 26 | ||
8023049310 | asia | 27 | ||
8023049311 | oceania | 28 | ||
8023049312 | north america | 29 | ||
8023049313 | latin america, caribbean, and mesoamerica | 30 | ||
8023049314 | mexico | 31 | ||
8023049315 | caribbean | 32 | ||
8023049316 | north africa | 33 | ||
8023049317 | west africa | 34 | ||
8023049318 | central africa | 35 | ||
8023049319 | southern africa | 36 | ||
8023049320 | east africa | 37 | ||
8023049321 | middle east | 38 | ||
8023049322 | central asia | 39 | ||
8023049323 | south asia | 40 | ||
8023049324 | east asia | 41 | ||
8023049325 | southeast asia | 42 | ||
8023049326 | Novgorod | Identify the City | ![]() | 43 |
8023049327 | Timbuktu | Identify the City | ![]() | 44 |
8023049328 | Swahili City-States | Identify the City | ![]() | 45 |
8023049330 | Calicut | Identify the City | ![]() | 46 |
8023049331 | Baghdad | Identify the City | ![]() | 47 |
8023049332 | Melaka | Identify the City | ![]() | 48 |
8023049333 | Venice | Identify the City | ![]() | 49 |
8023049334 | Tenochtitlan | Identify the City | ![]() | 50 |
8023049335 | Cahokia | Identify the City | ![]() | 51 |
8023049338 | Mesoamerica | Identify the Region | ![]() | 52 |
8023049340 | Central Asian Steppe | Identify the Region | ![]() | 53 |
8023049341 | Polynesia | Identify the Region | ![]() | 54 |
8023049342 | Sub-Saharan Africa | Identify the Region | ![]() | 55 |
8023049344 | Iberian Peninsula | Identify the Region | ![]() | 56 |
8023049345 | Grand Canal | Identify the Feature | ![]() | 57 |
8023049346 | Tang | Identify the Empire | ![]() | 58 |
8023049347 | Byzantine | Identify the Empire | ![]() | 59 |
8023049348 | Caliphate | Identify the Empire | ![]() | 60 |
8023049349 | Mongol | Identify the Empire | ![]() | 61 |
8023049351 | Mexica | Identify the Empire | ![]() | 62 |
8023049352 | Inca | Identify the Empire | ![]() | 63 |
8023049353 | Aztec Empire established | 1400 | 64 | |
8023049354 | Black Death in Europe | 1346-1350 | 65 | |
8023049355 | Buddhism suppressed by Tang | 845 | 66 | |
8023049356 | Constantinople falls to Turks | 1453 | 67 | |
8023049357 | 1st Crusade | 1095 | 68 | |
8023049358 | Delhi Sultinate | 1206 | 69 | |
8023049359 | Gunpowder invented | 1000 | 70 | |
8023049360 | Ming expeditions | 1405-1433 | 71 | |
8023049361 | Yuan dynasty | 1279-1368 | 72 | |
8023049362 | Trans-Saharan trade | 300-500 | 73 | |
8023049363 | Song dynasty | 960-1279 | 74 | |
8023049364 | Sui dynasty | 589-618 | 75 | |
8023049365 | Life of Muhammad | 570-632 | 76 | |
8023049366 | Inca established | 1450 | 77 | |
8023049367 | Iconoclasm in Byzantine Empire | 726-843 | 78 | |
8023049368 | Bedouins | Small groups of nomadic people in Arabia | 79 | |
8023049369 | Bushido | "The way of the warrior"; Japanese word for the Samurai life ; Samurai moral code was based on loyalty, chivalry, martial arts, and honor until the death | 80 | |
8023049372 | Crusades | A series of holy wars from 1096-1270 AD undertaken by European Christians to free the Holy Land from Muslim rule. | 81 | |
8023049373 | Cyril and Methodius | Byzantine missionary brothers who helped convert the Slavic peoples to Christianity, including the Croats, Serbs, and Bulgarians. They translated the Bible into the Slavic language | 82 | |
8023049375 | "fictive kinship" | condition in which people who are not biologically related behave as if they are relatives of a certain type | 83 | |
8023049376 | "firestick farming" | A manipulation of their environment by the Paleolithic peoples of Australia that involved controlled burns to clear underbrush. | 84 | |
8023049380 | Hadiths | Traditions passed on about the sayings or actions of Muhammad and his immediate followers; hadiths rank second only to the Quran as a source of Islamic law. | 85 | |
8023049381 | Hajj | A pilgrimage to Mecca, made as an objective of the religious life of a Muslim. | 86 | |
8023049382 | Hijra | Muhammad's move to Medina. Start of the Islamic calendar (632 CE) | 87 | |
8023049383 | Heian | Capital city of Japan under the Yamato emperors, later called Kyoto; built in order to escape influence of Buddhist monks; patterned after ancient imperial centers of China; never fully populated | 88 | |
8023049385 | Ibn Battuta | (1304-1369) Morrocan Muslim scholar, the most widely traveled individual of his time. He wrote a detailed account of his visits to Islamic lands from China to Spain and the western Sudan. His writings gave a glimpse into the world of that time period. | 89 | |
8023049386 | Imams | Shi'a religious leaders who traced their descent to Ali's successors. | 90 | |
8023049388 | Indian Ocean Trading Network | Area where goods as far as from West Rome wre loaded into Chinese ships to be carried to East Asia. Included many luxury items, the links in this trading zone were critical to the expansion of Islam. | 91 | |
8023049389 | Jihad | A holy struggle or striving by a Muslim for a moral or spiritual or political goal | 92 | |
8023049390 | Jizya | Poll tax that non-Muslims had to pay when living within a Muslim empire | 93 | |
8023049391 | Jurchen | A nomadic people that established a state that included parts of northern China | 94 | |
8023049392 | Monsoons | Major winds in the Indian Ocean that blew into India for half the year, and blew away from India for the other half. Helped facilitate trade in the Indian Ocean. | 95 | |
8023049393 | Neo-Confucianism | Term that describes the resurgence of Confucianism and the influence of Confucian scholars during the T'ang Dynasty; a unification of Daoist or Buddhist metaphysics with Confucian pragmatism | 96 | |
8023049394 | Paleolithic persistence | The continuance of gathering and hunting societies in substantial areas of the world despite millennia of agricultural advance | 97 | |
8023049395 | Pastoralism | A type of agricultural activity based on nomadic animal husbandry or the raising of livestock to provide food, clothing, and shelter. | 98 | |
8023049397 | Sand Roads | The system of roads that led across the Sahara desert in Africa. Used for trade through Africa. | 99 | |
8023049398 | Sharia | Islamic law; a combination of the Quran and the Hadith. | 100 | |
8023049399 | Silk Roads | A system of ancient caravan routes across Central Asia, along which traders carried silk and other trade goods. | 101 | |
8023049400 | Song Dynasty economice revolution | A major economic quickening that took place in China under the Song dynasty (960-1279ce) 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. Lots of rice. | 102 | |
8023049401 | Srivijaya | A state based on the Indonesian island of Sumatra, between the seventh and eleventh centuries C.E. It amassed wealth and power by a combination of selective adaptation of Indian technologies and concepts, and control of trade routes. | 103 | |
8023049402 | Sufis | A mystical Muslim group that believed they could draw closer to God through prayer, fasting, and a simple life | 104 | |
8023049403 | Third-wave civilizations | Civilizations that emerged between 500 and 1500 C.E. and were typified by intensifying trade networks. | 105 | |
8023049404 | Tribute system | A system in which defeated peoples were forced to pay a tax in the form of goods and labor. This forced transfer of food, cloth, and other goods subsidized the development of large cities. An important component of the Chinese, Aztec, and Inca economies. | 106 | |
8023049405 | Trung Sisters | Leaders of one of the frequent peasant rebellions in Vietnam against Chinese rule; revolt broke out in 39 c.e.; demonstrates importance of Vietnamese women in indigenous society. | 107 | |
8023049406 | Turks | A member of the Turkish-speaking ethnic group in Turkey, or, formerly, in the Ottoman Empire | 108 | |
8023049409 | Indian Ocean Route | 109 | ||
8023049410 | Eurasian Trade Route | 110 | ||
8023049411 | Mediterranean Sea Trade Route | 111 | ||
8023049412 | Trans- Saharan Trade Route | 112 | ||
8023049413 | Silk Roads | 113 | ||
8023049414 | Novgorod (Russia) | IMPORTS- spices, silk, steel, horses, jewels EXPORTS- furs, honey, wax, wool, linens, slaves | 114 | |
8023049415 | Timbuktu (Africa) | IMPORTS- textiles, horses EXPORTS- slat, gold, slaves | 115 | |
8023049416 | Swahili City-States (Africa) | IMPORTS- porcelain, jewelry, glass, textiles EXPORTS- ivory, exotic animals, gold, slaves, cotton, glass beads | 116 | |
8023049417 | Hangzhou (China) | IMPORTS- cotton, wool, ivory, gold, silver EXPORTS- silk, rice, spices, porcelain, tea, paper | 117 | |
8023049418 | Calicut (India) | IMPORTS- horses, glassware, porcelain, Satin EXPORTS- spices, jewels, gold, cotton, silk | 118 | |
8023049419 | Baghdad (Arabia) | IMPORTS- textiles, slaves, porcelain EXPORTS- textiles, leather, paper, books | 119 | |
8023049420 | Melaka (Indonesia) | IMPORTS- porcelain, paper, textiles, sugar, salt EXPORTS- rice, pepper, spices, tin, aromatic woods | 120 | |
8023049421 | Venice (Italy) | IMPORTS- spices, silk, jewels EXPORTS- metals, salt, wheat, wines, oils | 121 | |
8023049422 | Bosporus, Dardenelles | ![]() | 122 | |
8023049423 | Hawaiian Islands | ![]() | 123 | |
8023049424 | Italian Peninsula | ![]() | 124 | |
8023049425 | Iberian Peninsula | ![]() | 125 | |
8023049426 | Java | ![]() | 126 | |
8023049427 | Madagascar | ![]() | 127 | |
8023049428 | Urals | ![]() | 128 | |
8023049429 | Afro-Eurasian Trade Routes | Silk Roads, etc. | ![]() | 129 |
8023049430 | Catholic Europe | Western Europe | ![]() | 130 |
8023049431 | Deccan | Indian Sultanates | ![]() | 131 |
8023049432 | Muslim World | Middle East/Western Asia | ![]() | 132 |
8023049433 | Orthodox Europe | Eastern Europe | ![]() | 133 |
8023049434 | Sudan | West Africa | ![]() | 134 |
8023049436 | Baghdad | ![]() | 135 | |
8023049438 | Cairo | ![]() | 136 | |
8023049440 | Constantinople | ![]() | 137 | |
8023049441 | Cordoba | ![]() | 138 | |
8023049442 | Guangzhou | ![]() | 139 | |
8023049443 | Hangzhou | ![]() | 140 | |
8023049444 | Heian | ![]() | 141 | |
8023049445 | Kilwa | ![]() | 142 | |
8023049447 | Mogadishu | ![]() | 143 | |
8023049448 | Novgorod | ![]() | 144 | |
8023049449 | Tenochtitlan | ![]() | 145 | |
8023049451 | Venice | ![]() | 146 | |
8023049454 | Caesaropapism | A political theory in which the head of state, notably the Emperor, is also the supreme head of the church. | 147 | |
8023049455 | Charlemagne | Charlemagne, also known as Charles the Great or Charles I, was King of the Franks, the Caroligian Empire. He staged an imperial revivial in Western Europe. | 148 | |
8023049458 | Dhimmis | A dhimmi refers to specific individuals living in Muslim lands, who were granted special status and safety in Islamic law in return for paying the capital tax. | 149 | |
8023049461 | Foot Binding | Foot binding was the custom of applying painfully tight binding to the feet of young girls to prevent further growth. | 150 | |
8023049462 | Ghana, Mali, Songhay | Three of the greatest western African trading states. | 151 | |
8023049463 | Guild | Associations of artisans or merchants who control the practice of their craft in a particular town. | 152 | |
8023049468 | Iconoclasm | The rejection or destruction of religious images as heretical; practiced by the Byzantine Empire. | 153 | |
8023049470 | Imams delete | A title of various Muslim leaders, especially of one succeeding Muhammad as leader of Shiite Islam. | 154 | |
8023049471 | Indulgence | A grant by the pope of remission of the temporal punishment in purgatory still due for sins after absolution. The unrestricted sale of indulgences by pardoners was a widespread abuse during the later Middle Ages. | 155 | |
8023049480 | Pure Land Buddhism | A tradition of Buddhist teachings that are focused on Amitābha Buddha, which was popular after the rise of the Sui Dynasty. | 156 | |
8023049491 | Ulama | A body of Muslim scholars recognized as having specialist knowledge of Islamic sacred law and theology. | 157 | |
8023049492 | Umma | The whole community of Muslims bound together by ties of religion. | 158 | |
8023049493 | Vikings | Norse seafarers, speaking the Old Norse language, who raided and traded from their Scandinavian homelands across wide areas of northern, central and eastern Europe, during the late 8th to late 11th centuries. | 159 | |
8023049496 | Islamic Caliphates | ![]() | 160 | |
8023049497 | Italian City States | ![]() | 161 | |
8023049498 | Japan | ![]() | 162 | |
8023049499 | Mongolian Empire | ![]() | 163 | |
8023049500 | Polynesia | ![]() | 164 | |
8023049501 | Swahili States | ![]() | 165 | |
8023049502 | Sui, Tang, Song Dynasties | ![]() | 166 | |
8023049503 | Toltecs | ![]() | 167 |
, AP World History: Period 3 Maps, Dates, Vocabulary, ..EVERYTHING! Flashcards
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