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AP World History Period 4 Flashcards

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6712275539AkbarThe most famous emperor of India's Mughal Empire (r. 1556-1605); his policies are noted for their efforts at religious tolerance and inclusion.0
6712275540Columbian ExchangeThe massive transatlantic interaction and exchange between the Americas and Afro-Eurasia that began in the period of European exploration and colonization.1
6712275541ConquistadoresSpanish conquerors of the Native American lands, most notably the Aztec and Inca empires.2
6712275542Constantinople, 1453The capital and almost the only outpost left of the Byzantine Empire, fell to the army of the Ottoman sultan Mehmed II "the Conqueror," an event that marked the end of Christian Byzantium.3
6712275543CreolesSpaniards born in the Americas.4
6712275544DevshirmeThe tribute of boy children that the Ottoman Turks levied from their Christian subjects in the Balkans; the Ottomans raised the boys for service in the civil administration or in the elite Janissary infantry corps.5
6712275545Fixed WindsThe prevailing winds of the Atlantic, which blow steadily in the same direction; an understanding of these winds made European exploration and colonization of the Americas possible.6
6712275546The Great DyingTerm used to describe the devastating demographic impact of European-borne epidemic diseases on the Americas.7
6712275547JizyaSpecial tax levied on non-Muslims in Islamic states; the Mughal Empire was notable for abolishing it for a time.8
6712275548MercantilismAn economic theory that argues that governments best serve their states' economic interests by encouraging exports and accumulating bullion.9
6712275549MestizoLiterally, "mixed"; a term used to describe the mixed-race population of Spanish colonial societies in the Americas.10
6712275550Mughal EmpireOne of the most successful empires of India, a state founded by Muslim Turks who invaded India in 1526; their rule was noted for efforts to create partnerships between Hindus and Muslims.11
6712275551MulattoTerm commonly used for people of mixed African and European blood.12
6712275552Ottoman EmpireMajor Islamic state centered on Anatolia that came to include the Balkans, the Near East, and much of North Africa.13
6712275553PeninsulareIn the Spanish colonies of Latin America, the term used to refer to people who had been born in Spain; they claimed superiority over Spaniards born in the Americas.14
6712275554Plantation complexAgricultural system based on African slavery that was used in Brazil, the Caribbean, and the southern colonies of North America.15
6712275555Qing DynastyRuling dynasty of China from 1644 to 1912; these rulers were originally from Manchuria, which had conquered China.16
6712275557SiberiaRussia's great frontier region, a vast territory of what is now central and eastern Russia, most of it unsuited to agriculture but rich in mineral resources and fur-bearing animals.17
6712275559African diasporaName given to the spread of African peoples across the Atlantic via the slave trade.18
6712275560Banda IslandsInfamous case of the Dutch forcibly taking control of the spice trade; nearly the entire population of these nutmeg-producing islands was killed or enslaved and then replaced with Dutch planters.19
6712275561BeninWest African kingdom (in what is now Nigeria) whose strong kings sharply limited engagement with the slave trade.20
6712275562British/Dutch East India companiesPrivate trading companies chartered by the governments of England and the Netherlands around 1600; they were given monopolies on Indian Ocean trade, including the right to make war and to rule conquered peoples.21
6712275565DaimyoFeudal lords of Japan who ruled with virtual independence thanks to their bands of samurai warriors.22
6712275567Indian Ocean Commercial NetworkThe massive, interconnected web of commerce in premodern times between the lands that bordered on the Indian Ocean (including East Africa, India, and Southeast Asia); the network was badly disrupted by Portuguese intrusion beginning around 1500.23
6712275568Little Ice AgeA period of cooling temperatures and harsh winters that lasted for much of the early modern era.24
6712275569Ferdinand MagellanPortuguese mariner who commanded the first European (Spanish) fleet to circumnavigate the globe (1519-1521).25
6712275571Middle PassageName commonly given to the journey across the Atlantic undertaken by African slaves being shipped to the Americas.26
6712275573PotosiCity that developed high in the Andes (in present-day Bolivia) at the site of the world's largest silver mine and that became the largest city in the Americas, with a population of some 160,000 in the 1570s.27
6712275574SamuraiThe warrior elite of medieval Japan.28
6712275575ShogunIn Japan, a supreme military commander.29
6712275576Silver drainTerm often used, along with "specie drain," to describe the siphoning of money from Europe to pay for the luxury products of the East, a process exacerbated by the fact that Europe had few trade goods that were desirable in Eastern markets; eventually, the bulk of the world's silver supply made its way to China.30
6712275578Spanish PhillipinesAn archipelago of Pacific islands colonized by Spain in a relatively bloodless process that extended for the century or so after 1565, a process accompanied by a major effort at evangelization31
6712275579Tokugawa ShogunateMilitary rulers of Japan who successfully unified Japan politically by the early seventeenth century and established a "closed door" policy toward European encroachments.32
6712275580Trading post empireForm of imperial dominance based on control of trade rather than on control of subject peoples.33
6712275581Catholic Counter-ReformationAn internal reform of the Catholic Church in the sixteenth century; thanks especially to the work of the Council of Trent (1545-1563), Catholic leaders clarified doctrine, corrected abuses and corruption, and put a new emphasis on education and accountability.34
6712275583CopernicusPolish mathematician and astronomer (1473-1543) who was the first to argue for the existence of a heliocentric cosmos.35
6712275584Council of TrentThe main instrument of the Catholic Counter-Reformation (1545-1563), at which the Catholic Church clarified doctrine and corrected abuses.36
6712275585Charles DarwinHighly influential English biologist (1809-1882) whose theory of natural selection continues to be seen by many as a threat to revealed religious truth.37
6712275586DeismBelief in a divine being who created the cosmos but who does not intervene directly in human affairs.38
6712275587Edict of Nantes1598 edict issued by French king Henry IV that granted considerable religious toleration to French Protestants and ended the French Wars of Religion.39
6712275588European EnlightenmentEuropean intellectual movement of the eighteenth century that applied the lessons of the Scientific Revolution to human affairs and was noted for its commitment to open mindedness and inquiry and the belief that knowledge could transform human society.40
6712275589GalileoItalian astronomer (1564-1642) who further developed the ideas of Copernicus and whose work was eventually suppressed by the Catholic Church.41
6712275591HuguenotsThe Protestant minority in France.42
6712275592Jesuits in ChinaSeries of Jesuit missionaries in the late sixteenth and seventeenth centuries who, inspired by the work of Matteo Ricci, made extraordinary efforts to understand and become a part of Chinese culture in their efforts to convert the Chinese elite, although with limited success43
6712275594Martin LutherGerman priest and theologian (1483-1546) who inaugurated the Protestant Reformation movement in Europe.44
6712275595Isaac NewtonEnglish natural scientist (1643-1727) whose formulation of the laws of motion and mechanics is regarded as the culmination of the Scientific Revolution.45
6712275596Ninety-Five ThesesList of debating points about the abuses of the Church, posted by Martin Luther on the door of a church in Wittenberg in 1517; the Church's strong reaction eventually drove Luther to separate from Catholic Christianity.46
6712275597Protestant ReformationMassive schism within Christianity that had its formal beginning in 1517 with the German priest Martin Luther; while the leaders of the movement claimed that they sought to "reform" a Church that had fallen from biblical practice, in reality the movement was radically innovative in its challenge to Church authority and its endorsement of salvation "by faith alone."47
6712275598Matteo RicciThe most famous Jesuit missionary in China in the early modern period; active in China from 1582 to 1610.48
6712275599Scientific RevolutionGreat European intellectual and cultural transformation that was based on the principles of the scientific method.49
6712275600SikhismReligious tradition of northern India founded by Guru Nanak ca. 1500; combines elements of Hinduism and Islam and proclaims the brotherhood of all humans and the equality of men and women.50
6712275601Society of JesusAlso called "Jesuits," this Catholic religious society was founded to encourage the renewal of Catholicism through education and preaching; it soon became a leading Catholic missionary order beyond the borders of Europe.51
6712275602Thirty Year's WarHighly destructive war (1618-1648) that eventually included most of Europe; fought for the most part between Protestants and Catholics, the conflict ended with the Peace of Westphalia (1648).52
6712275603VoltairePen name of the French philosopher François-Marie Arouet (1694-1778), whose work is often taken as a model of Enlightenment questioning of traditional values and attitudes; noted for his deism and his criticism of traditional religion.53
6712275604Wahhabi IslamMajor Islamic movement led by the Muslim theologian Abd al-Wahhab (1703-1792) that advocated an austere lifestyle and strict adherence to the sharia (Islamic law).54

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