48943878 | Asian Sea Trading Network | Prior to intervention of Europeans, consisted of three zones: Arab zone based on glass, carpets, and tapestries; India based on cotton textiles; China based on paper, porcelain, and silks | 0 | |
48943879 | Ormuz | Portuguese factory or fortified trade town located at the southern end of the Persian Gulf; site for forcible entry into the Asian sea trade network | 1 | |
48943880 | Goa | a state of southwestern India | 2 | |
48943881 | Batavia | Fort established in 1619 as headquarters of Dutch East India Company operations in INdonesia; today the city of Jakarta. | 3 | |
48943882 | Dutch Trading Empire | The dutch system extending into Asia with fortified towns and factories, warships on patrol, and monoply control on a limited number of products. | 4 | |
48943883 | Mindanao | the second largest island of the Philippines at the southern end of the archipelago | 5 | |
48943884 | Francis Xavier | This was a man who helped Ignatius of Loyola to start the Jesuits. He also was famous for his number of missionaries he went on to promote Christianity | 6 | |
48943885 | Robert di Nobili | Italian Jesuit missionary; worked in India during the early 1600s; introduced strategy to convert elites at first; strategy later widely adapted by Jesuits in various parts of Asia; mission eventually failed. | 7 | |
48943886 | Macao | a Portuguese province on the south coast of China and two islands in the South China Sea | 8 | |
48943887 | Canton | a small administrative division of a country | 9 | |
48943888 | Matteo Ricci | An Italian Jesuit who by his knowledge of Astronomy and science was accepted as a missionary of China | 10 | |
48943889 | Adam Schall | Along with Mattea Ricci, Jesuit scholar in court of Ming empeors; skilled scientist; worn few converts ot Christianity. | 11 | |
48943890 | Chongzhen | Last of the Ming Emperors; comited suicide in 1644 in the face of Jurchen capture of the Forbidden City of Bejing. | 12 | |
48943891 | Nobunaga | Japanese daimyo; 1st to make extensive use of firearms; in 1573 deposed of the last of the Ashikaga shogunate;unified much of central Honshu under his command. | 13 | |
48943892 | Toyotomi Hideyoshi | The predecessor of Tokugawa; succeeded Nobunaga Oda and laid the foundations of the Tokugawa shogunate | 14 | |
48943893 | Tokugawa Ieyasu | Vassal of Toyotomi Hideyoshi; succeeded him as most powerful military figure in Japan; granted title of shogun in 1603 and established Tokugawa Shogunate; established political unity in Japan | 15 | |
48943894 | Edo | Tokugawa capital city; modern-day Tokyo; center of the Tokugawa shogunate. | 16 | |
48943895 | Deshima | Island in Nagasaki Bay; only port open to non-Japanese after closure of the islands in the 1640s; only Chinese and Dutch ships were permitted to enter. | 17 | |
48943896 | School of National Learning | New Ideology that laid emphasis on Japan's unique historical experience and the revival of indigenous culture at the expense of Chinese imporst such as Confuciansim; typical of Japan in the 18th century. | 18 |
AP World History vocab ch. 22 Flashcards
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