Hello, welcome to the ultimate study guide for the AP World History exam. Have fun, and good luck. This is basically a compilation of every notecard term in the unit.
13535680684 | Early Modern Period | the time period of 1450 - 1750 (it is called this because events occurring in this time directly shape regional/political units of todays world) | 0 | |
13535680685 | Catholic Reformation | the church's actions to revive their reputation and membership roles in 1545 (regained control of most of southern Europe, Austria, Poland, and much of Hungary) | 1 | |
13535680686 | Jesuits | a religious order converting people to return to the church (went to Asia + Americas in 1500's) | 2 | |
13535680687 | Thirty Years War | War within the Holy Roman Empire between German Protestants and their allies (Sweden, Denmark, France) and the emperor and his ally, Spain; ended in 1648 after great destruction with Treaty of Westphalia | 3 | |
13535680688 | English Civil War | This was the revolution as a result of whether the sovereignty would remain with the king or with the Parliament. Eventually, the kingship was abolished. | 4 | |
13535680689 | Scientific Revolution | a new vision of science developed during the renaissance in the 17th + 18th century | 5 | |
13535680690 | Scholasticism | Scholars based their inquiry on the principles established by the church, which sometimes resulted in clases between science and religion | 6 | |
13535680691 | Humanism | interest in the capabilities and accomplishments of individuals | 7 | |
13535680692 | Patrons | supporters of the arts, with payment and such, they found talented artists, often when they were young | 8 | |
13535680693 | Medici | was a powerful family of Florence in the mid to late 1400s that sponsored artists as a rich merchant family | ![]() | 9 |
13535680694 | Johan Gutenberg | a German goldsmith and printer, who created the printing press, in 1454 | ![]() | 10 |
13535680695 | Nicolo Machiavelli | a Renaissance writer who wrote, "The Prince" which was a famous philosophical view of the ideal political leader in the 16th century, in Italian city states | 11 | |
13535680696 | Protestant Reformation | a religious movement of the 16th century that began as an attempt to reform the Roman Catholic Church and resulted in the creation of Protestant churches | ![]() | 12 |
13535680697 | Indulgences | The Catholic Church's grants of salvation for money in the 1500s, and was part of the growing corruption of the church. | ![]() | 13 |
13535680698 | John Calvin | A protestant who established a variation of his beliefs on a stern and vengeful God. | ![]() | 14 |
13535680699 | Anglican Church | A form of Christianity established by Henry VIII that was not decided on the grounds of religious belief, but because the pope would not allow him to divorce his wife. | ![]() | 15 |
13535680700 | Martin Luther | a German monk who wrote the 95 theses in 1517, which were 95 propositions that criticized the Catholic Church | ![]() | 16 |
13535680702 | Deism | God built the universe and let it run. Clockmaker theory. | ![]() | 17 |
13535680705 | Renaissance | A heightened intellectual and artistic advance from about 1450s, that changed Europe forever | ![]() | 18 |
13535680706 | Adam Smith | He analyzed the natural law of supply and demand that governed economies in his classic book, "The Wealth of Nations" | 19 | |
13535680707 | New Monarchies | Monarchies that emerged that differed from their medieval predecessors in having greater centralization of power, more regional boundaries, and stronger representative institutions | 20 | |
13535680708 | Constitutional Monarchy | States where rulers shared power with a parliament, a body of representatives selected by the nobility and urban citizens | 21 | |
13535680709 | Gentry | the most powerful members of a society, and landowners that affected the style of the old aristocracy | ![]() | 22 |
13535680710 | Enlightenment | the emphasis on human abilities and accomplishments and the importance of independent and rational thought | 23 | |
13535680711 | John Locke | sought to understand the impact of the "laws of nature" on human liberties | 24 | |
13535680712 | Thomas Hobbes | English materialist and political philosopher who advocated absolute sovereignty as the only kind of government that could resolve problems caused by the selfishness of human beings (1588-1679) | 25 | |
13535680713 | Voltaire | wrote witty criticisms of the French monarchy and the Roman Catholic Church. He believed both institutions to be despotic and intolerant, limiting freedoms | 26 | |
13535680714 | Hapsburg | A powerful family with land claims all over Europe from Spain to Italy to the Netherlands to Hungary, as all the Holy Roman Emperor's had been Hapsburg since 1273 | ![]() | 27 |
13535680715 | Holy Roman Empire | a place/time where religion remained very important, and religious issues continued to fragment, and strong kings emerged in the 16th century | ![]() | 28 |
13535680716 | Reconquista | the retaking of land in Iberia by Spain and Portugal in a religious crusade to expand. This conquest advanced in waves over several centuries. | ![]() | 29 |
13535680718 | Divine Right | with God's blessing of the king's authority, the legitimacy of royalty across Europe was enhanced, and occurred under the reign of Louis XIV during the 17th and 18th centuries | ![]() | 30 |
13535680719 | Louis XIV | Understood the importance of a "theatre state", by building a magnificent palace at Versailles, and the apex of absolutism occurred under him | ![]() | 31 |
13535680721 | Capitalism | an economic system based on private ownership of property and business that provide goods to be bough and sold in a free manner | 32 | |
13535680722 | Mercantilism | the responsibility of government to promote the states economy to improve the revenues and limit imports to prevent profits from going to outsiders (allows industry to develop their own business) | ![]() | 33 |
13535680723 | Joint-stock Companies | these companies organized commercial ventures on a large scale by allowing investors to buy and sell shares. The new capitalist system largely replaced the old guild system of the middle ages. | 34 | |
13535680724 | Bourgeoise | middle class; factory owners who put long hours and much of their profits into their businesses | 35 | |
13535680725 | Balance of Power | states forming a temporary alliance to prevent the state form being too powerful. (Russia emerged as a major power in Europe after its mediterranean armies got Sweden in the GNW) | 36 | |
13535680726 | Versailles | a place where Louis' palace was built symbolizing the French's triumph over the traditional rights of the nobility and clergy. This kept nobles away from plotting rebellions, and 'distracted europe'. | ![]() | 37 |
13535680727 | Zheng He | led expiditions in Chinese junks across the atlantic ocean, with one goal being to assert Chinas power after the demise of the Yuan dynasty. | ![]() | 38 |
13535680728 | Henry the Navigator | the third son of the portuguese king; devoted his life to navigation, creating a navigation school, which became a magnet for the cartographers of the world | 39 | |
13535680729 | Caravel | a new ship developed by the portuguese, which was much smaller than the junk, but size allowed for exploration of shallower coastal areas | ![]() | 40 |
13535680730 | Vasco da Gama | set out to find the tip of Africa and connect it to the Indian Ocean, and discovered the fastest and safest ways to travel to Portugal | ![]() | 41 |
13535680731 | Christopher Columbus | A Genoese mariner who convinced Isabella and Ferdinand to sponsor a voyage across the Atlantic after he was turned down by the Genoese and Portugal. He believed he could reach east Asia by sailing West. | 42 | |
13535680732 | Treaty of Tordesillas | a treaty making Spain and Portugal land claim boundary. Portugal pushes its explorations to India and beyond. | ![]() | 43 |
13535680733 | Magellan | had a ship that was first to circumnavigate the glove, even though Magellan himself died in the phillipines | ![]() | 44 |
13535680734 | Conquistadors | went to search for gold and convert the natives to Christianity in the interior of Mexico | ![]() | 45 |
13535680735 | Cortes | sought to find the Aztec capital, and took over the Aztec land - with help of Amerindians, disease, and technology | 46 | |
13535680736 | Moctezuma | the Aztec emperor, who welcome the Spaniards at Tenochtitlan, seeing them as god-like. This was a mistake, as this allowed everyone to conquer him. | 47 | |
13535680737 | Francisco Pizzaro | led a group of soldiers to the Andes to find the Inca. The Incas were weak; Pizzaro conquered and got gold. | ![]() | 48 |
13535680738 | Ethnocentrism | the term that describes the tendency of human beings to view their own culture as superior | ![]() | 49 |
13535680739 | De La Casas | a conquistador priest who dedicated himself to protecting Amerindian rights | ![]() | 50 |
13535680740 | Franciscans | peoples who converted new world people to christianity, and took care of the poor. | 51 | |
13535680741 | Encomenderos | Spanish settlers who were in charge of the natives working on the encomiendas | 52 | |
13535680742 | Peninsularies | a fading social class in the new world, composed of the people born in the old world | 53 | |
13535680743 | Mestizos | composed of European and Amerindian children, part of the castas | ![]() | 54 |
13535680744 | Mulattoes | composed of European and African children, also part of the castas | ![]() | 55 |
13535680746 | Bartholomew Dias | set out to find the tip of Africa and connect beyond it to the Indian Ocean, as well as discovering the fastest and safest ways back to Portugal | ![]() | 56 |
13535680747 | Encomienda | the system in which conquistadors had forced natives to do work for them | ![]() | 57 |
13535680748 | Creoles | composed of those born in the new world; a quickly growing class | ![]() | 58 |
13535680749 | Protestant work ethic | a work ethic of the protestants that encouraged individual endeavors towards gaining wealth | 59 | |
13535680750 | Dutch East India Company | a joint stock company that specialized in the spice and luxury trade of the East Indies and quickly gained control of Dutch Trading in the Pacific | ![]() | 60 |
13535680752 | Indentured Servitude | a system which was usually ethnically the same as a free settler, but he or she was bound by an "indenture" (contract) to work for a person for four to seven years, in exchange for payment of the new world voyage | 61 | |
13535680753 | Columbian exchange | the global diffusion of crops, other plants, human beings, animals, and distance that took place after the European exploring voyages of the New World | ![]() | 62 |
13535680754 | Middle Passage | the first leg of the atlantic circuit, where ships took slaves to the new world | ![]() | 63 |
13535680755 | Manila Galleons | ships that traveled across the pacific ocean picking up and trading goods, like Asian luxury goods, and silver | ![]() | 64 |
13535680756 | Pilgrims | settled first in New England, and wanted to break away completely from the Church of England, sought to pursue spiritual ends in new lands | 65 | |
13535680757 | Puritans | wanted to purify Church of England, not break with it | 66 | |
13535680759 | African Diaspora | The spreading of Africans to many other parts of the world, especially the Americas. This is one of the most important demographic changes during 1450 - 1750 | ![]() | 67 |
13535680761 | Shah Abbas I | brought the Safavids to the peak of the power, slave infantrymen | ![]() | 68 |
13535680762 | Devshirme | a system that required Christian's of the area to contribute young boys to be the sultans slaves | ![]() | 69 |
13535680764 | Gunpowder Empires | an age of time where almost all powerful states used guns to build control/attack (included Russia, Ming and Qing, Japan, the Ottoman Empire, the Safavid and the Mughal empire) | ![]() | 70 |
13535680765 | Suleiman the Magnificent | ruled the Ottomans as the empire reached the height of its power. The Ottomans controlled much of the water traffic between the Black Sea and the Mediterranean sea | ![]() | 71 |
13535680766 | Janissaries | Checked the military power of the sultan, being an elite military group | ![]() | 72 |
13535680767 | Vizier | head of the imperial administration in the Ottoman empire who took care of the day to day work of the empire, aiding the Sultan | 73 | |
13535680768 | Safavid Empire | an empire that grew from a turkish nomadic group, that were Shi'ite muslims | ![]() | 74 |
13535680769 | Imams | heirs of Muhammad according to Shi'ite muslims | 75 | |
13535680770 | Babur | founded the Mughal empire, claimed to be a descendant of Timur and Genghis Khan (1526) | ![]() | 76 |
13535680771 | Akbar | the grandson of Babur, who brought the height of the Mughal empire. Also expanded his empire to control much of the subcontinent. | 77 | |
13535680772 | Taj Mahal | a building of beauty built as a tomb for Mumtaz Mahal's wife. | ![]() | 78 |
13535680773 | Sati | the ritual suicide of widows by jumping into their husbands pyres, representing the low status of women | 79 | |
13535680774 | Mughal Empire | an empire that that was a mixture of Mongol and Turkish peoples from Central Asia, which dominated India until the early 1700s | ![]() | 80 |
13535680775 | Sikhism | started by Nanuk, who became the first Guru of Sikhism. Sikhism was a following of people who formed a community free of caste divisions | ![]() | 81 |
13535680776 | Ivan IV | Ivan the Terrible (his nickname) reflected problems that tsars faced as power increased | ![]() | 82 |
13535680778 | Kabuki | a form of drama that consisted of several acts and separate skits with singing, dancing, and elaborate staging. (Actors became well known starts) | ![]() | 83 |
13535680780 | Boyars | The nobility of the Russia feudal based economic system. They also had military responsibilities to overlords, including the tsar | ![]() | 84 |
13535680782 | Peter the Great | The tsar of Russia in 1682 to 1724, who was most responsible for transforming Russia into a great world power. He understood how things worked globally, and expanded water ports | ![]() | 85 |
13535680783 | St. Petersburg | The "Window to the West" established by Peter the Great, which was a capital built on the shoes of the newly accessed Baltic Sea (a port for the new navy + allowed closer access to western countries) | ![]() | 86 |
13535680784 | Table of Ranks | A system by Peter the Great that allowed officials to attain gov't posistions based on merit, not on aristocracy status (reorganization of Bureaucracy) | 87 | |
13535680785 | Tsar | a derivative of "Caesar", establishing a "3rd rome". This was a major propaganda for Russia | 88 | |
13535680786 | Daimyo | Japanese territorial lords, who held local control of areas. Some Daimyos had more influence than others, but each maintained his own governments and had his own samurai | 89 | |
13535680787 | Tokugawa leyasu | Founder of the Tokugawa shogunate | ![]() | 90 |
13535680788 | Tokugawa Shogunate | a centralized government established in 1603 in present day Tokyo. Also called a tent government, which was temporary | 91 | |
13535680791 | Qing Dynasty | The name of the empire after the Ming; seized China from the emperors who could no longer defend their borders from the Manchu | 92 | |
13535680792 | Forbidden City | was the home of the emperor and his family, which expanded service people to 20,000; as the government returned to Beijing from Manjing | ![]() | 93 |
13535680793 | Kowtow | a special, often deep bow to the Chinese emperor. In the Qing dynasty, those who came to see the emperor had to do a special bow consisting of 3 separate kneeling | ![]() | 94 |