AP Notes, Outlines, Study Guides, Vocabulary, Practice Exams and more!

World History AP 11-15 Flashcards

Stearns textbook, page # are wrong

Terms : Hide Images
115202874bedouinNomadic pastoralists of the Arabian peninsula; culture based on camel and goat nomadism; early converts to Islam. (p. 279)0
115202875shaykhsLeaders of tribes and clans within bedouin society; usually men with large herds, several wives, and many children. (p. 281)1
115202876MeccaCity located in mountainous region along Red Sea in Arabian peninsula; founded by Umayyad clan of Quraysh; site of Ka'ba; original home of Muhammad; location of chief religious pilgrimage point in Islam. (p. 281)2
115202877Ka'baMost revered religious shrine in pre-Islamic Arabia; located in Mecca; focus of obligatory annual truce among bedouin tribes; later incorporated as important shrine in Islam. (p. 281)3
115202878MedinaAlso known as Yathrib; town located northeast of Mecca; grew date palms whose fruit was sold to bedouins; became refuge for Muhammad following flight from Mecca (hijra). (p. 281)4
115202879QurayshTribe of bedouins that controlled Mecca. (p. 281)5
115202880UmayyadClan of Quraysh that dominated politics and commercial economy of Mecca; clan later able to establish dynasty as rulers of Islam. (p. 281)6
115202881MuhammadProphet of Islam; born c. 570 to Banu Hashim clan of Quraysh tribe in Mecca; raised by father's family; received revelations from Allah in 610 c.e. and thereafter; died in 632. (p. 277)7
115202882AliCousin and son-in-law of Muhammad; one of orthodox caliphs; focus for Shi'is. (p. 285)8
115202883Khadijah(595-619) First wife of the prophet Muhammad who had worked for her as a trader (p.243)9
115202884Qur'anRecitations of revelations received by Muhammad; holy book of Islam. (p. 277)10
115202885ummaCommunity of the faithful within Islam; transcended old tribal boundaries to create degree of political unity. (p. 286)11
115202886zakatTax for charity; obligatory for all Muslims. (p. 286)12
115202887five pillarsThe obligatory religious duties of all Muslims; confession of faith, prayer, fasting during Ramadan, zakat, and hajj. (p. 286)13
115202888hajjPilgrimage to the holy city of Mecca to worship at the Ka'ba. (p. 287)14
115202889RamadanIslamic month of religious observance requiring fasting from dawn to sunset. (p. 245)15
115202890Abu BakrOne of Muhammad's earliest converts; succeeded Muhammad as first caliph of Islamic community. (p. 288)16
115202891caliphThe political and religious successor to Muhammad. (p. 288)17
115202892Ridda WarsWars that followed Muhammad's death in 632; resulted in defeat of rival prophets and some of larger clans; restored unity of Islam. (p. 288)18
115202893CoptsChristian sect of Egypt; tended to support Islamic invasions of this area in preference to Byzantine rule. (p. 335)19
115202894jihadIslamic holy war. (p. 288)20
115202895NestoriansA Christian sect found in Asia; tended to support Islamic invasions of this area in preference to Byzantine rule; cut off from Europe by Muslim invasions. (p. 488)21
115202896Battle of SiffinFought in 657 between forces of Ali and Umayyads; settled by negotiation that led to fragmentation of Ali's party. (p. 290)22
115202897DamascusCapital of Umayyad caliphate. (p. 290)23
115202898KarbalaSite of defeat and death of Husayn, son of Ali; marked beginning of Shi'i resistance to Umayyad caliphate. (p. 290)24
115202899Mu'awiyaLeader of Umayyad clan; first Umayyad caliph following civil war with Ali. (p. 290)25
115202900Shi'aAlso known as Shi'ites. Political and theological division within Islam; followers of Ali. (p. 290)26
115202901SunnisPolitical and theological division within Islam; followers of the Umayyads. (p. 290)27
115202902UthmanThird caliph and member of Umayyad clan; murdered by mutinous warriors returning from Egypt; death set off civil war in Islam between followers of Ali and the Umayyad clan. (p. 290)28
115202903dhimmiLiterally "people of the book"; applied as inclusive term to Jews and Christians in Islamic territories; later extended to Zoroastrians and even Hindus. (p. 291)29
115202904hadithsTraditions of the prophet Muhammad. (p. 292)30
115202905jizyaHead tax paid by all nonbelievers in Islamic territories. (p. 291)31
115202906mawaliNon-Arab converts to Islam. (p. 291)32
115202907AbbasidDynasty that succeeded the Umayyads as caliphs within Islam; came to power in 750 c.e. (p. 295)33
115202908Battle of River ZabVictory of Abbasids over Umayyads; resulted in conquest of Syria and capture of Umayyad capital. (p. 294)34
115202909BaghdadCapital of Abbasid dynasty located in Iraq near ancient Persian capital of Ctesiphon. (p. 295)35
115202910wazirChief administrative official under the Abbasid caliphate; initially recruited from Persian provinces of empire. (p. 295)36
115202911dhowsArab sailing vessels with triangular or lateen sails; strongly influenced European ship design. (p. 297)37
115202912ayanThe wealthy landed elite that emerged in the early decades of Abbasid rule. (p. 298)38
115202913lateenTriangular sails attached to the masts of dhows by long booms or yard arms, which extended diagonally high across the fore and aft of the ship (p.260)39
115202914al-MahdiThird of the Abbasid caliphs; attempted but failed to reconcile moderates among Shi'is to Abbasid dynasty; failed to resolve problem of succession. (p. 306)40
115202915Harun al-RashidMost famous of Abbasid caliphs; renowned for sumptuous and costly living; dependent on Persian advisors early in reign; death led to civil wars over succession. (p. 307)41
115202916BuyidsRegional splinter dynasty of the mid-10th century; invaded and captured Baghdad; ruled Abbasid Empire under name of sultan; retained Abbasids as figureheads. (p. 310)42
115202917CrusadesSeries of military adventures initially launched by western Christians to free Holy Land from Muslims; temporarily succeeded in capturing Jerusalem and establishing Christian kingdoms; later used for other purposes such as commercial wars and extermination of heresy. (pp. 310, 382)43
115202918SaladinMuslim leader in the last decades of the 12th century; reconquered most of the crusader outposts for Islam. (p. 310)44
115202919Seljuk TurksNomadic invaders from central Asia via Persia; staunch Sunnis; ruled in name of Abbasid caliphs from mid-11th century. (p. 310)45
115202920Ibn KhaldunA Muslim historian; developed concept that dynasties of nomadic conquerors had a cycle of three generations-strong, weak, dissolute. (pp. 95, 311)46
115202921Shah-NamaWritten by Firdawsi in late 10th and early 11th centuries; relates history of Persia from creation to the Islamic conquests. (p. 313)47
115202922ulamaOrthodox religious scholars within Islam; pressed for a more conservative and restrictive theology; increasingly opposed to non-Islamic ideas and scientific thinking. (p. 315)48
115202923al-GhazaliBrilliant Islamic theologian; struggled to fuse Greek and Quranic traditions; not entirely accepted by ulama. (p. 315)49
115202924Chinggis KhanBorn in 1170s in decades following death of Kabul Khan; elected khagan of all Mongol tribes in 1206; responsible for conquest of northern kingdoms of China, territories as far west as the Abbasid regions; died in 1227, prior to conquest of most of Islamic world. (pp. 95, 317)50
115202925HuleguRuler of the Ilkhan khanate; grandson of Chinggis Khan; responsible for capture and destruction of Baghdad. (p. 488)51
115202926MamluksMuslim slave warriors; established a dynasty in Egypt; defeated the Mongols at Ain Jalut in 1260 and halted Mongol advance. (pp. 317, 488)52
115202927MongolsCentral Asian nomadic peoples; smashed Turko-Persian kingdoms; captured Baghdad in 1258 and killed last Abbasid caliph. (p. 317)53
115202928SufisMystics within Islam; responsible for expansion of Islam to southeastern Asia. (p. 315)54
115202929Mahmud of GhazniThird ruler of dynasty; led invasions of northern India; credited with sacking one of wealthiest of Hindu temples in northern India; gave Muslims reputation for intolerance and aggression. (p. 321)55
115202930Muhammad ibn QasimArab general; conquered Sind in India; declared the region and the Indus valley to be part of Umayyad Empire. (p. 320)56
115202931Muhammad of GhurMilitary commander of Persian extraction who ruled small mountain kingdom in Afghanistan; began process of conquest to establish Muslim political control of northern India; brought much of Indus valley, Sind, and northwestern India under his control. (p. 322)57
115202932Qutb-ud-din AibakLieutenant of Muhammad of Ghur; established kingdom in India with capital at Delphi; proclaimed himself Sultan of India. (p. 322)58
115202933bhaktic cultsGroups dedicated to gods and goddesses; stressed the importance of strong emotional bonds between devotees and the god or goddess who was the object of their veneration; most widely worshipped gods were Shiva and Vishnu. (p. 324)59
115202934KabirMuslim Mystic during 15th century; played down the importance of ritual differences between Hinduism and Islam. (p. 324)60
115202935Mira Bai(1498-1547) Celebrated Hindu writer of religious poetry; reflected openness of bhaktic cults to women (p.276)61
115202936ShrivijayaTrading empire centered on Malacca Straits between Malaya and Sumatra; controlled trade of empire; Buddhist government resistant to Muslim missionaries; fall opened up southeastern Asia to Muslim conversion. (p. 325)62
115202937DemakMost powerful of the trading states on north coast of Java; converted to Islam and served as point of dissemination to other ports. (p. 326)63
115202938MalaccaPortuguese factory or fortified trade town located on the tip of the Malayan peninsula; traditionally a center for trade among the southeastern Asian islands. (p. 326)64
115202939stateless societiesAfrican societies organized around kinship or other forms of obligation and lacking the concentration of political power and authority associated with states. (p. 333)65
115202940AlmohadisA reformist movement among the Islamic Berbers of northern Africa; later than the Almoravids; penetrated into sub-Sahara Africa. (p. 334)66
115202941IfriqiyaThe Arabic term for eastern North Africa. (p. 334)67
115202942MaghribThe Arabic word for western North Africa. (p. 334)68
115202943griotsProfessional oral historians who served as keepers of traditions and advisors to kings within the Mali Empire. (p. 338)69
115202944Ibn BatutaArabic traveler who described African societies and cultures in his travel records. (p. 337)70
115202945juulaMalinke merchants; formed small partnerships to carry out trade throughout Mali Empire; eventually spread throughout much of West Africa. (p. 337)71
115202946SundiataThe "Lion Prince"; a member of the Keita clan; created a unified state that became the Mali Empire; died about 1260. (p. 337)72
115202947Hausa statesCombined Muslim and pagan traditions; emerged following the demise of Songhay Empire among the Hausa peoples of northern Nigeria, based on cities such as Kano. (p. 340)73
115202948SonghaySuccessor state to Mali; dominated middle reaches of Niger valley; formed as independent kingdom under a Berber dynasty; capital at Gao; reached imperial status under Sunni Ali (1464-1492). (p. 340)74
115202949TimbuktuPort city of Mali; located just off the flood plain on the great bend in the Niger River; population of 50,000; contained a library and university. (p. 339)75
115202950Muhammad the GreatExtended the boundaries of the Songhay Empire; Islamic ruler of the mid-16th century. (p. 340)76
115202951ShariaIslamic law; defined among other things the patrilineal nature of Islamic inheritance. (p. 341)77
115202952ZanjArabic term for the East African coast. (pp. 298)78
115202953demographyThe study of population. (p. 344)79
115202954Demographic TransitionThe change from a high birth rate and high infant mortality to low rates, as in western Europe and U.S. in late 19th century. (p. 345)80
115202955BeninA large and powerful kingdom of West Africa near the coast (in present-day Nigeria) which came into contact with the Portuguese in 1485 but remained relatively free of European influence; remained an important commercial and political entity until the 19th century. (p. 347)81
115202956KongoKingdom, based on agriculture, formed on lower Congo River by late 15th century; capital at Mbanza Kongo; ruled by hereditary monarchy. (p. 348)82
115202957Great ZimbabweBantu confederation of Shona-speaking peoples located between Zambezi and Limpopo rivers; developed after 9th century; featured royal courts built of stone; created centralized state by 15th century; king took title of Mwene Mutapa. (p. 342)83
115202958BelisariusOne of Justinian's most important military commanders during period of reconquest of western Europe; commanded in North Africa and in Italy. (p. 356)84
115202959Hagia SophiaNew church constructed in Constantinople during reign of Justinian. (p. 355)85
115202960BulgariaSlavic kingdom established in northern portions of Balkan peninsula; constant source of pressure on Byzantine Empire; defeated by Emperor Basil II in 1014. (p. 357)86
115202961Greek fireByzantine weapon consisting of mixture of chemicals that ignited when exposed to water; utilized to drive back the Arab fleets that attacked Constantinople. (p. 357)87
115202962CyrilAlong with Methodius, missionary sent by Byzantine government to eastern Europe and the Balkans; converted southern Russia and Balkans to Orthodox Christianity; responsible for creation of written script for Slavic known as Cyrillic. (p. 364)88
115202963MethodiusAlong with Cyril, missionary sent by Byzantine government to eastern Europe and the Balkans; converted southern Russia and Balkans to Orthodox Christianity; responsible for creation of written script for Slavic known as Cyrillic. (p. 364)89
115202964KievTrade city in southern Russia established by Scandinavian traders in 9th century; became focal point for kingdom of Russia that flourished to 12th century. (p. 366)90
115202965RurikLegendary Scandinavian, regarded as founder of the first kingdom of Russia based in Kiev in 855 c.e. (p. 366)91
115202966Russian OrthodoxyRussian form of Christianity imported from Byzantine Empire and combined with local religion; king characteristically controlled major appointments. (p. 366)92
115202967Vladimir IRuler of Russian kingdom of Kiev from 980 to 1015; converted kingdom to Christianity. (p. 366)93
115202968YaroslavLast of great Kievan monarchs; issued legal codification based on formal codes developed in Byzantium. (p. 367)94
115202969iconoclasmReligious controversy within the Byzantine Empire in the 8th century; emperor attempted to suppress veneration of icons; literally "breaking of images"; after long struggle, icon veneration was restored. (p. 361)95
115202970iconsImages of religious figures that became objects of veneration within Christianity of the Byzantine Empire; particularly prevalent in Eastern monasticism. (p. 361)96
115202971boyarsRussian aristocrats; possessed less political power than did their counterparts in western Europe. (p. 714)97
115202972TatarsMongols; captured Russian cities and largely destroyed Kievan state in 1236; left Russian Orthodoxy and aristocracy intact. (p. 368)98
115202973Middle AgesThe period in western European history from the decline and fall of the Roman Empire until the 15th century. (p. 396)99
115202974manorialismSystem that described economic and political relations between landlords and their peasant laborers during the Middle Ages; involved a hierarchy of reciprocal obligations that exchanged labor or rents for access to land. (p. 376)100
115202975moldboardHeavy plow introduced in northern Europe during the Middle Ages; permitted deeper cultivation of heavier soils; a technological innovation of the medieval agricultural system. (p. 376)101
115202976serfsPeasant agricultural laborers within the manorial system of the Middle Ages. (p. 376)102
115202977three-field systemSystem of agricultural cultivation by 9th century in western Europe; included one-third in spring grains, one-third fallow. (p. 376)103
115202978VikingsSeagoing Scandinavian raiders from Sweden, Denmark and Norway that disrupted coastal areas of western Europe from the 8th to the 11th centuries. (p. 376)104
115202979CarolingiansRoyal house of Franks after 8th century until their replacement in 10th century. (p. 377)105
115202980ClovisEarly Frankish king; converted Franks to Christianity c. 496; allowed establishment of Frankish kingdom. (p. 377)106
115202981MartelCharles,Carolingian monarch of Franks; responsible for defeating Muslims in battle of Tours in 732; ended Muslim threat to western Europe. (p. 377)107
115202982CharlemagneCharles the Great; Carolingian monarch who established substantial empire in France and Germany c. 800. (p. 377)108
115202983Holy Roman emperorsEmperors in northern Italy and Germany following split of Charlemagne's empire; claimed title of emperor c. 10th century; failed to develop centralized monarchy in Germany. (p. 378)109
115202984vassalsMembers of the military elite in the Middle Ages who received land or a benefice from a lord in return for military service and loyalty. (p. 380)110
115202985William the ConquerorInvaded England from Normandy in 1066; extended tight feudal system to England; established administrative system based on sheriffs; established centralized monarchy. (p. 381)111
115202986Hundred Years' WarConflict between England and France from 1337 to 1453; fought over lands England possessed in France and feudal rights versus the emerging claims of national states. (p. 382)112
115202987Magna CartaGreat Charter issued by King John of England in 1215; confirmed feudal rights against monarchical claims; represented principle of mutual limits and obligations between rulers and feudal aristocracy. (p. 381)113
115202988parliamentsBodies representing privileged groups; institutionalized feudal principle that rulers should consult with their vassals; found in England, Spain, Germany, and France. (p. 381)114
115202989three estatesTypical social organization of Middle Ages after 10th century; included military nobility, clergy, and ordinary people. (p. 381)115
115202990Urban IICalled First Crusade in 1095; appealed to Christians to mount military assault to free the Holy Land from the Muslims. (p. 382)116
115202991Gregory VIIPope during the 11th century who attempted to free Church from interference of feudal lords; quarreled with Holy Roman Emperor Henry IV over practice of lay investiture. (p. 383)117
115202992investiturePractice of state appointment of bishops; Pope Gregory VII attempted to ban the practice of lay investiture, leading to war with Holy Roman Emperor Henry IV. (p. 383)118
115202993AbelardPeter,Author of Yes and No; university scholar who applied logic to problems of theology; demonstrated logical contradictions within established doctrine. (p. 385)119
115202994AquinasThomas,Creator of one of the great syntheses of medieval learning; taught at University of Paris; author of several Summas; believed that through reason it was possible to know much about natural order, moral law, and nature of God. (p. 386)120
115202995Bernard of Clairvaux(1090-1153) Emphasized role of faith in prefernce to logic; stressed importance of mystical union with God; successfully challenged Abelard and had hm driven from the universities (p.332)121
115202996scholasticismDominant medieval philosophical approach; so-called because of its base in the schools or universities; based on use of logic to resolve theological problems. (p. 386)122
115202997GothicAn architectural style developed during the Middle Ages in western Europe; featured pointed arches and flying buttresses as external supports on main walls. (p. 387)123
115202998Hanseatic LeagueAn organization of cities in northern Germany for the purpose of establishing a commercial alliance. (p.390)124
115202999guildsSworn associations of people in the same business or trade in a single city; stressed security and mutual control; limited membership, regulated apprenticeship, guaranteed good workmanship; often established franchise within cities. (p. 391)125
115203000Black DeathPlague that struck Europe in 14th century; significantly reduced Europe's population; affected social structure. (p. 395)126

Need Help?

We hope your visit has been a productive one. If you're having any problems, or would like to give some feedback, we'd love to hear from you.

For general help, questions, and suggestions, try our dedicated support forums.

If you need to contact the Course-Notes.Org web experience team, please use our contact form.

Need Notes?

While we strive to provide the most comprehensive notes for as many high school textbooks as possible, there are certainly going to be some that we miss. Drop us a note and let us know which textbooks you need. Be sure to include which edition of the textbook you are using! If we see enough demand, we'll do whatever we can to get those notes up on the site for you!