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14729725046Persian EmpireMesopotamian empire that conquered the existing Median, Lydian, and Babylonian empires, as well as Egypt and many others. Also known as the Achaemenid Empire.0
14729725047PersepolisA complex of palaces, reception halls, and treasury buildings erected by the Persian kings Darius I and Xerxes in the Persian homelan1
14729725048Cyrus the GreatA remarkable leader who managed to reunite he Persian Empire in a powerful kingdom. Under Cyrus, Persia began building an empire larger than any yet seen in the world2
14729725049religious tolerationpolicy of allowing people to worship as they choose3
14729725050Satrapiesthe 23 states into which Darius divided the Persian Empire4
14729725051Royal RoadA road in the Persian Empire, stretching over 1,600 miles from Susa in Persia to Sardis in Anatolia.5
14729725052ZoroastrianismOne of the first monotheistic religions, particularly one with a wide following. It was central to the political and religious culture of ancient Persia.6
14729725053Ahura MazdaMain god of Zoroastrianism who represented truth and goodness and was perceived to be in an eternal struggle with the malign spirit Angra Mainyu.7
14729725054Classical GreeceThis term refers to the time period of Greek History from 500 to 338 B.C. In 338 B.C. Greece was conquered by King Philip II, who was a Macedonian King. A time when Greek culture and ideas flourished.8
14729725055Democracy and Citizenship classical GreeceAll free , adult Greek military males who has completed military service9
14729725056Athens and SpartaTwo city-states (polis) of ancient Greece.10
14729725057AthensWomen had no political rights, education; restricted to home . Slaves were 1/3 of population11
14729725058SpartaWomen were revered from having children, women governed Sparta while men were at war12
14729725059Helotsenslaved people in ancient Sparta13
14729725060SocratesGreek philosopher; socratic method--questioning; sentenced to death for corrupting Athens youth (470-399 BCE14
14729725061Persian WarsIonian cities revolted against Persia , Persia invaded twice , 499-449 BC15
14729725062Peloponnesian WarSparta fought against growing Athenian empire, Sparta and it's allies defeated Athens and weakens Greece16
14729725063Alexander the GreatMacedonian king , Between 334 and 323 B.C.E. he conquered the Persian Empire, reached the Indus Valley, founded many Greek-style cities, and spread Greek culture across the Middle East., never lost a battle17
14729725064Hellenizationthe spread of Greek culture—language, ideas, art, architecture and political and cultural structures—in the Mediterranean world and the Near East.18
14729725065Law (Judaism)Moses led Jews out of Egypt , received the law from god , law provided rituals and sacrifices to atone for sins19
14729725066Messiah (Judaism)Jews are awaiting their Messiah (savior)20
14729725067Jesus of NazarethBorn to a poor Jewish family , travelled throughout Palestine , claimed to be the Messiah and son of god , executed by persecution as a political revel by the romans21
14729725068Gospelmeans "Good News" written to preserve the experiences of Jesus Christ22
14729725069St. Paul of TarsusHe spreaded the Christian faith on at least 3 separate journeys through Greece , Anatolia, and time , traveling an estimated 10,000 miles23
14729725070martryrSomeone who is killed because of their faith24
14729725071Appeal and spread of ChristianitySpread quickly , 10% of romans were Christian by 300 CE25
14729725072ConstantineEmperor of Rome who adopted the Christian faith and stopped the persecution of Christians (280-337)26
14729725073Edict of MilanMade Christianity official religion of the Roman empire27
14729725074Roman RepublicThe period from 507 to 31 B.C.E., during which Rome was largely governed by the aristocratic Roman Senate.28
14729725075PatriciansUpper class families29
14729725076PlebeiansLower class families30
14729725077Government of the Roman Republicunder the Republic (representatives represent the people by district), the seat of Roman government was the Senate (qualification: patrician)31
14729725078Julius Caesar100-44 B.C. Roman general who became the republic's dictator in 45 B.C. , a general32
14729725079Roman EmpireExisted from 27 BCE to about 400 CE. Conquiered entire Mediterranean coast and most of Europe. Ruled by an emperor. Eventually oversaw the rise and spread of Christianity.33
14729725080OctavianFirst emperor of Rome , granted overarching pose by senate , used army and aristocracy to maintain order34
14729725081Causes of decline and fall of Roman EmpireWeak emperors and uninterested aristocracy, epidemic diseases and decreasing urbanization, Germanic tribes invaded35
14729725082Mauryan Empire(326-184BCE) This was the first centralized empire of India whose founder was Chandragupta Maurya.36
14729725083Chandragupta MauryaUnited India for the first time, created a bureaucracy influenced Persia and Alexander the Great37
14729725084Ashokaa ruler of the Mauryan Empire who converted to Buddhism , sent out Buddhist missionaries, ended slavery38
14729725085Gupta EmpireGolden Age of India , development of chess, built free hospitals39
14729725086NalandaFamous Buddhist university of ancient india , students came from Middle East , China , and Greece40
14729725087HinduismA religion native to India, featuring belief in many gods and reincarnation, goal is to end samsara and unite your atman with Brahman41
14729725088Caste Systema social structure in which classes are determined by heredity42
147297250894 VarnasBrahmins, Kshatriyas, Vaisyas, Sudras43
14729725090BuddhismA religion based on the teachings of the Buddha.44
14729725091Siddartha Gautama (Buddha)Founder of Buddhism and wealthy Indian prince. Sought to overcome suffering by being ascetic45
14729725092Middle Way (Buddhism)Nothing to excess, not too little or too much46
14729725093Nirvana (Buddhism)Enlightenment47
14729725094Appeal and spread of BuddhismEgalitarian -No caste system •Individual was responsible for spiritual enlightenment , Teaching available m in local Language Women could participate equally48
14729725095Theravada BuddhismBuddhist sect that focuses on the wisdom of the Buddha49
14729725096Mahayana"the Great Vehicle" - The largest of Buddhism's three divisions, prevalent in China, Japan and Korea, encompasses a variety of forms, including those that emphasize devotion and prayer to the Buddhas and bodhisattvas.50
14729725097Qin Dynastythe Chinese dynasty (from 246 BC to 206 BC) that established the first centralized imperial government and established written Chinese language , built much of the Great Wall51
14729725098ShihuangdiShihuangdi (r. 221-210 BCE) defeated others and became the "first emperor" -Advanced army, elaborate bureaucracy -Used Legalism to rule empire52
14729725099Han DynastyHan dynasty founded by Emperor Gaozu (r. 202-195 BCE) -Capital at Chang'an •Assimilated non-Chinese people53
14729725100Emperor Wu of Han(r. 141-87 BCE) -Confucianism became official government philosophy -Nationalized salt and iron industries -Repelled nomadic Xiongnu from the north54
14729725101Imperial exams and bureaucracy in classical chinaEmperor Wu established the Imperial University to train officials -Different levels of civil service examinations to enter the bureaucracy -Exams based on Confucian55
14729725102Wang Mang's reformslooking to redistribute the land. Problems with peasants, gave them land from the rich people.56
14729725103Causes of decline and fall classical ChinaEmpire became too big to maintain -Court eunuchs and aristocracy fought for power -Large landowning families gained power •Epidemic diseases -Smallpox, bubonic plagues reduced population by as much as one fourth57
14729725104LegalismPolitical philosophy used by Shihuangdi -Burned Confucian texts and killed Confucian scholars •The state, law, and the position of the ruler had ultimate authority •Rules were publicly posted -Strict rewards and punishments were enforced •Viewed soldiers and farmers as only essential members of society58
14729725105Confucianisma system of philosophical and ethical teachings founded by Confucius and developed by Mencius.59
14729725106Filial PietyHonor of one's parents and ancestors60
14729725107(Five) unequal relationships-Ruler to ruled -Father to son -Husband to wife -Elder brother to younger brother -Friend to friend61
14729725108DaoismFounded by Laozi (ca. 6th century BCE) •Encouraged withdrawal to nature to find harmony -Rejection of formal education, political and social involvements and ambitions62
14729725109DaoDao: the way, the path -The way or principle that governs nature -Simplicity in living, limited governm63
14729725110Yin and YangYin (dark, female) and yang (light, male) -Male and female were complementary64

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