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AP World History Unit 3 500-1450 Flashcards

Silk Road An ancient caravan route that linked Xian in central China with the eastern Mediterranean. It was established during the period of Roman rule in Europe and took its name from the silk that was brought to the west from China. The Mongols reopened the route in the 13th c.

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4270368497MuslimFollower of the religion of Islam.0
4270368498SassanidThe name of the last pre-Islamic Iranian empire. It was one of the two main powers in Western Asia for a period of more than 400 years. Was founded by Ardashir I after defeating the last Parthian (Arsacid) king, in Persia, also involving a revival of a revival of the Persian religion Zoroastrianism. Fought the Byzantines, which weakened them both.1
4270368499ArabA member of a Semitic people, originally from the Arabian peninsula and neighboring territories, inhabiting much of the Middle East and North Africa.2
4270368500IslamA monotheistic religion founded by Muhammad as the Prophet of Allah in the Arabian Peninsula in the 7th Century C.E. Its followers, called Muslims, believe Allah is the only God and that he spoke to the people through Muhammad, whose teachings are recorded in the Qu'ran (Koran). Muslims believe that following the Five-Pillars (Confession of faith to one god, prayer 5 times a day, charity to the needy, fasting during Ramadan, pilgrimage to Mecca) will result in salvation.3
4270368501QuranThe Islamic sacred book, believed to be the word of God as dictated to Muhammad by the archangel Gabriel and written down in Arabic.4
4270368502UmmaThe whole community of Muslims bound together by ties of religion. The community of believers5
4270368503InquisitionA formalized interrogation and persecution of heretics. Punishment for so-called nonbelievers ranged from excommunication and exile to torture and execution6
4270368504MatrilinealWhere power in a family is passed down through the mother or the female line, rather than the male/father's line.7
4270368505Code of BushidoThe code of honor and morals developed by the Japanese samurai. It stressed loyalty, courage and honor; if a samurai failed to observe the code; he was expected to commit suicide.8
4270368506Justinian(483-565) Byzantine emperor from 527-565.9
4270368507Sui DynastyA dynasty that ruled in China ad 581-618 and reunified the country.10
4270368508Shi'iteBranch of Islam that only supports the descendants of Muhammad as his rightful successors.11
4270368509Holy Roman EmpireDifferent from the original Roman Empire, was begun by Charlemagne in 800, but was not called the Holy Roman Empire until 962. It consisted on Northern Italy, Germany, Belgium and France. The empire marked the beginning of imperialism, especially be religious leaders. The church held a strong influence over most aspects of society. It was feudalistic, with local lords answering to the emperor. It was created by the medieval papacy in an attempt to unite Christendom under one rule.12
4270368510Roman Catholic ChurchThe part of the Christian Church that acknowledges the pope as its head. Main cultural unifying force in Western Europe during the Middle Ages.13
4270368511Inca EmpireThese people arrived in the Cuzco Valley in Peru around 1200 C.E. When the Spanish invaded in the early 1530s, the empire covered most of modern Ecuador and Peru, much of Bolivia, and parts of Argentina and Chile. Their technology and architecture were highly developed. Their descendants, speaking Quechua, still make up about half of Peru's population.14
4270368512MalawiNon-Arab converts to Islam15
4270368516Yuan DynastyEstablished when the Mongols conquered the Song dynasty in 1279. The Mongol reign was short-lived, ending when the Mongols were driven out of China in the 1300s.16
4270368517House of WisdomLocated in Baghdad, and was a place of learning for scholars who came from all over the Islamic world.17
4270368518TurksA member of any of the ancient central Asian peoples who spoke Turkic languages, including the Seljuk and Ottomans. Also a member of the ruling Muslim population of the Ottoman Empire.18
4270368520Song Dynasty(960-1279 C.E.) Reunified China after the collapse of the Tang dynasty. This dynasty experience a long stretch of peace and prosperity, but eventually fell to Jurchin and then the Mongols in 1279. Under this dynasty, China developed printing processes and gunpowder.19
4270368521Mansa MusaOne of the greatest Mali rulers, built a capital city at Timbuktu and added lands to his kingdom well beyond the bounds of Ghana. In 1307 he made a pilgrimage to Mecca with so many gold-carrying servants and camels that he became a sort of international Islamic celebrity.20
4270368522Marco Polo( 1254- 1324) Italian traveler. With his father and uncle he traveled to China and the court of Kublai Khan via central Asia (1271-75). He eventually returned home (1292-95) via Sumatra, India, and Persia. His account of his travels spurred the European quest for the riches of the East.21
4270368523Mita SystemMandatory labor performed by male citizens over the age of 15 in the Inca civilization.22
4270368524Indian Ocean Trading NetworkNetwork of trade that extended throughout the Indian Ocean and connected to East Africa, Islamic World, Mediterranean, East Asian and Southeast Asian trading zones.23
4270368525Tang DynastyThe era is known for its poetry, development of a transportation and communication network, and its tribute system (where independent countries sent ambassadors to China with gifts to acknowledge the supremacy of the emperor.24
4270368526Ghana, Mali, and SonghayMali - a landlocked republic in Northwestern Africa Ghana - a republic of West Africa on the Gulf of Guinea Songhai - a Nilo - Saharan language spoken by the Songhai people in Mali and Niger25
4270368527Foot BindingPractice in Chinese society to mutilate women's feet in order to make them smaller; produced pain and restricted women's movement; made it easier to confine women to the household26
4270368528MeritocracyA government where the people who hold power are selected on the basis of their ability.27
4270368529MosqueA Muslim place of worship. They consist of an area reserved for communal prayers, frequently in a domed building with a minaret, and with a niche (mihrab) or other structure indicating the direction of Mecca.28
4270368530SufismVersion of Islam that stresses the spiritual path to mystical union with God. Their teachings made Islam highly adaptable to different circumstances, allowing individuals to mold their relationship with Allah to meet their needs and beliefs. Because of this, they converted many people to Islam during the Abbasid Dynasty. It is influenced by other faiths, such as Buddhism, and reached its peak in the 13th century. There are many Sufi orders, the best known being the dervishes.29
4270368531TimbuktuA major trading center for gold and salt on the trans-Saharan trade routes, it reached the height of its prosperity in the 16th century but fell into decline after its capture by the Moroccans in 1591.30
4270368532MalaccaKey trading port in the Indian Ocean trading network. All trade between East Asia and the Indian Ocean passed through it.31
4270368533ChivalryAn honor system in Western Europe that strongly condemned betrayal and promoted mutual respect and the belief that women were to be protected. Most of the lords and knights followed this code32
4270368534Abbasid CaliphateA dynasty of Muslim leaders who ruled the Islamic world from their capital in Baghdad from 750 to 1258.33
4270368535MedievalEuropean history period prior to Renaissance. 500/1500 BC34
4270368536Japanese FeudalismUnder this system the shogun was the 'chief general,' appointed by the emperor. The shogun held the real power, and the emperor became a figurehead. The daimyo (landowners and powerful samurai warriors) were below the shogun. Daimyo divided up their land among lesser samurai, who split their land up again. Peasants worked the land, and artisans ran shops to support the samurai class.35
4270368537Aztec empireBegan as an alliance of Tenochtitlan, Texcoco, and Tlacopan. These city-states ruled the area in and around the Valley of Mexico from 1428 until they were defeated by the Spanish conquistadores and their native allies under Hernán Cortés in 1521.36
4270368538Eastern Orthodox Christianitya Christian church or federation of churches originating in the Greek-speaking church of the Byzantine Empire, not accepting the authority of the pope, and using elaborate and ancient forms of service.37
4270368539IconsA painting of Jesus Christ or another holy figure, typically in a traditional style on wood, venerated and used as an aid to devotion in the Byzantine and other Eastern Churches.38
4270368540Umayyad CaliphateA Muslim dynasty that ruled the Islamic world from 660 to 750 and Moorish Spain from 756 to 1031. Enlarged the Islamic Empire significantly. Capital moved from Mecca to Damascus in Syria.39
4270368541Primogenturethe statement that the oldest son received land from his father and younger sons seeked fortunes elsewhere40
4270368542Theocracya form of government in which a deity is officially recognized as the civil Ruler and official policy is governed by officials regarded as divinely guided, or is pursuant to the doctrine of a particular religion or religious group.41
4270368543TenochtitlanThe ancient capital of the Aztec empire, founded c. 1320. In 1521, the Spanish conquistador Cortés destroyed it and established Mexico City on its site.42
4270368544Yamato clanThe first important ruling family in Japan. They came to power in the 5th c and have been the only dynasty to rule Japan since then. In fact, the current Emperor (Akihito) is a descendent of the Yamato.43
4270368545Gothicof or relating to the Goths or their extinct East Germanic language, which provides the earliest manuscript evidence of any Germanic language (4th-6th centuries AD).44
4270368546Heretica person believing in or practicing religious heresy.45
4270368547Mongol EmpireIn the 13th century C.E., the empire under Genghis Khan extended across central Asia from Manchuria in the east to European Russia in the west. It was one of the largest continuous empire in the world. It was divided into smaller territories called hordes. Under Kublai Khan, China was conquered and the Mongol capital moved to Khanbaliq (modern Beijing). The Mongol empire collapsed after a series of defeats culminating in the destruction of the Golden Horde by the Muscovites in 1380.46
4270368548AristocracyA government system in which positions are inherited based on being a member of a small, privileged class or family.47
4270368549Byzantine EmpireCoexisted with and was situated between the Roman and Islamic empires. Greek was spoken here, and it's culture had more in common with Eastern (i.e. Persian); its brand of Christianity became entirely separate branch known as Orthodox Christianity. It ended with the loss of Constantinople to the Ottoman Turks in 145348
4270368550Silk RoadAn ancient caravan route that linked Xian in central China with the eastern Mediterranean. It was established during the period of Roman rule in Europe and took its name from the silk that was brought to the west from China. The Mongols reopened the route in the 13th c.49
4270368551FeudalismA political system in which nobles are granted the use of lands that legally belong to a king in return for loyalty and military service50
4270368552Temujin/Chinggis Khan(1162-1227). Founder of the Mongol empire; born Temujin. He took the name Genghis Khan ("ruler of all") in 1206 after uniting the nomadic Mongol tribes. When he died, his empire extended from China to the Black Sea. His grandson Kublai Khan completed the conquest of China.51
4270368553Khubilai Khan(1216-94). Mongol emperor of China; grandson of Genghis Khan. With his brother Mangu (then Mongol Khan), he conquered southern China (1252-59). After Mangu's death in 1259, he completed the conquest of China, founded the Yuan dynasty, and established his capital on the site of modern Beijing.52
4270368554CrusadesMedieval military expedition made by Europeans to recover the Holy Land from the Muslims in the 11th, 12th, and 13th centuries.53
4270368555Ottoman EmpireThe Turkish empire, established in northern Anatolia by Osman I at the end of the 13th century and expanded by his successors to include all of Asia Minor and much of southeastern Europe. After setbacks caused by the invasion of the Mongol ruler Tamerlane in 1402, the Ottomans captured Constantinople in 1453, and the empire reached its zenith under Suleiman in the mid 16th century. It had greatly declined by the 19th century and collapsed after World War I.54
4270368556Safavid EmpireThe Shia dynasty that ruled Persia from 1502-1736.55
4270368557MuhammadArab prophet and founder of Islam. In c. 610, in Mecca, he received the first of a series of revelations that, as the Koran, became the doctrinal and legislative basis of Islam. In the face of opposition to his preaching, he and his small group of supporters were forced to flee to Medina in 622 (the Hegira). He then led his followers into a series of battles against the Meccans. In 630, Mecca capitulated and by his death he had united most of Arabia.56
4270368558Black DeathThe great epidemic of bubonic plague that killed a large part of the population of Europe in the mid 14th century. Began in Asia and spread through merchants. It killed about 1/3 of the population of Europe. It sped the decline of the feudal system in western Europe, because many manors were closed because their lords or serfs died. It was carried by the fleas of black rats, reaching England in 1348 and killing between one third and one half of the population in a matter of months.57
4270368560Hanseatic LeagueAn economic and defensive alliance of the free towns in northern Germany, founded about 1241 and most powerful in the fourteenth century.58
4270368561Caliph/CaliphatesThe emperor and religion leader in early Islam. They would serve as a head of state, military commander, chief judge, and religious leader. The theocratic Islamic Empire was referred to as a caliphate. They ruled in Baghdad until 1258 and then in Egypt until the Ottoman conquest of 1517; the title was then held by the Ottoman sultans until it was abolished in 1924 by Atatürk.59
4270368562Civil Service ExamExam taken in order to gain entrance to the Chinese bureaucracy. Primarily focused on Confucian concepts.60
4270368563Cultural DiffusionThe things and ideas from one culture that are 'borrowed' from another culture.61
4270368564VassalsA person in the Medieval European feudal system who entered into a mutual obligation to a lord or monarch.62
4270368565Chang'an (Xi'an, China)Capital of the Tang dynasty and eastern most city on the Silk Road.63
4270368566Sunni IslamMembers do not believe Ali, son of Muhammad, is the rightful heir to the Islamic empire. They hold Ali in high esteem, but believe that their leaders should arise from a broad base of Islamic people.64
4270368567Tang Empress WuTang Empress Wu, born Wu Zetian, was a Chinese sovereign, who ruled officially from 690 to 705; however, she had previous imperial positions under both Emperor Taizong of Tang and his son Emperor Gaozong of Tang, of the Tang Dynasty of China. Wu Zetian ruled as effective sovereign until 705. She is the only woman to rule China in her own right65
4270368568WesternizationAn adoption of the social, political, or economic institutions of Western—especially European or American—countries.66

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