3004607878 | Bantu Migration | -proto-Bantu homeland was near modern boundary between Nigeria and Cameroon -Bantu migrated across Africa spreading language and iron smelting -massive transfer of Bantu traditions and practices southwards, eastword, and westwards from 500 BCE to 1000 CE | 0 | |
3004607879 | Swahili | ... | 1 | |
3004609875 | Polynesian Voyages | -Polynesians originated in Asia -travel in Pacific Ocean -developed larger, more sea-worthy canoes and improved navigational skills that allowed large distance voyages after centuries of island-hopping migrations -migrated to Marquesas, the Hawaiian Islands, the Americas, and even as far as New Zealand | 2 | |
3004615975 | Muhammad | -Arab prophet; founder of religion of Islam -Born in Mecca 570 CE -Engaged in trade and married a rich widow, Khadija | 3 | |
3004615976 | Islam | Religion expounded by the Prophet Muhammad on the basis of his reception of divine revelations, which were collected after his death into the Quran. In the tradition of Judaism and Christianity, and sharing much of their lore, Islam calls on all people to recognize one creator god--Allah--who rewards or punishes believers after death according to how they lived their lives | 4 | |
3004615977 | Dar al-Islam | ... | 5 | |
3004615978 | Mecca | City in Western Arabia; birthplace of the Prophet Muhammad and ritual center of the Islamic religion. A late-blooming caravan city occupying a barren mountain valley halfway between Yemen and Syria and somewhat inland from the Red Sea | 6 | |
3004615979 | Umma | The community of all Muslims. A major innovation against the background of 7th-century Arabia, where traditionally kinship rather than faith had determined membership in a community | 7 | |
3004617971 | Quran | Book composed of divine revelations made to the Prophet Muhammad between ca. 610 and his death in 642; the sacred text of the religion of Islam. Viewed not as the words of Muhammad but as the unalterable word of God. | 8 | |
3004617972 | Sunnis | Muslims belonging to branch of Islam believing that the community should select it's own leadership. The majority religion in most Islamic countries | 9 | |
3004617973 | Shi'ites | .Muslims belonging to the branch of Islam believing that God vests leadership of the community in a descendent of Muhammad's son-in-law Ali. Shi'ism is the state religion of Iran | 10 | |
3004619754 | Expansion of Islam | -conquests outside of Arabia began under second caliph, Umar (r. 634-644) -wrenched Syria (636) and Egypt (639-643) away from Byzantine Empire and defeated last Sasanid shah, Yazdigird III (r.632-651) -Tunisia fell and became governing center (711) -Spain conquered by army of Barbers from North Africa -Sind (southern Indus Valley) invaded by Iraqians -India and Anatolia experienced some invasion -sub-Saharan Africa and other regions saw peaceful expansion through trade and conversion | 11 | |
3004619755 | Decline of Abbasids | -Held onto caliphate until 1258 when mongol invaders killed the last of them in Baghdad but decline was evident in second half of the 9th century -revolts targeting Arab or Muslim domination gave way to movements within Islamic community concentrating on seizure of territory and formation of principalities -cut off tax flow to Baghdad. -out of distrust for generals and troops from outlying areas, they purchased mamluks for military -mamluks rebelled when they could not be payed | 12 | |
3004619783 | Abbasid Caliphate | Descendants of the Prophet Muhammad's uncle, al-Abbas, the Abbas ids overthrew the Umayyad Caliphate and ruled an Islamic empire from their capital in Baghdad from 750 to 1258 | 13 | |
3004622274 | Persian influence in Islamic World | -Abbasid Caliphate adopted the ceremonies and customs of the Sasanid shahs -as more non-Arabs converted to Islam, the ruling elite became more cosmopolitan -Greek, Iranian, Central Asian, and African cultural currents met in the capital and gave rise to an abundance of literary works, facilitated by papermaking from China -Arab poets neglected the traditional odes extolling life in the desert and wrote instead wine songs or poems in praise of their patrons -refinement of Baghdad culture only slowly made its way into provinces -early Abbasid period sometimes called a "golden age" | 14 | |
3004622275 | Mamluks | Under the Islamic system of military slavery, Turkish military slaves who formed an important part of the armed forces of the Abbas id Caliphate of the 9th and 10th centuries. Mamluks eventually founded their own state, ruling Egypt and Syria (1250-1517) | 15 | |
3004622276 | Turks | -dominated Samarra without interference from an unruly Baghdad populace that regarded them as rude and highhanded -money and effort that went into the huge city (occupied from 835 to 892) further sapped the caliphs' financial strength and deflected labor from more productive pursuits | 16 | |
3004622277 | Caliphates | Office established in succession to the Prophet Muhammad, to rule the Islamic empire; also the name of that empire | 17 | |
3004622323 | Caliph | The successor of Muhammad to leadership. Leader of the caliphate. | 18 | |
3004626729 | Women in the Islamic World | Women seldom travelled. Those living in rural areas worked in the fields and tended animals. Urban women, particularly members of the elite, lived in seclusion and did not leave their homes without covering themselves. Though they sometimes became literate and studied with relatives, they did so away from the gaze of unrelated men. While they played important roles in family, public roles were generally barred. A man could have sexuall relationships with as many slave concubines as he pleased and could marry as many as four wives. Women fared better under Islamic law than Christian and Jewish women under their respective religious codes. | 19 | |
3004626730 | Cities in the Islamic world | The Arab military settlement tsir of Kuna and Basra blossomed into cities and became important centers for Muslim cultural activities. As conversion rapidly spread, urbanization accelerated in other areas, most notably Iran. In Iran, major cities are Baghdad, Mosul, Kufa, and Basra. In Syria, Aleppo and Damascus. Fustat in Egypt developed into Cairo. The christian patriarchal cities of Jerusalem, Antioch, and Alexandria shrank and stagnated. | 20 | |
3004626731 | Ibn Buttuta | ... | 21 | |
3004626732 | Hadith | A tradition relating to the words or deeds of the Prophet Muhammad; next to the Quran, the most important basis for Islamic law | 22 | |
3004628037 | Shari'a | The law of Islam that provides the foundation of Islamic civilization. Every Muslim ruler was expected to abide by and enforce the religious law. The Shari'a proved an important basis for an urban lifestyle that varied surprisingly little from Morocco to India | 23 | |
3004628038 | Impact of Conversion | -converts did not know much about Islam because they couldn't read Arabic -converts migrated to Arab governing systems to both learn more about the religion and escape discrimination in their home communities -migration both averted discrimination and took advantage of the economic opportunities opened up by tax revenues flowing into Arab governing centers | 24 | |
3004630327 | Science and technology in the Islamic World | Building on Hellen I stick traditions and their own observations and experience, Muslim doctors and astronomers developed skills and theories far in advance of their European counterparts. In 11th century Egypt, Ibn al-Haytham determined that the Milky Way lies far beyond the earth's atmosphere, proved that light travels from a seen object to the eye and not the reverse, and explained why the sun and the moon appear larger on the horizon than overhead | 25 | |
3004630328 | Sufi | ... | 26 | |
3004634204 | Timbuktu | ... | 27 | |
3004634205 | Medieval Trans-Saharan Trade | ... | 28 | |
3004635823 | Islam of Sub-Saharan Africa | -Islam's spread was gradual and peaceful -most Africans found meaning and benefit in the teachings of Islam -Takrur in the far western Sudan became the first sub-Saharan African state to adopt the new faith around 1030 | 29 | |
3004635824 | Mali | Empire created by indigenous Muslims in Western Sudan of West Africa from the 13th to 15th centuries. It was famous for its role in the trans-Saharan gold trade. | 30 | |
3004642820 | Swahili | ... | 31 | |
3004639767 | Medieval Indian Ocean Basin Trade | ... | 32 | |
3004639768 | Spices | ... | 33 | |
3004639769 | Ships navigation in the Indian Ocean | ... | 34 | |
3004642751 | Swahili Coast | ... | 35 | |
3004646970 | Ibn Battuta | ... | 36 | |
3004648941 | Medieval Europe | ... | 37 | |
3004648942 | Feudalism | ... | 38 | |
3004648943 | Invasions of Medieval Europe | ... | 39 | |
3004650374 | Papacy | ... | 40 | |
3004650375 | The Black Death | ... | 41 | |
3004650376 | Wat Tyler | ... | 42 | |
3004653714 | The Little Ice Age | *include dates!!! | 43 | |
3004656282 | Medieval European Agriculture | ... | 44 | |
3004660032 | Japanese Feudalism | ... | 45 | |
3004662160 | Byzantine Peasants | ... | 46 | |
3004662161 | The Crusades | ... | 47 | |
3004663569 | Crusader States | ... | 48 | |
3004665046 | Genoa | ... | 49 | |
3004665047 | City-State | ... | 50 | |
3004665968 | Italian Trading States | ... | 51 | |
3004665969 | Mediterranean Trade | ... | 52 | |
3004667247 | Sui Dynasty | ... | 53 | |
3004685928 | Grand Canal | ... | 54 | |
3004685961 | Tang Dynasty | ... | 55 | |
3004688287 | Tang Cross-cultural exchange | ... | 56 | |
3004688288 | Tang Economy | ... | 57 | |
3004688289 | Chang'an | ... | 58 | |
3004691205 | Song Dynasty | ... | 59 | |
3004691206 | paper Money in China | ... | 60 | |
3004691207 | Song Technology | ... | 61 | |
3004692441 | Song Industry | ... | 62 | |
3004692442 | Foot Binding | ... | 63 | |
3004694143 | The Rise of the Mongols | ... | 64 | |
3004694144 | Genghis Khan | ... | 65 | |
3004694145 | Mongol Society | ... | 66 | |
3004694146 | Mongol Government | ... | 67 | |
3004696377 | Mongol Warfare | ... | 68 | |
3004696378 | Il-khan | ... | 69 | |
3004698537 | Bubonic Plague | ... | 70 | |
3004698538 | Mongols & Trade | ... | 71 | |
3004698539 | Golden HOrde | ... | 72 | |
3004701470 | Intellectual Development of the Il-Khan | ... | 73 | |
3004706199 | Mongol Yoke | ... | 74 | |
3004706200 | Political Consequences of Golden Horde | ... | 75 | |
3004707897 | Yuan China Society | ... | 76 | |
3004707898 | Yuan Government | ... | 77 | |
3004707899 | Yuan Economy | ... | 78 | |
3004710498 | Ming China | ... | 79 | |
3004710499 | Zheng He | ... | 80 | |
3004710500 | Changes from Mongols to Ming | ... | 81 | |
3004712237 | Gunpowder | *include everything!!! | 82 | |
3004713893 | Moveable Type | ... | 83 | |
3004713894 | Ming Agriculture | ... | 84 | |
3004715621 | Mongol Impact on Korea and Japan | ... | 85 | |
3004715622 | Zen Buddhism | ... | 86 | |
3004717667 | Revival of Medieval Western Europe | ... | 87 | |
3004717668 | Horse Collar | ... | 88 | |
3004719603 | Guilds | ... | 89 | |
3004719604 | Urban Revival | ... | 90 | |
3004721335 | Climate in the 12th & 13th | ... | 91 | |
3004725508 | Mayan Government | ... | 92 | |
3004725509 | Mayan Trade | ... | 93 | |
3004725510 | Mayan Society | ... | 94 | |
3004727196 | Mexica | ... | 95 | |
3004727197 | Mexica Government | ... | 96 | |
3004727198 | Mexica Society | ... | 97 | |
3004727199 | Mexica Economy | ... | 98 | |
3004729065 | Inca Empire | ... | 99 | |
3004729066 | Ayllu | ... | 100 | |
3004730549 | Mita | ... | 101 | |
3004730550 | Trade in the Andes | ... | 102 |
AP World History Unit 3 Flashcards
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