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AP World History Period 3: Medieval Africa Flashcards

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8108741782Kingdom of GhanaWest African empire from 700s to 1076, grew wealthy and powerful by controlling gold-salt trade.0
8108741783Kingdom of Malia huge territorial empire that flourished in west Africa during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. Its capital was Timbuktu, which became a center of Islamic learning (see Islam). The empire controlled trade routes that stretched from the edge of the Sahara in the north to forests in the south and that carried gold and other luxuries1
8108741784Kingdom of Songhailast and final great empire of West Africa. a very big trading city back then where many people would trade things like gold for salt2
8108741785Sunni Alicreated Sunni Dynasty; rule lasted 30 years; many military campaigns/victories; conquered Timbuktu and Djenne, which gave Songhai control of trade; focus on trading empire3
8108741786Kumbi Salehwas the capital of Ghana. It was made up of two separate towns, 1 was the royal town and the other was the place were the merchants lived.4
8108741787Trans-Saharan Traderoute across the sahara desert. Major trade route that traded for gold and salt, created caravan routes, economic benefit for controlling dessert, camels played a huge role in the trading5
8108741788Gold-Salt-Slavesmajor commodities in medieval Africa6
8108741789Islammajor cultrual and religous in North Africa arived about 634 and by 750 followers of _______ controlled most of North Africa7
8108741790TimbuktuCity on the Niger River in the modern country of Mali. It was founded by the Tuareg as a seasonal camp sometime after 1000. As part of the Mali empire, it became a major major terminus of the trans-Saharan trade and a center of Islamic learning8
8108741791DjenneAncient city in West Africa near the Niger River, at least as old as 250 B.C.E.9
8108741792Sundiate (Sologon Djata)the leader of the Malinke people. He was the first leader of Mali. They built on Ghana's empire by establishing the gold-salt trade and expanded trade routes. This allowed them to expand their empire beyond Ghana's old borders.10
8108741793Mansa MusaEmperor of the kingdom of Mali in Africa. He made a famous pilgrimage to Mecca and established trade routes to the Middle East.11
8108741794Kingdom of KongoBasin of the Congo (Zaire) river, conglomeration of several village alliances, participated actively in trade networks, most centralized rule of the early Bantu kingdoms, royal currency: cowries, ruled 14th-17th century until undermined by Portuguese slave traders12
8108741795Swahili CoastEast African shores of the Indian Ocean between the Horn of Africa and the Zambezi River; from the Arabic sawahil, meaning "shores."13
8108741796MombasaAn African city on the coast that adopted the Muslim religion and made a great living trading in the Indian Ocean. It is located in modern Kenya. Swahili became their language and gold, ivory, slaves, and animal skins were traded14
8108741797Zanzibarimportant center of trade, sailors from Southeast Asia, China, and India brought gold and ivory to this island15
8108741798Great ZimbabweCity, now in ruins whose many stone structures were built between about 1250 and 1450, when it was a trading center and the capital of a large state.16
8108741799Indian OceanLarge amounts of trade happened in this body of water between Arab, Persian, Turkish, Indian, African, Chinese, and Europe merchants. Particularly in the postclassical period17
8108741800GriotA member of a class of traveling poets, musicians, and storytellers who maintain a tradition of oral history in parts of West Africa.18
8108741801Silent trade systemA way of communicating while trading without using any forms of language. It is significant and important because it allowed traders to trade without finding out where all the gold or salt was.19
8108741802AnimismA local religion, mostly from Africa and the Americas, in which the world is seen as being infused with spiritual and even supernatural powers.20
8108741803NomadsCattle-and sheep-herding societies normally found on the fringes of civilized societies; commonly referred to as "barbarian" by civilized societies21
8108741804Bantu MigrationThe movement of the Bantu peoples southward throughout Africa, spreading their language and culture, from around 500 b.c. to around A.D 100022
8108741805Syncretic LanguageKreyòl23
8108741806Sahela strip of dry grasslands on the southern border of the Sahara; also known as "the shore of the desert"24

Pre-AP World History Flashcards

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8437896703hunting and gatheringa hunter gatherer is a human living in a society in which most or all food is obtained by foraging, in contrast to agricultural societies, which rely mainly on domesticated species.0
8438009080nomadic lifestylea nomad is someone who lives by traveling from place to place. Nomadic thus means anything that involves moving around a lot. Nomadic hunter-gatherer tribes follow the animals they hunt, carrying tents with them. You don't have to be a nomad to live a nomadic lifestyle.1
8438056059agricultural revolutionthe wide scale transition of many human cultures from a lifestyle of hunting and gathering and settlement, making possible an increasingly larger population.2
8438092306irrigationmajor changes were introduced by agriculture, affecting the way human society was organized and how it used the earth, including forest clearance, root crops, and cereal cultivation that can be stored for long periods of time, along with the development of new technologies.3
8438144216job specializationas agricultural productivity increased, fewer people were needed to work in the fields producing food.4
8438167535sedentary lifestylefewer homo sapiens on earth lived in small, nomadic communities and transitioned to a sedentary lifestyle.5
8438210672decentralizationthe transfer of authority from central to local government.6
8438218282city-statesa city state is a sovereign state, also described as a type of small independent country, that usually consists of a single city and its dependent territories.7
8438257962Hammurabi's codeit is a well preserved Babylonian code of law of ancient Mesopotamia, dating back to about 1754 BC. It is one of the oldest disciplined writings of significant length in the world.8
8438305062cuneifromcuneiform script, one of the earliest systems of writing, was invented by the Sumerians. It is distinguished by its wedge-shaped marks on clay tablets, made by means of a blunt reed for a stylus.9
8438379986polytheismthe belief in our worship of more than one god.10
8438414775patriarchya system of society or government in which the father or eldest male is head of the family and descent is traced through the male line. Woman are largely excluded from it.11
8438468890artisansa worker in a skilled trade, especially one that involves making things by hand.12
8438497772Hierooglyphicsenigmatic or incomprehensible symbols or writing.13
8447207231pharaohPharaoh is the common title of the monarchs of ancient Egypt from the First Dynasty until the annexation of Egypt by the Roman Empire in 30 BCE.14
8448148005pyramidsThe Egyptian pyramids are ancient pyramid-shaped masonry structures located in Egypt.15
8448170675Mandate of HeavenThe Zhou created the Mandate of Heaven: the idea that there could be only one legitimate ruler of China at a time, and that this ruler had the blessing of the gods.16
8448197724Oracle Bonesare pieces of ox scapula or turtle plastron, which were used for pyromancy - a form of divination - in ancient China, mainly during the late Shang dynasty.17
8448234143ancestor worshipthe custom of venerating deceased ancestors who are considered still a part of the family and whose spirits are believed to have the power to intervene in the affairs of the living.18
8448459116Similarities of river valley civilizationsAfro-Eurasian Civilizations. There are four settled societies that each developed agriculture independently along major rivers that are traditionally considered the early river valley civilizations.19
8448541709iron metallurgythe technique or science of working or heating metals so as to give them certain desired shapes or properties.20
8448564116chiefdomsA chiefdom is a form of hierarchical political organization in non-industrial societies usually based on kinship, and in which formal leadership is monopolized by the legitimate senior members of select families or 'houses'.21
8448604556calvaryThe name is Latin for "Place of the Skull".22
8448657700centralized government organizationis the government of a nation-state and is a characteristic of a unitary state. Basically, the central government has the power to make laws for the whole country, in contrast with local governments.23
8448707932expansionthe action of becoming larger or more extensive.24
8448729970satrapsa provincial governor in the ancient Persian empire.25
8448772865bureaucracya system of government in which most of the important decisions are made by state officials rather than by elected representatives.26
8448790898Qanat systemQanat is an ancient system of underground tunnels that supply mountain water to dry lower places in the Middle East.27
8449272669standardized coinsa money system in which the value of the coins produced is the same as the value of the metal with which they are made.28
8449499796zoroastriansima monotheistic pre-Islamic religion of ancient Persia founded by Zoroaster in the 6th century BC.29
8449507531polisA city-state in ancient Greece.30
8449530087spartaa Greek city-state known for its strength and trained warriors31
8449556726helotsSpartan word for their slaves, who were the conquered Messenians'32
8449603881athensa city-state in ancient Greece; the capital of modern-day Greece and the birthplace of direct democracy.33
8449710515direct democarcysystem of government in which citizens gather at mass meetings to decide on government matters. Citizen take directly part in government34
8449780609Greek humanismsystem of thought and action that elevates human beings to the center of existence35
8450622209Greek philosophersthey want to know the meaning of life.36
8450659474Persian warA series of wars between Greek city-states and the Persian Empire (5th century B.C.).37
8450693477Peloponnesian Warsa war fought between Athens and Sparta in the 400s BC, ending in a victory for Sparta38
8450720448Alexander the GreatKing of Macedonia who conquered Greece, Egypt, and Persia and built the largest empire.39
8450750660spread of the Greek cultureThe conquests of Alexander the Great spread the Greek culture throughout much of Europe and Asia. The Greek culture mixed with other cultures, forming a new type of civilization which is today referred to as Hellenistic.40
8450816504representative democracyRepresentative democracy is a type of democracy founded on the principle of elected officials representing a group of people, as opposed to direct democracy.41
8450981088twelve tablesRome's first code of laws; adopted in 450 B.C.42
8450989084Julius CaesarGaius Julius Caesar, usually called Julius Caesar, was a Roman politician and general who played a critical role in the events that led to the demise of the Roman Republic and the rise of the Roman Empire.43
8451057783Augustus CaesarName given to Octavian following his defeat of Mark Anthony and Cleopatra; first emperor of Rome.44
8451079250Pax RomanaA period of peace and prosperity throughout the Roman Empire, lasting from 27 B.C. to A.D. 180.45
8451105829Plantations and exportsis a large-scale farm that specializes in cash crops. plantations were the latifundia of the Roman Empire, which produced large quantities of wine and olive oil for export.46
8451161492paterfamiliasthe male head of a family or household.47
8452112525bread and circusesa diet of entertainment or political policies on which the masses are fed to keep them happy and docile.48
8452437533decline of the roman empireThe collapse of the Roman Empire in the fifth century. Two of the main events of the Fall of Rome were the plundering of the city of Rome by an invading tribe, the Vandals, in the middle years of the century and the abdication of the last Roman emperor.49
8452449797warring states periodThe Warring States Period (475-221 BC) was an era of division in ancient China. various states were at war before the Qin state conquered them all, and China was reunited under the Qin Dynasty.50
8452543242legalisma Chinese philosophy that stressed the importance of laws51
8452567299confucianisma system of philosophical and ethical teachings founded by Confucius and developed by Mencius.52
8452585693daoisma Chinese philosophy based on the writings of Lao-tzu ( fl. 6th century BC), advocating humility and religious piety.53
8452601566great wall of chinaboundary built in the northern part of china to keep invaders from attacking54
8452642292decline of Qin dynastyUpon the First Emperor's death, China plunged into civil war, exacerbated by floods and droughts.55
8452682924Han dynastythe dynasty that ruled China from about 206 B.C.E. to 220 C.E., the period following the Qin dynasty56
8452702336imperial universitywas the second imperial dynasty of China57
8452745569silk textilesSilk is a natural protein fiber, some forms of which can be woven into textiles.58
8452774820silk roadsAncient trade routes that extended from the Roman empire in the west to China in the east.59
8452800985yellow turban rebellionA major Chinese peasant revolt that began in 184 BCE and helped cause the fall of the Han dynasty60
8452849229decline of the Han chinaThe Han dynasty formally ended in 220 when Cao Cao's son and heir, Cao Pi, pressured Emperor Xian into abdicating in his favour.61
8452906706caste systemA caste system is a class structure that is determined by birth. Loosely, it means that in some societies, if your parents are poor, you're going to be poor, too.62
8452944086Changragupta MauryaFounded the Mauryan Empire., Founder of the first great Indian empire63
8452955607Ashoka MauryaAshoka was an Indian emperor of the Maurya Dynasty, who ruled almost all of the Indian subcontinent from c. 268 to 232 BCE.64
8453005726trade goodsthe goods that are being trading between people.65
8453047473Indian ocean trade routesThe city-states traded with inland kingdoms like Great Zimbabwe to obtain gold, ivory, and iron.66
8453268845decline of the Mauryan EmpireThe decline of the Maurya Dynasty was rather rapid after the death of Ashoka/Asoka. One obvious reason for it was the succession of weak kings. Another immediate cause was the partition of the Empire into two.67
8453422452Chandra Guptathe founder and ruler of the Gupta Empire, he led to the golden age of India68
8453492392political organization of the Gupta empirewas one of the largest political and military empires in world history.69
8453518271mathematical advancementsThe number system was developed by a mathematician and astronomer named Aryabhatta in 498 CE. This system became known as the Arabic numerals, but it is really a Gupta accomplishment.70
8453630713scientific advancementsThese numerals paved the way for scientific discoveries during the Gupta Empire as well as today.71

AP World History - Chapter 21 Flashcards

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73919533361. Explain the disruption of the fragile balance of power in Europe.German unification had occurred in the context of a short war with France (the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-1871), which embittered relations between these two large countries for the next half century. Since the defeat of Napoleon in 1815, a fragile and fluctuating balance of power had generally maintained peace among Europe's major countries. By the early 20th century, that balance of power was expressed in two rival alliances, the Triple Alliance of Germany, Austria, and Italy and the Triple Entente of Russia, France, and Britain. It was those commitments, undertaken in the interests of national security that transformed a minor incident n the Balkans into a blaze that consumed all of Europe. (Original: p. 627; With Sources: p. 979)0
73919533372. What drew the Great Powers of Europe into a general war by early August 1914?A Serbian nationalist assassinated the heir to the Austrian throne, Archduke Franz Ferdinand. To the rulers of Austria, the surging nationalism of Serbian Slavs was mortal threat to the cohesion of their fragile multinational empire, which included other Slavic peoples as well, and they determined to crush it. But behind Austria lay its far more powerful ally, Germany; and behind tiny Serbia lay Russia, with its self-proclaimed mission of protecting other Slavic peoples; and allied to Russia were the French and the British. Thus a system of alliances intended to keep the peace created obligations that drew the Great Powers of Europe into a general war by early August 1914. (Original: p. 627; With Sources: p. 979)1
73919533383. Besides alliances, what issues lay at the heart of, and contributed to, the war's beginning?One of them was a mounting popular nationalism. Slavic nationalism and Austrian opposition to it certainly lay at the heart of the war's beginning. More important, the rulers of the major countries of Europe saw the world as an arena of conflict and competition among rival nationstates. The Great Powers of Europe competed intensely for colonies, spheres of influence, and superiority in armaments. Also contributing to the war was an industrialized militarism. All of the Great Powers had substantial standing armies and, except for Britain, relied on conscription to staff them. (Original: pp. 627-629; With Sources: pp. 979-981)2
73919533394. How did the rapid industrialization of warfare impact the war?It generated an array of novel weapons, including submarines, tanks, airplanes, poison gas, machine guns, and barbed wire. This new military technology contributed to the staggering casualties of the war, including some 10 million deaths; perhaps twice the number wounded, crippled, or disfigured; and countless women for whom their would be no husbands or children. (Original: p. 629; With Sources: p. 981)3
73919533405. With whom did the Ottoman Empire ally itself in WWI?Germany. (Original: p. 629; With Sources: p. 981)4
73919533416. When and why did the United States join the war?The United States, after initially seeking to avoid involvement in European quarrels, joined the war in 1917 when German submarines threatened American shipping. (Original: p. 629; With Sources: p. 981)5
73919533427. In what ways did WWI mark new departures for countries around the globe in the history of the 20th century?The authority of governments expanded greatly. In the European center of the conflict, unprecedented casualties, particularly among the elite and well-educated groups, and the physical destruction, especially in France, led to a widespread disillusionment among intellectuals with their own civilization. From the collapse of the German, Russian, and Austrian empires emerged a new map of Central Europe with an independent Poland, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, and other nations. Such new states were based on the principle of "national self-determination." In Russia, the strains of war triggered a vast revolutionary upheaval that brought the radical Bolsheviks to power in 1917 and took Russia out of the war. Thus was launched world communism. The Treaty of Versailles, which formally ended the war in 1919, proved in retrospect to have established conditions that generated a second world war only twenty years later. Ottoman authorities massacred or deported an estimated one million Armenians, and established a precedent on which the Nazis later built. The war also brought a final end to a declining Ottoman Empire, creating the modern map of the Middle East, with the new states of Turkey, Syria, Iraq, Jordan, and Palestine. Conflicting promises to both Arabs and Jews regarding Palestine set the stage for an enduring struggle over that ancient and holy land. Millions of Asian and African men had watched Europeans butcher one another without mercy, had gained new military skills and political awareness, and returned home with less respect for their rulers and with expectations for better treatment as a reward for their service. In East Asia, Japan emerged strengthened from the war, with European support for its claim to take over German territory and privileges in China. That news enraged Chinese nationalists and among a few sparked an interest in Soviet-style communism, for only the new communist rulers of Russia seemed willing to end the imperialist penetration of China. Finally, WWI brought the United States to center stage as a global power. (Original: pp. 630- 632; With Sources: pp. 982-984)6
73919533438. What were the terms of the Treaty of Versailles?Germany lost its colonial empire and 15% of its European territory, was required to pay heavy reparations to the winners, had its military forces severely restricted, and had to accept sole responsibility for the outbreak of the war. (Original: p. 631; With Sources: p. 983)7
73919533449. What right did women increasingly gain?The right to vote. (Original: p. 633; With Sources: p. 985)8
739195334510. What happened on the day that the American Stock Market initially crashed?On October 24, 1929, eleven Wall Street financiers committed suicide, some by jumping out of skyscrapers. Banks closed, and many people lost their life's savings. Investments dried up, world trade dropped by 62% within a few years, and businesses contracted when they were unable to sell their products. For ordinary people, the worst feature was the loss of work. (Original: p. 633; With Sources: p. 985)9
739195334611. Explain the continuing spread of the Great Depression from America to Europe.The U.S. had a booming economy during the 1920s. It was physically untouched by the war and wartime demand had greatly stimulated agricultural and industrial capacity. By the end of the 1920s, its farms and factories were producing more goods than could be sold because a highly unequal distribution of income meant that many people could not afford to buy the products that American factories were churning out. Nor were major European countries able to purchase those goods. Germany and Austria had to make huge reparation payments and were able to do so only with extensive U.S. loans. Britain and France, which were much indebted to the U.S., depended on those reparations to repay their loans. Furthermore, Europeans generally had recovered enough to begin producing some of their own goods, and their expanding production further reduced the demand for American products. Meanwhile, a speculative stock market frenzy had driven up stock prices to an unsustainable level. When that bubble burst in late 1929, this intricately connected and fragile economic network across the Atlantic collapsed. (Original: p. 634; With Sources: p. 986)10
739195334712. What rendered other societies vulnerable to changes in the world market?As much as Europe's worldwide empires had globalized the war, so too its economic linkages globalized the Great Depression. Countries or colonies tied to exporting one or two products were especially hard-hit. Depending on a single crop or product rendered these societies vulnerable. (Original: p. 634; With Sources: p. 986)11
739195334813. Why did the Soviet Union escape the Great Depression?The Soviet Union, a communist state whose more equal distribution of income and state-controlled economy had generated impressive growth with no unemployment in the 1930s, even as the capitalist world was reeling. (Original: p. 635; With Sources: p. 987)12
739195334914. In what ways did fascism challenge the ideas and practices of European liberalism and democracy?At the level of ideas, fascism was intensely nationalistic, seeking to revitalize and purify the nation and to mobilize its people for some grand task. Its spokesmen condoned violence against enemies, exalted action rather than thought and reflection, and looked to a charismatic leader for direction. Fascists also bitterly condemned individualism, liberalism, feminism, parliamentary democracy, and communism, all of which, they argued, divided and weakened the nation. (Original: pp. 636-637; With Sources: pp. 988-989)13
739195335015. Who was Benito Mussolini and how did he rise to power?He was a charismatic orator and a former journalist with a socialist background. With the help of a private army of disillusioned veterans and jobless men known as the Black Shirts, Mussolini swept to power in 1922, promising an alternative to both communism and ineffective democratic rule. Considerable violence accompanied Mussolini's rise to power as bands of Black Shirts destroyed the offices of socialist newspapers, attacked striking workers, and forced socialists to drink castor oil. Fearful of communism, big business threw its support to Mussolini, who promised order in the streets, an end to bickering party-based politics, and the maintenance of the traditional social order. (Original: p. 637; With Sources: p. 989)14
739195335116. How was the German expression of Nazism like that of its Italian counterpart?Both fascism and Nazism espoused an extreme nationalism, openly advocated the use of violence as a political tool, generated a single-party dictatorship, were led by charismatic figures, despised parliamentary democracy, hated communism, and viewed war as a positive and ennobling experience. (Original: p. 638; With Sources: p. 990)15
739195335217. What was the basis of popular support for the Nazis?German liberal or democratic political leaders during the 1920s faced the active or silent animosity of much of the German population. Vigilante groups of veterans assassinated hundreds of liberal politicians, journalists, and supporters of the Weimar regime, and they received only mild punishments from conservative judges, who also detested the republic. These small groups of discontented veterans gradually drew support from the middle classes as well as from conservative landowners because of the ruinous inflation of 1923 and then the Great Depression. The German economy largely ground to a halt. Everyone demanded decisive governmental action. Many industrial workers turned to socialists and communists for answers; others looked to fascism. Large numbers of middle-class people deserted moderate political parties in favor of conservative and radical right-wing movements. (Original: p. 639; With Sources: p. 991)16
739195335318. What was Hitler's leadership message to the Germans?It was a message of intense German nationalism cast in terms of racial superiority, bitter hatred for Jews as an alien presence, passionate opposition to communism, a determination to rescue Germany from the humiliating requirements of the Treaty of Versailles, and a willingness to decisively tackle the country's economic problems. (Original: p. 639; With Sources: p. 991)17
739195335419. What did Hitler do once he was in power?Hitler quickly suppressed all other political parties, abolished labor unions, arrested thousands of opponents, controlled the press and radio, and in general assumed police power over society far more thoroughly than Italian fascists were able to achieve. (Original: pp. 639-640; With Sources: p. 991)18
739195335520. How did Hitler's policies bring Germany successfully out of the Depression?The government invested heavily in projects such as superhighways, bridges, canals, and public buildings, and, after 1935, in rebuilding and rearming the country's diminished military forces. These policies drove down the number of unemployed Germans from 6.2 million in 1932 to fewer than 5000,000 in 1937. Hitler seemed to have the secret for recovery: economic planning, controlled wages and prices, government investment, and enforced peace between capital and labor. (Original: p. 640; With Sources: pp. 991-992)19
739195335621. How did Japan's experience during the 1920s and 1930s resemble that of Germany, and how did it differ?Their experiences were similar in that both countries were newcomers to great-power status; had limited experience with democratic politics; moved toward authoritarian government and a denial of democracy at home; launched aggressive programs of territorial expansion; and enacted policies that included state-financed credit and large-scale spending on armaments and public works projects to bring their respective countries out of the Depression very quickly. Their experiences differed in that Japan remained, at least internally, a less repressive and more pluralistic society than Germany; no right-wing party was able to seize power in Japan; Japan produced no charismatic leader on the order of Mussolini or Hitler; and Japanese conceptions of their racial purity and uniqueness were directed largely against foreigners rather than an internal minority. (Original: pp. 641-645; With Sources: pp. 993-996)20
739195335722. Explain why Japan withdrew from the League of Nations; and, eventually, what was the consequence of Japan's actions?In the late 1920s and 1930s, Japanese imperial ambitions mounted as the military became more prominent and powerful in Japan's political life. An initial problem was the rise of Chinese nationalism, which seemed to threaten Japan's sphere of influence in Manchuria, which had been acquired after the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-1905. Acting independently of civilian authorities in Tokyo, units of the Japanese military seized control of Manchuria in 1931 and established a puppet state called Manchukuo. This action infuriated Western powers, prompting Japan to withdraw from the League of Nations, to break politically with its Western allies, and in 1936 to align more closely with Germany and Italy. By that time, relations with an increasingly nationalist China had deteriorated further, leading to a full-scale attack on heartland China in 1937 and escalating a bitter conflict that would last another eight years. WWI in Asia had begun. (Original: p. 645; With Sources: pp. 996-997)21
739195335823. What were Japan's political and economic relationships with the United States?Anti-immigration policies in the United States convinced some Japanese that European racism prevented the West from acknowledging Japan as an equal power. Furthermore, Japan was quite dependent on foreign and especially American sources of strategic goods. By the late 1930s, some 73% of Japan's scrap iron, 60% of its imported machine tools, 80% of its oil, and about half of its copper came from the U.S., which was becoming increasingly hostile to Japanese ambitions in Asia. (Original: pp. 645-646; With Sources: p. 997)22
739195335924. In 1940-1941, how did Japan respond to Western imperial powers to acquire necessary resources?Japan extended its military operations to the French, British, Dutch, and American colonies of Indochina (Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia today), Malaya (Malaysia today), Burma (Myanmar today), Indonesia, and the Philippines in an effort to acquire those resources that would free it from dependence on the West. In carving out this Pacific empire, the Japanese presented themselves as liberators and modernizers, creating an "Asia for Asians" and freeing their continent form European dominance. (Original: p. 647; With Sources: p. 997)23
739195336025. As a consequence of the attack on Pearl Harbor, what did it mean for both Japan and the U.S.?The United States entered the war in the Pacific, beginning a long and bloody struggle that ended only with the use of atomic bombs against Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945. The Pearl Harbor action also joined the Asian theater of the war and the ongoing conflict in Europe into a single global struggle that pitted Germany, Italy, and Japan against the U.S., Britain, and the Soviet Union. (Original: p. 647; With Sources: p. 999)24
739195336126. Although Germany was central to both world wars, how was the second one different from the first?WWII was not welcomed with the kind of mass enthusiasm that had accompanied the opening of WWI. The bitter experience of the Great War suggested to most people that only suffering lay ahead. The conduct of the two wars differed. The first war had quickly bogged down in trench warfare that emphasized defense, whereas in the second war the German tactic of blitzkrieg (lightning war) coordinated the rapid movement of infantry, tanks, and airpower over very large areas. (Original: p. 648; With Sources: pp. 999-1000)25
739195336227. How did WWII differ from WWI?WWII was more destructive than WWI, with some 60 million deaths—six times the deaths in WWI. More than half the casualties of WWII were civilians, blurring the traditional line between civilian and military targets. A further dimension of total war lay in governments' efforts to mobilize their economies, their people, and their propaganda machines even more extensively that in WWI. On a larger scale than WWI, WWII rearranged the architecture of world politics. Within a few years, a weakened Europe was impoverished, its industrial infrastructure was shattered, many of its great cities wee in ruins, and millions of its people were homeless or displaced. Additionally, Europe was divided with its western half operating under an American umbrella and eastern half subject to Soviet control. Europe no longer dominated world affairs and the U.S. was the new superpower. The League of Nations was replaced with the United Nations as a forum for international opinion than as a means of solving the major conflicts of the postwar world. A growing internationalism lay in the creation of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund in 1945, whose purpose was to regulate the global economy, prevent another depression, and stimulate economic growth, especially in the poorer nations. (Original: p. 648- 653; With Sources: pp. 1001-1005)26
739195336328. What were the three factors that helped Europe recover from the devastation of war?Europe's industrial societies proved to be resilient. The major Western European countries took steps to integrate their recovering economies. The U.S. was in a position to take a leadership role in the West and served as a reservoir of military manpower, economic resources, and political leadership for the West as a whole. (Original: pp. 653-654; With Sources: p. 1005)27
739195336429. In what ways did the Marshall Plan help to rebuild and reshape the shattered European economy after WWII?The Marshall Plan funneled some $12 billion into Europe, together with numerous advisers and technicians. It was motivated by some combination of humanitarian concern, a desire to prevent a new depression by creating overseas customers for American industrial goods, and an interest in undermining the growing appeal of European communist parties. This economic recovery plan was successful beyond anyone's expectations. Between 1948 and the early 1970s, Western European economies grew rapidly, generating a widespread prosperity and improving living standards; at the same time, Western Europe became both a major consumer for American goods and a major competitor in global markets. It also required its European recipients to cooperate with one another. (Original: p. 654; With Sources: pp. 1005-1006)28
739195336530. What was a consequence of the American occupation on Japan from 1945-1952?The democratic constitution imposed on Japan by American occupation authorities required that "land, sea, and air forces, as well as other war potential, will never be maintained." Two billion dollars in aid helped boost Japanese economy and the nation became an economic giant on the world stage. (Original: p. 655; With Sources: pp. 1006-1007)29
7391953366Great WarIt was the name originally given to the First World War. (Original: p. 625; With Sources: p. 977)30
7391953367Conscriptioncompulsory military service (the "draft") (Original: p. 629; With Sources: p. 981)31
7391953368New Deala series of reforms enacted by the President Franklin Roosevelt administration between 1933 and 1942 with the goal of ending the Great Depression (Original: p. 635; With Sources: p. 987)32
7391953369John Maynard Keynesa prominent British economist who argued that government actions and spending programs could moderated the recessions and depressions to which capitalist economies were prone. These measures were reflected in Roosevelt's New Deal policies. (Original: p. 635; With Sources: p. 987)33
7391953370Axis Powersa 1940 military alliance among Germany, Italy, and Japan that was directed against the Soviet Union and international communism. They wanted to establish and maintain a new order of things. (Original: p. 636; With Sources: p. 988)34
7391953371EECEuropean Economic Community—also known as the Common Market—was an alliance formed by Italy, France, West Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg in 1957 and dedicated to developing common trade policies and reduced tariffs; it gradually developed into the European Union (Original: p. 654; With Sources: p. 1006)35
7391953372European UnionIn 1994, the EEC was renamed the EU. In 2002, 12 of its members adopted a common currency, the euro. (Original: p. 654; With Sources:)36
7391953373NATOThe North Atlantic Treaty Organization, 1949, was a military and political alliance. It committed the United States and its nuclear arsenal to the defense of Europe against the Soviet Union, and it firmly anchored West Germany within the Western alliance. (Original: p. 654; With Sources: p. 1006)37

AP World History Chapter 15: The Last Great Nomadic Challenges: From Chinggis Khan to Timur Vocab Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
8689100086KuriltaiMeeting of all Mongol chieftains at which the supreme ruler of all tribes was selected0
8689108761KhaganTitle of the supreme ruler of the Mongol tribes1
8689121457TumensBasic fighting units of the Mongol forces; consisted of 10,000 cavalrymen; each unit was further divided into units of 1,000, 100, and ten2
8689143127KarakorumCapital of the Mongol empire under Chinggis Khan, 1162-12273
8689154207BatuRuler of Golden Horde; one of the Chinggis Khan's grandsons; responsible for invasion of Russia beginning in 12364
8689167073Ogedei(1186-1241) Third son of Chinggis Khan; succeeded Chinggis Khan as khagan of the Mongols following his father's death5
8689181478Golden HordeOne of the four subdivisions of the Mongol empires after Chinggis Khan's death, originally ruled by his grandson Batu; territory covered much of what is today south central Russia6
8689198009KhanatesFour regional Mongol kingdoms that arose following the death of Chinggis Khan7
8689210848Battle of KulikovaRussian army victory over the forces of the Golden Horde; helped break Mongol hold over Russia8
8689220602Prester JohnIn legends popular from 12th to 17th century, a mythical Christian monarch whose kingdom was cut off from Europe by Muslim conquests; Chinggis Khan was originally believed to be this mythical ruler9
8689242501Baibars(1123-1277) Commander of Mamluk forces at Ain Jalut in 1260; originally enslaved by Mongols and sold to Egyptians10
8689342220Berke(r. 1257-1266) A ruler of the Golden Horde; converted to Islam; his threat to Hulegu combined with the growing power of Mamluks in Egypt forestalled further Mongol conquests in the Middle East11
8689367459Kubilai Khan(1215-1294) Grandson of Chinggis Khan; commander of Mongol forces responsible for for conquest of China; became khagan in 1260; established sinicized Mongol Yuan dynasty in China in 127112
8689388863DaduPresent-day Beijing; so-called when Kubilai Khan ruled China13
8689403914Chabiinfluential wife of Kubilai Khan; promoted interests of Buddhists in China; indicative of refusal of Mongol women to adopt restrictive social conventions of Chinese; died c. 128114
8689428505Romance of the West ChamberChinese drama written during the Yuan period; indicative of the continued literary vitality of China during Mongol rule15
8689443316White Lotus SocietySecret religious society dedicated to overthrow of Yuan dynasty in China; typical of peasant resistance to Mongol rule16
8689457512Zhu YuanzhangThe given name of the Hongwu emperor, the founder of the Ming dynasty17
8689464342Ming DynastySucceeded Mongol Yuan dynasty in China in 1368; lasted until 1644; initially mounted huge trade expeditions to southern Asia and elsewhere, but later concentrated efforts on internal development within China18
8689486199Timur-i LangAlso known as Tamerlane; leader of Turkic nomads; beginning in 1360s from base at Samarkand, launched series of attacks in Persia, the Fertile Crescent, India, and southern Russia; empire disintegrated after his death in 140519

AP World History Chap 4 & 5 Vocab Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
4791549875CyrusCreated the Persian Empire by defeating the Medes, Lydians, and Babylonians; was known for his allowance of existing governments to continue governing under his name0
4791551892Darius IThird ruler of the Persian Empire (r. 521-486 B.C.E.). He crushed the widespread initial resistance to his rule and gave all major government posts to Persians rather than to Medes.1
4791554165PersepolisA complex of palaces, reception halls, and treasury buildings erected by the Persian kings Darius I and Xerxes in the Persian homelan2
4791557596ZoroastrianismOne of the first monotheistic religions, particularly one with a wide following. It was central to the political and religious culture of ancient Persia.3
4791559466polisA city-state in ancient Greece.4
4791562195hopliteA citizen-soldier of the Ancient Greek City-states. They were primarily armed as spear-men.5
4791562196tyranta cruel and oppressive ruler6
4791563106democracyA system of government by the whole population or all the eligible members of a state, typically through elected representatives7
4791563107HerodotusGreek Historian, considered the father of History. He came from a Greek community in Anatolia and traveled extensively, collecting information in western Asia and the Mediterranean lands.8
4791563944PericlesAthenian leader noted for advancing democracy in Athens and for ordering the construction of the Parthenon.9
4791563945Persian WarsConflicts between Greek city-states and the Persian Empire, ranging from the Ionian Revolt (499-494 B.C.E.) through Darius's punitive expedition that failed at Marathon. Chronicled by Herodotus.10
4791565239triremeGreek and Phoenician warship of the fifth and fourth centuries B.C.E. It was sleek and light, powered by 170 oars arranged in three vertical tiers. Manned by skilled sailors, it was capable of short bursts of speed and complex maneuvers.11
4791566336SocratesAthenian philosopher (ca. 470-399 B.C.E.) who shifted the emphasis of philosophical investigation from questions of natural science to ethics and human behavior.12
4791568383Peloponnesian War(431-404 BCE) The war between Athens and Sparta that in which Sparta won, but left Greece as a whole weak and ready to fall to its neighbors to the north.13
4791568384Alexander the GreatHe and his father defeated and united the weakened Greek city-states and he defeated the Persian Empire in 330 BCE thus spreading Greek culture and influence throughout Western Asia.14
4791570212Hellenistic AgeGreek culture spread across western Asia and northeastern Africa after the conquests of Alexander the Great. Ended with the fall of Rome.15
4791570213PtolemiesDynastic powers which emerged in Egypt in the aftermath of the conquest of Alexander the Great16
4791571084AlexandriaCity on the Mediterranean coast of Egypt founded by Alexander. It became the capital of the Hellenistic kingdom of Ptolemy. Was a center for leading scientific and literary figures in the classical and postclassical eras.17
479157108512 tablesRome's first code of written laws18
4791571086RepublicA form of government in which the people select representatives to govern them and make laws.19
4791571857SenateA group of 300 men elected to govern Rome in the Roman Republic.20
4791572613PrincipateA term used to characterize Roman government in the first three centuries CE, based on the ambiguous title princept ("first citizen") adopted by Augustus to conceal his military dictatorship21
4791572614equitesProsperous landowners second in wealth and status to the senatorial aristocracy. Emperors used the equites to staff the imperial civil service.22
4791573465AugustusFirst emperor of Rome (27 BCE - 14 CE) He restored order and prosperity to the Empire after nearly a century of turmoil. Grandnephew to Julius Caesar.23
4791573466aqueductA raised channel used to carry water from mountains into cities24
4791574343Pax RomanaA period of peace and prosperity throughout the Roman Empire, lasting from 27 B.C. to A.D. 180.25
4791574344JesusA Jew from Galilee in northern Israel who sought to reform Jewish beliefs and practices. He was executed as a revolutionary by the Romans. He is the basis of Christianity.26
4791574345PaulOne of the most important figures in the spread of Christianity, he worked to spread Jesus's teachings and wrote letters that explained key ideas of Christianity.27
4791575447ConstantineRoman Emperor between 306 CE and 337 CE. He issued the Edict of Milan which outlawed the persecution of Christians. He also founded the city of Constantinople, the future capital of the Byzantine Empire.28
4791576260Third-Century CrisisTurmoil that beset the Roman Empire during much of the 3rd century C.E.: frequent changes of ruler, civil wars, barbarian invasions, and decline of urban centers. After 284 C.E.29
4791576261Qin dynastyChinese dynasty in 200s BCE. Lasted 15 years. Unified Chinese kingdoms, built the Great Wall and its emperor was the legalistic Shi Huangdi.30
4791577307Shi HuangdiFounder of the short-lived Qin dynasty and creator of the Chinese Empire (r. 221-210 B.C.E.). He is remembered for his ruthless conquests of rival states and standardization.31
4791577308Han dynastyimperial dynasty that ruled China (most of the time) from 206 BC to 221 and expanded its boundaries and developed its bureaucracy32
4791578181XiongnuA confederation of nomadic peoples living beyond the northwest frontier of ancient China. Considered barbarians by China.33
4791578182Gaozufirst emperor of former Han dynasty; a powerful general who takes the Wei River Valley and moves the capital to Xi'an; a sage-emperor34
4791580299Sima QianA Chinese scholar, astronomer, and historian; author of the most important history of ancient China, Historical Records35
4791581021Chang'anCapital of Tang dynasty; population of 2 million, larger than any other city in the world at that time.36
4791581022gentryA general term for a class of prosperous families, sometimes including but often ranked below the rural aristocrats.37

AP world history Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
4823925898B.C.EBefore the Christian Era-often punctuated; before the common era0
4823925899C.EChristian era-often punctuated; common era1
4823925900AbdicateTo fail to do what is required by a duty or responsibility2
4823925901AccessionThe act or process by which someone rises to a powerul and important position3
4823925902AestheticOf or relating to art or beauty4
4823925903AgrarianOf or relating to farms or farming5
4823925904AmenitiesSomething that makes life easier or more pleasant6
4824007022AnarchyA situation of confusion and wild behavior in which the people in a country; group, organization, etc.. Are not controlled by laws7
4824007023AnimismThe belief that all plants, animals and objects have spirits8
4824007024AntiquityAncient times9
4824007025AppeasementTo make someone pleased or less angry by giving or saying something desired10
4824007026AristocracyThe highest social class in some countries: the people who have special titles11
4824007027AsceticismRelating to or having a strict and simple way of living that avoids physical pleasure12
4824007028AssimilateTo learn something do that it is fully understood and can be used13
4824007029AuthoritarianExpecting or requiring people to obey rules or laws14
4824007030AutocracyA form of government in which a country is ruled by a person or group with total power15
4824007031BarbarismCruel and violent behavior or very rude behavior16
4824007032BureaucracyA large group of people who are involved in running a government but who are not elected17
4824007033City-stateA state that has its own government and consists of a city and the area around it18
4827316042civicOf or relating to a city or town or the people who live there19
4827320866classicalof a kind that has been respected for a long time20
4827331160colonialof or relating to a colony; owning or made up of colonies21
4827332339commerceactivities that relate to the buying and selling of goods and services22
4827334725communalshared or used by members of a group or community23
4827336691concubinean unmarried woman who has sex with a man and lives with the man and his wife or wives24
4827339089conscriptionthe practice of ordering people by law to serve in the armed forces25
4827342462cosmopolitana person who has lived in and knows about many different parts of the world26
4827347909coupa brilliant sudden and usually highly and successful stroke or act27
4827350482demographythe study or changes that occur over a period of time in human populations28
4827352396despota ruler who contains total power and who often uses that power in cruel and unfair ways.29
4827359366diasporaA group of people who live outside the area in which they had lived for a long time or in which their ancestors have lived30
4827362308dissentto publicly disagree with an official opinion, decision, or set of beliefs31

AP World History World War I and Russian Revolution Terms Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
9596735590Archduke FerdinandAustro-Hungarian heir to the throne assassinated at Sarajevo in 1914; precipitated World War I.0
9596735591Western Frontwar line between Belgium and Switzerland during World War I; featured trench warfare and massive casualties among combatants1
9596735592Eastern Frontwar zone from the Baltic to the Balkans where Germans, Austro-Hungarians, Russsians, and Balkan nations fought2
9596735593Nicholas IIRussian tsar; (r. 1894-1917); executed 19183
9596735594Armenian Genocidelaunched by Young Turk leaders in 1915; claimed up to one million lives4
9596735595League of NationsA world organization established in 1920 to promote international cooperation and peace. It was first proposed in 1918 by President Woodrow Wilson, although the United States never joined the League. Essentially powerless, it was officially dissolved in 1946.5
9596735596ArmisticeNovember 11, 1918 agreement by Germans to suspend hostilities6
9596735597Georges ClemenceauA French premier who pushed for the peace conference to force the Germans to pay for the damages of the war7
9596735598David Lloyd GeorgeBritish prime minister; attempted to mediate at peace conference between Clemenceau and Wilson8
9596735599Woodrow WilsonAmerican president who called for self-determination at the League of Nations9
9596735600Treaty of VersaillesTreaty to end WWI; was very harsh towards Germany10
9596735601KulaksAgricultural entrepreneurs who utilized the Stolypin and later NEP reforms to increase agricultural production and buy additional land11
9596735602Russian Revolution of 1905Spontaneous rebellion that erupted in Russia after the country's defeat at the hands of Japan in 1905; the revolution was suppressed, but it forced the government to make substantial reforms12
9596735603SovietA Communist nation, consisting of Russia and 14 other states, that existed from 1922 to 199113
9596735604Russian Communist PartyBolshevik wing of the Russian socialists; came to power under Lenin in the November 1917 revolution14
9596735605Red ArmyA military force established by the Bolsheviks in order to put down the counterrevolutionary struggles in the Baltic Republics15
9596735606New Economic Policy (NEP)set up by Lenin after his return, he temporarily put aside his plan for state-controlled economy. Small-scale capitalism. Allowed peasants to sell crops for profit, individuals to buy and sell goods, for the government to keep control of major industries, banks and means of communication, he also encouraged foreign investment16
9596735607Josef StalinBolshevik revolutionary, head of the Soviet Communist Party after 1924, and dictator of the Soviet Union from 1928-1953. He led the Soviet Union with an iron fist, using Five-Year Plans to increase industrial production and terror to crush all opposition17
9596735608CollectivizationCreation of large, state-run farms rather than individual holdings; allowed more efficient control over peasants; part of Stalin's economic and political planning; often adopted in other Communist regimes18
9596735609Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR)Federal system of socialist republics established in 1923 in various ethnic regions of Russia; firmly controlled by Communist party; diminished nationalities protest under Bolsheviks; dissolved 199119
9596916515Emancipation of the serfsAlexander II in 1861 ended serfdom in Russia; serfs did not obtain political rights and had to pay the aristocracy for lands gained20
9596916516ZemstvoesLocal political councils created as part of Alexander II's reforms; gave middle-class professionals experience in government but did not influence national policy21
9596916517Trans-Siberian RailroadConstructed during 1870s and 1880s to connect European Russia with the Pacific; increased the Russian role in Asia22
9596916518Anarchistspolitical groups that thought the abolition of formal government was a first step to creating better society; became important in Russia and was the modern world's first large terrorist movement23
9596916519Russo-Japanese War1904; Russian expansion into northern China leads to war; rapid Japanese victory followed24
9596916520LeninRussian Marxist leader; insisted on the importance of disciplined revolutionary cells25
9596916521BolsheviksLiterally the majority party, but actually a minority group; the most radical branch of the Russian Marxist movement; led by Lenin26
9596916522DumaRussian National Assembly created as one of the reforms following the Revolution of 1905; progressively stripped of power during the region of Nicholas II27

AP World History Dates 1450-1700 Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
58062427291453Ottomans capture Constantinople0
58062440221488Dias rounded Cape of Good Hope1
58062440231492Columbus sailed the ocean blue/Reconquista of Spain2
58062440241502Slaves to Americas3
58062448471517Martin Luther/95 theses4
58062448481521Cortez conquered the Aztecs5
58062457921533Pizarro toppled the Inca6
58062457931571Battle of Lepanto, (naval defeat of Ottomans)7
58062457941588Defeat of the Spanish Armada by the British8
58062467541600Beginning of Tokugawa Shogunate9
58062467551607Foundation of Jamestown10
58062467561618-164830 years war11
58062482051683Unsuccessful Ottoman siege of Vienna12
58062482061689Glorious Revolution/English Bill of Rights13

AP World History Strayer Chapter 1 Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
6350173022Venus FigurinesPaleolithic carvings of the female form, often with exaggerated breasts, buttocks, hips, and stomachs, which may have had religious significance0
6350173023DreamtimeA complex worldview of Australia's Aboriginal peopel that held that current humans live in an echo of ancestral happenings1
6350173024Clovis CultureThe earliest widespread and distinctive culture of North America; named from the Clovis point, a particular kind of projectile point2
6350173025Megafaunal ExtinctionThe dying-out of a number of large animal species, including the mammoth and several species of horses and camels; occured around 11,000-10,000 years ago at the end of the Ice Age. The extinction may have been caused by excessive hunting or by the changing of climate of the era3
6350173026Austronesian MigrationsThe last phase of the great human migration that established a human presence in every habitable region of the earth. Austronesian-speaking people settled the Pacific island and Madagascar in a series of seaborne migrations that began around 3,500 years ago4
6350173027shamansIn many early societies, a person believed to have the ability to act as a leasion between living humans and supernatural forces, often by means of trances induced by psychoactive drugs5
6350173028trance danceIn San culture, a nightlong ritual held to activate a human being's innter spiritual potency [n/um] to counteract the evil influences of gods and ancestors. The practice was apparently common to the Khoisan people, of whom the Jo/'hoansi are a surviving remnant6
6350173029Paleolithic settling downThe process by which some Paleolithic peoples moved toward permanent settlement in the wake of the last Ice Age. Settlement was marked by increasing storage of food and accumulation of goods, as well as growing inequalities in society7
6350173030Gobekli Tepeoldest religious structure. made by hunter gathers. Indicates that religion came before organization of labor, settlement and agriculture8
6350173031Fertile CrescentA geographical area of fertile land in the Middle East stretching in a broad semicircle from the Nile to the Tigris and Euphrates9
6350173032Teosintea wild grass found in the highlands of Mexico, is the wild ancestor of maize10
6350173033DiffusionIs the process by which a characterictic spreads11
6350173034Bantu Migrations(1500BCE to 500CE) As the Bantu people migrated, they spread the Bantu family of languages and culture. The Bantu also spread the use of iron, which improved farming techniques and agricultural efficiency, the greater food supply sparked economic development and population growth. The changes instigated by the Bantu migration increased the vitality of sub-Saharan Africa.12
6350173035IshiThe last the Yali people found in northern California in 1951. He is a good example of how the growth of agricultural societies led to the collapse of gathering and hunting communities.13
6350173036"secondary products revolution"A term used to describe the series of technological changes that began c.a. 4000 B.C.E., as people began to develop new uses for their domesticated animals, exploiting a revolutionary new source of power. Examples: milk, transportation, wool, hunting help, glue, muscle power, eggs, blood, feathers, bones, ivory, manure/fertilizer, and hides/fur.14
6350173037Pastoral SocietiesBased on the domestication of animals and use their products as main source of food. Groups move where there is foods but they are more settlers than nomads. Independent and warlike.15
6350173038CatalhuyukGood example of agricultural village society. Social structure, buried dead, many people, well built houses, specialization.16
6350173039ChiefdomsA society that is led by a ruler of decent, but seldom used force to lead their people. They relied on generosity, charisma, and leadership to rule.17
6350173040Paleolithic Rock ArtThe hundreds of Paleolithic painting discovered in Spain and France, dating to about 20,000 years ago; these paintings depict a range of animals, although human figures and abstract designs are also found.18
6350173041NeanderthalsHomo sapiens neanderthalensis, a European varient of Homo sapiens that died out about 25,000 years ago19

AP World History Unit 2 Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
7624192407HinduismA religion that began in India and dates back to 1500 B.C., making it the world's oldest religion0
7624326905Hindu BeliefsWhose beliefs consist of believing in a single Divinity or supreme God that is present in everything called Brahma and also believe in other gods who are aspects of that supreme God such as Shiva, Shakti, and Ganesh?1
7624445020Hindu Gods and GoddessesWhat religion's Gods and Goddesses are very colorful and have many extra limbs and heads?2
7624522908ReincarnationThe belief that the soul repeatedly goes through a cycle of being born into a body, dying, and being reborn again in a new body to perfect yourself, soul, or energy.3
7624539067Karma (effect)A force that determines the quality of each life.4
7624545784Dharma (cause)How well one behaved in a past life.5
7624591180MokshaEach time a Hindu soul is born into a better life, it has the opportunity to improve itself further, and get closer to ultimate liberation, what is this liberation called?6
7657990558Varna (Hindu Caste System)Braha (Priests and Scholars), Chetri Kshatriya (Ruler and Warrior), Vaishya (Merchant, Trader, and Artisans), Shudra (Farmer and Laborers), and untouchables (nobody wants to be around them)7
7658083432The VedasSacred writing which consists of collections of Sanskrit hymns.8
7658104425KrishnaBrahma in human form9
7658160585Indus Valley CivilizationA light-skinned, nomadic people from the Black Sea Region known as the Indo-Europeans or Aryans migrated to the Indian sub-continent10
7658234840SanskritIndo-European culture developed the language and literary form called?11
7658286936Vedic AgeThe early part of Indian History12
7658318925Chandragupta MauryaFirst rises to power in the Ganges River Basin13
7684239462BrahmaGod of Hinduism14
7684272230SamsaraThe nature of multiple lives in Hinduism and Buddhism15
7684311458uniformed coined-money system, treatise of government, tox codes, adoption of sub-governments, and economic departmentMauryan Dynasty set up:16
7684393270AshokaAdopted Buddhism midlife, thus establishing a more moderate and diverse empire17
7684522249Siddhartha GautamaThe first Buddhist18
7684549095Nirvana"Moksha" Liberating your soul from suffering19
7684561235The Middle WayDo not live life in extremes20
7684582216The Four Noble Truth1. Life is full of Suffering 2. Desire causes suffering 3. Stop suffering by stopping desire 4. The noble eightfold path leads you to Nirvana21
7684649875TripitakaThe holy book of Buddhism22
7684683525TheravadaTraditional Buddhism which primarily spreads into East Asia and does not have a God23
7684839045Gupta EmpireMauryan Empire falls due to internal dynastic disputes and new Middle Eastern empires24
7684850374Chandra GuptaEstablishes Gupta dynasty, models rule after Mauryan, conquers most of India, and creates India's "Golden Age"25
7684901594Development of Gupta InstitutionsEconomic institutions, Political Institutions, Religious Institutions, Conquered by Huns by 550 C.E.26
7708362233Silk RoadNetwork of roads connecting China to Rome and started in 200 B.C. for trade27
7708457332Warring States PeriodStates in constant chaos with each other to try and create "One China"28
7708475784Qin DynastyA dynasty lead by Shi Huangdi "First emperor" and conquered other city-states in the waning decades of the Warring states Period29
7708662365Han DynastyA dynasty that is lead by Liu Bang and overthrew the Qin Dynasty and lead for 400 years.30
7746865796ConfucianismAn ethical system created by Confucius (Kongzi) near the end of the Zhou Dynasty or during the Warring States period. This is not a religion and is based upon the idea that every individual plays a necessary role for the greater societal good.31
7747233039DaoismEthical system that promotes balance between extremes, and living simple within the balance of nature.32
7747290145Han Dynastyinvented wood-pulp paper33
7747377415Han Dynasty FallCaused by large expenses, governors keeping a majority of taxes, commoners avoiding military service, and natural disasters and bad harvest.34
7773322214Latins, Greeks, and Etruscans (Rome)These three ethnic groups inhabit the Italian peninsula35
7773384119Twelve Tables (Rome)Ancient legislation that served as foundation of constitution and posted in Forum so every Roman could view them. All free citizens had a right to the protection of the law and it was very similar to the Bill of Rights.36
7773397315Romeestablished the first Democratic Republic37
7773428830Separation of Powers (Rome)Co-equal branches of gov't that have control over different parts of the gov't38
7773433611Senate (Rome)Aristocratic branch that created laws and had administrative powers39
7773439003Assemblies (Rome)Plebeian legislators elected by plebeians according to where they live40
7773476144Consols (Rome)2 officials that had the power of kings, commanded the military, and 1 year terms; couldn't serve until another 10 year passed41
7773490595Praetors (Rome)8 judges who oversaw criminal and civil laws42
7773496125Patricians (Rome)Wealthy landlords who inherited their wealth and power.43
7773501222Plebeians (Rome)Middle class (merchants, farmers) who are gaining wealth and power44

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