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World History Unit 1 Flashcards

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4730409616Neolithic Era"New Stone Age", discovery and cultivation of agriculture0
4730409620Neolithic "Revolution"The switch from nomadic lifestyles to a settled agricultural lifestyle is this revolution.1
4730409621Mesopotamia(land between the rivers) The region between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers; birthplace of the Sumerian and Babylonian Civilizations.2
4730409622Tigris RiverMesopotamian River, above Euphrates3
4730409623Euphrates RiverMesopotamian river, below Tigris4
4730409624Mediterranean SeaSea connecting Mesopotamia, Anatolia, and N.Africa5
4730409627BabylonThe largest and most important city in Mesopotamia.6
4730409631IrrigationManmade canals and reservoirs for easier access to water, developed by Sumerians7
4730409633City-statePolitical organization: urban king rules surrounding agricultural regions8
4730409635PolytheismBelief in more than one god9
4730409636Hammurabi's CodeExtensive law code est. by Babylonian King Hammurabi10
4730409637CuneiformWorld's 1st written language, invented by Sumerians11
4730409644MonotheismBelief in only one god12
4730409645PhoeniciansMaritime civilization in Mediterranean that developed extensive trade, communication networks, early alphabetical script13
4730409646Arabian DesertDesert on Arabian Peninsula14
4730409647Sahara DesertDesert in N.Africa15
4730409648SavannahA grassy plain in tropical and subtropical regions.16
4730409653PharaohA king of ancient Egypt, considered a god as well as a political and military leader.17
4730409654Nile RiverPrincipal water source of water flowing through North Africa (site of sophisticated cultural development)18
4730409655CairoEgyptian city along lower Nile19
4730409658HieroglyphicsEgyptian writing (pictographs & symbols representing sounds+ideas)20
4730409666Rosetta StoneA huge stone slab inscribed with hieroglyphics. It provided historians with Greek text that matched early Egyptian writing. This helped historians to decode and decipher the languages.21
4730409671Brahmana member of the highest Hindu caste, that of the priesthood22
4730409672KarmaHindu concept that the sum of good and bad in a person's life will determine his or her status in the next life23
4730409673AsceticHindu concept of a simple, non-materialistic lifestyle24
4730409674DharmaHindu concept of obedience to religious and moral laws and order25
4730409684DynastyA series of rulers from the same family26
4730409685"Mandate of Heaven"Chinese belief : heavenly powers' approval chooses emperor. A political theory of ancient China in which those in power were given the right to rule from a divine source27
4730409689Ancestor VenerationChinese belief : ancestors influence one's fortunes in life. Rituals and worship to ancestors conducted to ensure good fortune.28
4730409703Latitude & LongitudeMeasures north-south position & Measures east-west position29
4730409704Continents (7)North America, South America, Europe, Asia, Africa. Australia, Antarctica30
4730409705Oceans (4)Atlantic, Pacific, Indian, Arctic31
4730409713River Valley Civilizations - Mesopotamia- Tigris & Euphrates rivers - Cuneiform -Est. government for order & stability - Job specialization -> Social classes32
4730409714River Valley Civilization - Nile River-Pharaoh -Religious traditions (mummification,Amon-Re) -Industries, Transportation, Trade networks -Writing systems (hieroglyphic, hieratic, demotic,Coptic)33
4730426467BuddhismA belief system based on the teachings of Siddhartha Gautama, the Buddha, which stress freeing oneself from worldly desires.34
4730426960HinduismTerm for a wide variety of beliefs and ritual practices that have developed in the Indian subcontinent since antiquity. It has roots in ancient Vedic, Buddhist, and south Indian religious concepts and practices.35
4730428326ZoroastrianismFounded by Zoroaster; taught that humans had the freedom to choose between right and wrong, and that goodness would triumph in the end. Was one of the first monotheistic religions.36
4730431117JudaismFounded by Abraham it was the first of the three Abrahamic religions of Judaism, Christianity and Islam.37
4730450408ConfucianismThe system of ethics, education, and statesmanship taught by Confucius and his disciples, stressing love for humanity, ancestor worship, reverence for parents, and harmony in thought and conduct.38

The Transformation of Europe - Chapter 23 AP World History Flashcards

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5570958300Martin Luther(1483-1546) attacks Roman Caltholic church practicies, 1517. Hated practice of indulgences.0
5570958301Ninety-Five ThesesWritten by Martin Luther. Attacked the church for many abuses and called for reform. ML posted this on the door of the church.1
5570958302Pope Leo XExcommunicated Martin Luther in 15202
5570958303Printing pressInvented by Johannesburg Gutenberg. Increased literacy and published works written in vernacular.3
5570958304VernacularPublic works written in this form became popular after the printing press was invented.4
5570958305King Henry VIII(r. 1509-1547) has conflict with pope over requested divorce. England forms its own church by 1560.5
5570958306John Calvin(1509-1564) attempts to reform Protestant teaching while in exile in Geneva. Imposes strict code of morality and discipline.6
5570958307Counter-ReformationRoman Catholic Church reacts to the Protestant Reform by making changes to Catholic doctrine and attempt to renew spiritual activity.7
5570958308Council of Trent(1545-1564) periodic meetings to discuss reform. Acknowledged that abuses had led people from the Church8
5570958309St. Ignacio's Loyola(1491-1556) Founded Society of Jesus (Jesuits)9
5570958310FemaleGender of Vast majority of victims of witch hunts10
5570958311Religious tensionCaused witch hunts11
5570958312HuguenotsFrench Protestants that were persecuted in religious wars between Protestants and Roman Catholics in France (1562-1598)12
5570958313Spanish ArmadaEnormous fleet of 131 ships that Phillip II of Spain uses to attack England to force return to Catholicism.13
5570958314Decline; emergence1588 Philip II of Spain attacks England to force return of Catholicism. England destroys Spanish ships by sending flaming unmanned ships into the fleet. This event makes the decline of the ____ power and the emergence of the ____ power on the world stage.14
5570958315Holy Roman Empire300 tiny countries in Germany. States have individual rulers; 1/2 are Catholic and 1/2 are Protestant.15
5570958316Emperor's territory in GermanyPrincipal battleground of the Thirty Years' War (1618-1648)16
5570958317Treaty of WestphaliaTreaty that ends the Thirty Years War17
5570958318Charles V(r. 1519-1557) Emperor who attempts to revive Holy Roman Empire as a strong center of Europe.18
5570958319Fernando and IsabelFounded the Spanish Inquisition in 1478. The original task was to search for secret practitioners of Judaism or Islam, but later to search for Protestants. Imprisonment and executions followed capture. Intimidated nobles who might have considered Protestantism.19
5570958320Constitutional monarchyEngland's institution of popular representation.20
5570958321RepublicThe Netherlands' institution of popular representation.21
5570958322English Civil War1642-1649 Begins with opposition to royal taxes. King Charles I and Parliament's armies clash. King loses and is beheaded in 1649.22
5570958323Charles Iclashes with Parliament. Loses and is beheaded in 1649.23
5570958324Oliver CromwellThe Great Protector. Brutal rule.24
5570958325Glorious RevolutionResolution with bloodless coup. William and Mary take throne and shared governance between crown and parliament (constitutional monarchy)25
5570958326Divine rightTheory of kings gaining their authority from God.26
5570958327Cardinal RichelieuDesigned French absolutism under King Louis XIII (1624-1642). Destroyed castles of nobles and crushed aristocratic conspiracies. Built bureaucracy to bolster royal power base. Ruthlessly attacked Calvinists.27
5570958328VersaillesLocation of Louis XIV's magnificent palace. In 1670s, it becomes his court.28
5570958329Peter I"The Great" r. 1762-1796 worked to modernize Russia on Western European model. Developed modern Russian army, reformed Russian government bureaucracy.29
5570958330The GreatPeter I _____ _____ r. 1682-1735 demanded changes in fashion: beards forbidden. Built new capital at St. Petersburg.30
5570958331Catherine II"The Great" r. 1762-1797 Divided the Russian Romanov Dynasty into 50 administrative provinces. Huge military expansion.31
5570958332The greatCatherine II __ ___ r. 1762-1796 Led huge military expansion such as Partitions of Poland, 1772-1797. Social reforms at first, but end with Pugachev peasant rebellion (1773-1774)32
5570958333PotatoConsidered an aphrodisiac in 16th and 17th centuries. Replaces33
5570958334BreadPotato replaces this as a staple of diet.34
5570958335Supply and demandThis determined price in early capitalism.35
5570958336Putting outMedieval guilds were discarded in favor of this system.36
5570958337Putting outSystem where businessmen have raw materials like wool to houses in the country. Families spun yarn, wove it into cloth, cut and assembled pieces into garments. Workers were then paid for their devices when the businessman picked them up businessman sells for profit.37
5570958338Nuclear familyReplaces extended community families in capitalism38
5570958339Extended familiesWere replaced by nuclear families in capitalism.39
5570958340Adam Smith(1723-1790) wrote The Wealth of Nations. Argues that capitalism would ultimately improve society as a whole.40
5570958341The wealth of nationsAdam Smith wrote this arguing that capitalism would ultimately improve society as a whole.41
5570958342Claudius PtolemySecond-century Greek scholar of Alexandria believed that the universe was geocentric.42
5570958343GeocentricClaudia Ptolemy belief that motionless earth inside nine concentric spheres. Christians believed the last sphere was heaven.43
5570958344Nicolaus CopernicusBreaks geocentric theory. Believed the universe was not static, but instead in motion. Proposed heliocentric theory.44
5570958345HeliocentricTheory by Nicolaus Copernicus of Poland who proposed that the sun was the center of the universe. Notion of earth moving challenged Christian doctrine.45
5570958346Johannes KeplerGermany 1571-1630 Showed that planets move in an elliptical orbit, not circular. Reinforced heliocentric theory.46
5570958347Galileo GalileoItaly 1564-1642 showed that the universe was bigger, imperfect, and constantly changing. Reinforced heliocentric theory.47
5570958348Isaac NewtonEngland 1642-1727 revolutionized study of physics. Learns how planets move (gravity) explains the movement of the ocean tides. Rigorous challenge to church doctrine.48
5570958349William Harvey1578-1657 "scientifically" proves innate female inferiority. Explained the circulation of human blood. Believed men were most important concerning reproduction. Women were seen as a vessel to bear children.49
5570958350Émilie du Châtelet(1701-1749) French mathematician and physicist. Translated Newton's Principia Mathematica. (Explained his complex work and converted his formulas to calculus)50
5570958351Peace of Westphalia(1648) European states to be recognized as sovereign and equal after the Thirty Years' War.51

Chapter 13 terms -AP World History Flashcards

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6058868166fixed windsThe prevailing winds of the Atlantic, which blow steadily in the same direction; an understanding of these winds made European exploration and colonization of the Americas possible.0
6058842979Columbian exchangeThe massive transatlantic interaction and exchange between the Americas and Afro-Eurasia that began in the period of European exploration and colonization.1
6058874150The "Great Dying"Term used to describe the devastating demographic impact of European-borne epidemic diseases on the Americas.2
6058846903ConquistadorsSpanish conquerors of the Native American lands, most notably the Aztec and Inca empires. They had wonderful hats- I mean -helmets.3
6058862586creolesSpaniards born in the Americas.4
6058894139peninsularIn the Spanish colonies of Latin America, the term used to refer to people who had been born in Spain; they claimed superiority over Spaniards born in the Americas.5
6058881528mercantilismAn economic theory that argues that governments best serve their states' economic interests by encouraging exports and accumulating bullion.6
6058884447mestizoLiterally, "mixed"; a term used to describe the mixed-race population of Spanish colonial societies in the Americas.7
6058891981mulattoesTerm commonly used for people of mixed African and European blood.8
6058894140plantation complexAgricultural system based on African slavery that was used in Brazil, the Caribbean, and the southern colonies of North America.9
6058898441settler coloniesColonies in which the colonizing people settled in large numbers, rather than simply spending relatively small numbers to exploit the region; particularly noteworthy in the case of the British colonies in North America.10
6058892950Ottoman EmpireMajor Islamic state centered on Anatolia that came to include the Balkans, the Near East, and much of North Africa.11
6058855197Constantinople in 1453The capital and almost the only outpost left of the Byzantine Empire, fell to the army of the Ottoman sultan Mehmed II "the Conqueror" in 1453, an event that marked the end of Christian Byzantium.12
6058866252devshirmeThe tribute of boy children that the Ottoman Turks levied from their Christian subjects in the Balkans; the Ottomans raised the boys for service in the civil administration or in the elite Janissary infantry corps.13
6058888655Mughal EmpireOne of the most successful empires of India, a state founded by Muslim Turks who invaded India in 1526; their rule was noted for efforts to create partnerships between Hindus and Muslims.14
6058877382jizyaSpecial tax levied on non-Muslims in Islamic states; the Mughal Empire was notable for abolishing the tax for a time.15
6058835518AkbarThe most famous emperor of India's Mughal Empire (r. 1556-1605); his policies are noted for their efforts at religious tolerance and inclusion.16
6058840414AurangzebMughal emperor (r. 1658-1707) who reversed his predecessor's' policies of religious tolerance and attempted to impose Islamic supremacy.17
6058896462Qing dynastyRuling dynasty of China from 1644 to 1912; the rulers were originally from Manchuria, which had conquered China.18
6058904503ZungharsWestern Mongol group that created a substantial state (1671-1760); the threat provoked Qing expansion into Central Asia.19
6058900456SiberiaRussia's great frontier region, a vast territory of what is now central and eastern Russia, most of it unsuited to agriculture but rich in mineral resources and fur-bearing animals.20
6058902457yasakTribute that Russian rulers demanded from the native peoples of Siberia, most often in the form of furs.21

AP World History Religions Flashcards

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7409635690Why did we develop belief systems?Because humans have always needed to understand natural phenomenon0
7409635691PolytheismBelief in many gods1
7409635692MonotheismBelief in one God2
7409635693Animism-They practice nature worship -They believe that everything has a spirit -They communicated with and showed respect to ancestors. -It is practiced worldwide but mostly in Africa and the Americas.3
7409635694ShintoA Japanese religion whose followers believe that all things in the natural world are filled with divine spirits -"Way of the Gods" -Founded around the year 500 BCE -The Emperor of Japan was considered to be divine and a direct descendant of the Sun Goddess.4
7409635695HinduismA religion and philosophy developed in ancient India, characterized by a belief in reincarnation and a supreme being who takes many forms. -Polytheistic -A result of cultural diffusion between the Aryans and other native people in India. -Practiced in India -The Vedas, Upanishads, etc.. were all significant writings.5
7409635696AtmanThe spiritual oneness of the soul6
7409635697BrahmanThe term for The Universal Soul in Hinduism.7
7409635698MokshaThe Hindu concept of the spirit's 'liberation' from the endless cycle of rebirths.8
7409635699SamsaraThe endless cycle of birth, death, and rebirth9
7409635700ReincarnationIn Hinduism and Buddhism, the process by which a soul is reborn continuously until it achieves perfect understanding Basically Samsara10
7409635701Karma(Hinduism and Buddhism) the effects of a person's actions that determine his destiny in his next incarnation11
7409635702DharmaFulfilling one's duty in life12
7409635703AhismaThat all life is sacred13
7409635704Caste SystemA Hindu social class system that controlled every aspect of daily life14
7409635705Judaism-A religion with a belief in one god (Monotheistic) -It originated with Abraham and the Hebrew people. -Practiced worldwide but most Jews are in Israel. -They have 10 commandments15
7409635706BuddhismA religion founded in India by Siddhartha Gautama which teaches that the most important thing in life is to reach peace by ending suffering.16
7409635707The Four Noble TruthsThe core of the Buddhist teaching. There is suffering. There is a cause to suffering. There is an end to suffering. The is a path out of suffering (the Noble 8-fold path). 1. Life is full of pain and suffering 2. human desire causes this suffering 3. By putting an end to desire, humans can end suffering 4. Humans can end desire by following the Eightfold Path17
7409635708The Eightfold Path1. Know that suffering is caused by desire 2. Be selfless and love all life 3. Do not lie, or speak without a cause 4. Do not kill, steal, or commit other unrighteous acts 5. Do not do things which promote evil 6. Take effort to promote righteousness 7. Be aware of your physical actions, state of mind, and emotions. 8. Learn to meditate.18
7409635709ConfucianismA philosophy that adheres to the teachings of the Chinese philosopher Confucius. It shows the way to ensure a stable government and an orderly society in the present world and stresses a moral code of conduct.19
7409635710Five Relationships in Confucianism:- Ruler to ruled - Father to Son - Older brother to Younger brother - Husband to Wife - Friend to Friend20
7409635711Three concepts needed to be practiced:Ren or Jen: human kindness Li: a sense of propriety, courtesy, respect, and deference to elders Xiao: Filial Piety21
7409635712Taoism or Daoisman ideology whose central theme is the Way, a philosophy teaching that eternal happiness lies in total identification with nature and deploring passion, unnecessary invention; simple life of individuals -Ying and Yang is used to illustrate the natural harmony in the world.22
7409635713ChristianityA monotheistic system of beliefs and practices based on the Old Testament and the teachings of Jesus as embodied in the New Testament and emphasizing the role of Jesus as savior. -Also has the Ten Commandments -Believe in the Holy Trinity Christians take part in sacraments.23
7409635714The Holy TrinityThe Creator (Father), Redeemer (Son), and the Sustainer (Holy Spirit)24
7409635715SacramentsReligious practices such as baptism and receiving the Eucharist. There are 7 sacraments in total.25
7409635716IslamA religion based on the teachings of the prophet Mohammed which stresses belief in one god (Allah), Paradise and Hell, and a body of law written in the Quran. Followers are called Muslims.26
7409635717The Five Pillars of Islam1. Confession of Faith 2. Prayer 3. Charity 4. Fasting 5. Pilgrimage27
7409635718Zoroastrianism- A dualistic faith, this means they believe in two gods representing good and evil -It was very important during the Sassanid Persian Dynasty.28
7409635719LegalismChinese philosophy developed by Hanfeizi; taught that humans are naturally evil and therefore need to be ruled by harsh laws29

Ap world history Flashcards

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7312237132Period 1Technological and environmental transformations start of humanity to 600 BC0
7312237133Period 2Organization and reorganization of human societies 600 BC- 6001
7312237134Period 3Regional and transreigonal interactions 600-14502
7312237135Period 4Global interactions 1450-17503
7312237136Period 5Industrialization and global integration 1450-19004
7312237137Period 6Accelerating global change and realignments 1900- modern day5
7312237138Theme 1Interaction between humans and the environment6
7312237139Theme 2Development and interaction of cultures7
7312237140Theme 3State building expansion and conflict8
7312237141Theme 4Creation expansion and interaction of the economic systems9
7312237142Theme 5Development and transformation of social structures10

AP World History Chapter 6/7 Flashcards

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5681714572bedouinnomadic pastoralists of the Arabian peninsula; culture based on camel and goat nomadism; early converts to Islam0
5681714573Anamists1
5681714574Ridda Warswars that followed Muhammad's death; resulted in the defeat of rival prophets and some larger clans; restored unity of Islam2
5681714575Jihadsstruggle, often used for wars in defensive of the faith3
5681714576Battle of Siffinfought in 657 between forces of Ali and Umayyads; settled negotiation that led to fragmentation of Ali's party4
5681714577Mawalinon-arab converts to Islam5
5681714578Jizyahead taxed paid by all nonbelievers in Islamic territory6
5681714579Ghazu7
5681714580DhimmiLiterally "people of the book"; applied as inclusive term to Jews and Christians in Islamic territories; later expanded to Zoroastrians and even Hindus8
5681714581DamascusSyrian city that was the capitol of Umayyad caliphate9
5681714582Baghdadcapitol of Abbasid dynasty located in Iraq near ancient Persian capitol of Ctesiphon10
5681714583Ayanthe wealthy landed elite that emerged in the early decades of Abbasid rule11
5681714584Sunnimost popular in the world anyone can rule Arian12
5681714585Shiaalso known as Shi'ites; political and theological division within Islam; followers of Ali blood descendent Persian13
5681714586Sufimystics within Islam; responsible for expansion of Islam to southern Asia and other regions meditated14
5681714587Koran (Qur'an)holy book of Islam15
5681714588Ramadanmonth long holiday included fasting every nine months16
5681714589Caliphthe political and religious successor to Muhammad17
5681714590Caliphatea form of Islamic government led by a caliph18
5681714591Umayyadfirst great Muslim dynasty to rule the Caliphate19
5681714592Abbasiddynasty that succeeded the Umayyads as caliphs within Islam; came to power in 750C.E.20
5681714593Muhammad the Prophetfounder of Islam21
5681714594MosqueIslamic place for worship22
5681714595Imamaccording to Shi'ism, rulers who could trace descent from the successors of Ali23
5681714596HajjA Muslim's pilgrimage to the holy city of Mecca, to worship Allah at the Ka'ba24
5681714597Shahadahone God Allah25
5681714598Sawmfasting26
5681714599Zakattax for charity; obligatory for all Muslims27
5681714600Salatprayer five times a day facing the city of Mecca28
5681714601Dhowarab sailing vessels with triangular or lateen sails, strongly influenced European ship design29
5681714602Abu Bakrcompanion of 1st Muslim leader after Muhammad; regarded by Sunni's as the 1st caliph and rightful successor; Shi'ah regarded him as a traitor of Muhammad; known as best interpreter of dreams following Muhammad's death30
5681714603Umar31
5681714604Uthmanthird caliph murdered by numerous warriors returning from Egypt32
5681714605Alicousin and son-in-law of Muhammad; one of orthodox caliphs; focus for Shi'a33
5681714606Al-Mahdithird of the caliphs; attempted but failed to reconcile moderates among Shi'a to Abbasid dynasty; failed to resolve the problem of succession34
5681714607Haremthe part of a Muslim palace or house reserved for the residence of women35
5681714608Sunni-Shia Splitbattle of siffin36
5681714609ArchitectureMuslims37
5681714610Art (characteristics)38
5681714611Crusadersseries of military adventures initially launched by western Christmas to free Holy Land from Muslims; temporarily succeeded in capturing Jerusalem and establishing Christian kingdoms; later used for other purposes such as commercial wars and extermination of heresy39
5681714612Al-Ghazalibrilliant Islamic theologian; struggled to fuse Greek and Qur'anic traditions; not entirely accepted by ulama40
5681714613The Thousand and One Nights41

AP World History Regions Maps Flashcards

Locating the regions in APWH on a map by the green dot!

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7226004211North America0
7226004212Caribbean1
7226004213Latin America2
7226004214Central Africa3
7226004215East Africa4
7226004216East Asia5
7226004217Eastern Europe6
7226004218Middle East (Southwest Asia)7
7226004219South Africa8
7226004220South Asia9
7226004221Southeast Asia10
7226004222West Africa11
7226004223Western Europe12

AP World History Exam Flashcards

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9884197515Peloponnesian Warbetween Athens and Sparta (peloponnesian league and delian league). A plague and defeat at Syracuse weakens Athens, but Sparta doesnt destroy them out of respect. This made sparta more vulnerable to outside aggression.0
9884197516Alexander the Greatconquered the Persian empire. Divided territory into three realms: Antigonid, Ptolemaic, and Seleucid. Hellenism thrived even though it wasnt a native greek ruler. Economies were revived through trade. Empire crubled after Alexander the Great and the romans rose.1
9884197517Ancient RomeGeographically isolated - protected from outsiders. Also at a crossroad so it was a perfect location for trade. Social structure comprised of patricians (land owning nobles), plebians (everyone else), and slaves. Government made up of the Senate and the Assembly. Were a republic instead of a democracy, so the people elected representatives instead of voting on everything. Used two consuls. Law code = Twelve Tables of Rome . Centered on pater familias - eldest males in the family.2
9884197518Punic Warsbattled Carthage in North Africa. There were three wars: the first fought for control of sicily - Roman victory. Second - Hannibal ambushed the romans from the north. But hannibal had to retreat back to carthage relatively quickly. Third - Rome invaded Carthage and burned it to the ground.3
9884197519First Triumveratepompey, Crasses and Caesar. Caesar conquered Gaul and other parts of Europe - but NOT germany. War led to Caesar pushing pompey and crassus out of the picture and becoming emperor for life.4
9884197520Second TriumverateAfter Caesar's death, the government began to be led by Ocatavius, Marc Anthony, and Lepidus. Octavius achieves dominance and took the name Augustus Caesar (emperor). Stability returned to Rome (known as the period of Pax Romana). Roman empire expands farther than ever before. Growth of arts, sciences, etc. Ptomlemy lived during this time5
9884197521Religion in Ancient RomePaganism = state religion. Had to make sacrifices to Roman gods. But after Augustus, Christianity became popular. Both Judaism and Christianity were tolorated by the romans until Nero began persecuting christians. Emperor Constatntine ussued the edict of Milan to end the persecution and Christianity becomes the official religion of the Roman empire.6
9884197522Christianitygrew out of Judaism.7
9884197523Collpase of the MayaNobody knows why - but they began to desert their cities in the ninth century.8
9884197524Collapse of the Han Dynastywant mang established the Xin Dynasty. He tried to improve China, but he ended up just making everything worse. Attempted reforms and war on the edges of the empore along with the devastation due to the flooding of the yellow river make the Xin Dynasty die as well. the han dynasty was once again restored but the government had gone through too much and just collapsed.9
9884197525collapse of the gupta empireHuns invaded India, and the empire slowly lost more and more influence to these Huns10
9884197526collapse of the Western portion of the Roman empirecombination of internal decay, external pressure, the sheer size of the empire, and the succession of a few weak leaders, led the empire to collapse. Diocletian tried to divide the empire, which just led to civil war. Constantine tried to move the capital to constantinople but he struggled with the economy and external pressite. The the Visigoths and the Huns (led by Attila) began to press on the roman empire. the visigoths sacked rome in 41- and by 476 the roman emperor had been deposed. the fall of the western hald of the roman empire was complete. the eastern half would survive, but not as the roman empire. it became the byzantine empire.11
9884197527daoismbased in china. Founded by Lao-tzu. The Dao is "the way" of nature, or "the way" one should behave. it is passive. the ultimate goal is to achieve harmony with nature. the counterbalanced active chinese confucianism. but it was still able to coexist with confucianism, bhuddism, and legalism.12
9884197528legalismpracticed by Chinese, particularly during the Qin Dynasty. Focused on a highly centralized government because it didnt trust human nature. They focused on rationality. This philosophy unified China quickly and helped them achieve accomplishments like the great wall, but caused resentment among its citizens. it led to the creation of confucianism and daoism.13
9884197529HinduismPracticed in India. Began with the Aryans. Primarily concerned with Brahma, the creator of everything. they believed in rebirth, and that the caste one was born into was based on their adherence to the dharma. The ultimate goal is to merge with Brahma in a process called moksha. The sacred texts of hinduism are the vedas and upanishads. it was the cause of the creation of the caste system. it also led to bhuddism.14
9884197530Bhuddismpracticed in india, china, and southeast asia. founded by siddhartha gautama. he searched for the meaning of human life until he became the enlightened one. he created the four noble truths and the eightfold path. the ultimate goal is to achieve nirvana. this could take many lifetimes, meaning they also believed in reincarnation. split into theravada and mahayana bhuddism. Appealed to the members of the lower class. Bhuddism was consumed by Hinduism.15
9884197531the four noble truthsall life is suffering, suffering is caused by desire, the way to end suffering is to end desire, the way to end desiring is through the eightfold path.16
9884197532the eightfold pathright views, right aspirations, right speech, right conduct, right livelihood, right endeavor, right mindfulness, right meditation17
9884197533theravada bhuddismemphasizes meditation, simplicity, and an interpretation of nirvana as the renunciation of human consiousness and of the self. Bhudda is not considered a god. more practical.18
9884197534mahayana bhuddismclaims that there is an exact path one must follow in order to achieve nirvana. followed the original teachings of bhudda and turned him into a god. more radical.19
9884197535judaismpracticed by the hebrews. First monotheistic faith. believed that if they were faithful to God, he would preserve them for all eternity. Believed in an afterlife - and that if they were faithful to god it would be paradise. Beliefs contained in the Torah. Spawned the creation of islam and christianity.20
9884197536christianitySpread among the hebrew community until it expanded to the roman empire. founded by jesus of nazareth. He was crucified for the sins of his people, and his followers believed that he returned to heaven. based on the old and new testaments of the bible. they believe that jesus christ is the son of God and that forgiveness is only achieved through belief in the divinity, death, and resurection of christ. Christians felt that it was their duty to spread their faith. it was spread by paul of tarus and the disciple of jesus. it spread gradually21
9884197537the role of women in the first time periodwomen lost power as people became sedentary. depended on the society, but both bhuddism and christianity made women equals. but hinduism wouldnt even let women read the sacred vedas22
9884197538Islammonotheistic. followers called muslims. led by mohammad. teaching recorded in the Qu'ran. Believe that salvation is due to submission to god, which can be achieved through the five pillars of islam. also guided by the concept of jihad meaning "to struggle". believe that moses, mohammad, and jesus are all prophets and that mohammad was the last great prophet. split into shia and sunni.23
9884197539the five pillars of islamconfession of faith, prayer five times per day, charity to the needy, fasting during the month-long ramadan, pilgrimage to mecca at least once during one's lifetime.24
9884197540mohammad's lifeborn in mecca, he was exposed to lots of different faiths. he preached christianity until the leaders gpt mad at him and him and his followers fled to medina (known as the first HIJRA) where they found support and went back and destroyed all pagan shrines in mecca. gained followers.25
9884197541Islam after MohammadAby Bakr became caliph - sort of an emperor and religiou leader in one. Government called a caliphate - theocratic government. No clear line of succession afterwards until the fomation of the Umayyad Dynasty. The capital of Islam was moved to Damascus in Syria with Mecca as the spiritual center. Th islamic Empire spread during the Umayyad period, until they dominated the south (christians dominated the north). But Charles Martel stopped muslim expansion. The Dome of the Rock was built (a famous temple thing) After the Shiita/ Sunni split the Abbasid Dynasty reigned.26
9884197542Shiite (shia) islamclaims that Mohammad's son-in-law, Ali, was the rightful heir to the empire27
9884197543Sunni Islamwhile they hold Ali in high esteem, they did not believe that power should be given to the bloodline of Mohammad. They claimed that rulers should be chosen from the broad base of the people.28
9884197544The Abbasid DynastyWas a golden age for Islam - beautiful capital in baghdad, which became one of the great cultural centers in the world. Society was based around trade. Mohammas al-Razi produced an encyclopedia. They defeated the chinese in the BATTLE OF TALUS RIVER and won control of the silk road. the chinese exposed them to the invention of paper. monopolized trade routes. Are credited for preserving western culture. Translated the classics of ancient greek and rome into arabic. Battled with the christians over the Levant, and many europeans found some of their own culture in arabic libraries.29
9884197545the Sufisaggressive missionaries trying to convert people to islam.30
9884197546women in islamBefore, they were viewed as property of men. baby males were more valued than baby males - leading to female infanticide. However, after the Qu'ran came out, women gained considerable influence. Women were considered equal in front of Allah. The religion banned female infanticide after it began, and had power mostly within the home. But it was still a patriarchial society.31
9884197547decline of the islamic caliphatesinternal struggles, mostly between the shiites and the sunnis. then the turkish slaves, called mamaluks, revolted and established a new capital in Summara, Iraq. But the Mongols were the ones who finally defeated them. The islamic empire became the a new empire ruled by the ottoman turks.32
9884197548middle ages definitionperiod after the fall of rome but before the renaissance33
9884197549the byzantine empire and the roman empirethe roman empire had deteriorated into two different sects: the western half (dead) and the eastern half, which became the byzantine empire. The Byzantine empire was a lot more centralized and organized than the western empire. They both practiced christianity, though not in the same way (roman catholocism vs. christian orthodoxy)34
9884197550the byzantine empiregreek language, distinctive domes, followed Orthodox Christianity, ruled by an absolute authority. Thrived under JUSTINIAN: the justinian code was a law code that kept roman legal principles alive. and the arts and sciences fluourished (HAGIA SOPHIA = famous cathedral). Secular leaders headed the church35
9884197551roman catholocism vs. christian orthodoxyroman catholic - centralized, ruled by pope, more religious; christian orthodoxy - localized, ruled b secular leader, more secular36
9884197552Orthodoxy in Europepenetrated southeast europe and russia because of ST. CYRIL. VLADMIR, the prnce of russia, converted to orthodoxy, leading russia to become culturally different from the majority of europe overtime.37
9884197553foundation of the Holy Roman Empirea germanic tribe called the Franks defeated the muslims in france in the battle of tours and established he carolingian dynasty under the control of Pepin. Pepin's son, later known as Charlemagne, built the Holy Roman Empire with its first king being Otto the Great.38
9884197554the holy roman empireUnder Charlemagne, the arts and education were emphasized as well as religion. structured arounf feudalism. divided among the grandchildren of charlemange in the treaty of verdum.39
9884197555vikingsfrom scandinavia. skilled raiders because they lived on islands (limited resources) but were also merchants and fisherman. famous viking = WILLIAM who conquered Anglo-Saxon England in 1066.40
9884197556feudalismpolitical/ social system in the middle ages = king -> nobles -> vassals (in control of individual fiefs/manors) -> peasants41
9884197557medieval societypeasants were self-sufficient - used the three-field system. agricultural surplusses allowed other professions to be pursued. many peasant conflicts with the nobility. followed the code of chivalry. patriarchial society. power was passed down through primogeniture (to the eldest son, eldest son, etc.) Serfs had few rights - tied to the land. began trading with the rest of the world. emergence of a middle class.42
9884197558burghersmiddle class merchants43
9884197559hanseatic leaguealliance of cities that controlled trade throughout most of northern europe. it was established to create common trade practices, fight off pirates and foreign governments, and essentially establish a trade monopoly from the region to much of the rest of the world. over 100 cities joined over time.44
9884197560the crusadesmilitary campaigns undertaken by European Christians of the elevneth through fourteenth centuries to take over the Holy Land and convert Muslims and other non-Christians to Christianity45
9884197561the first crusadeThe christian city of jerusalem was taken over by the seljuk turks, who were not tolorant of christians. So, the christians wanted to take it back. The Byzantine Emperor requests that Pope Urban unite some troops. Pope Urban used this crusade as a way to unite the Eastern Orthodox Church and the Roman Catholic church, and many people responded emphatically. The Christians attacked Jerusalem, Palestine, and Syria. They took the land and divided it up amongst themselves.46
9884197562second crusademuslims conquered the city of Edessa, which upset the pope so he made a guy named bernard launch a second crusade. many other countries declared crusades as well, but there was a dearth in supplies and the muslims were strong so their siege failed and edessa remained in muslim hands47
9884197563thrid crusadebarbossa, richard the lion hearted, and phillip augustus launched it to gain jerusalem back from the muslims. only richard ended up attacking the muslims though. the muslims were able to keep control of jerusalem.48
9884197564fourth crusadepope innocent III asked for venice's help in launching a new crusade, but they said they'd perticipate as equals. he asked other religious leaders as well, but tried to keep kings out of it. They never captured jerusalem, but they did get constantinople, which they established as their new capital49
9884197565conflict with the church in the middle agesherecies became more common, the ideas of aristotle, ptolemy, etc. conflicted with church beliefs, and scholasticism became more common (progression in education).50
9884197566inquisitionformalized interrogation and persecution of heretics. also known as the universal church of the church militant.51
9884197567summa theologicaa book by thomas aquinas that said that faith and reason were not in conflict52
9884197568interrgnuma period between kings or governments53
9884197569unification of englandduring the rule of king john, peasants rebelled and forced him to sign the magna carta, which gave people rights and laid the foundation for parliament. Parliament was established and divided into the house of lords (legal stuff) and the house of commons (taxes and finances). this led england to establish its identitiy pretty early on54
9884197570unification of franceduring the reign of king hugo capet, england began to invade french speaking areas (not actually french yet) leading to revolts. (a particularly famous one led by young joan of arc). Eventually it became the hundred years' war, which England won, but France still centralized its power and unified itself as a nation under a series of monarchs known as bourbons55
9884197571unification of spainqueen isabella and ferdinand combined their kingdoms and enlisted the catholic church as their ally. they persecuted anyone who was not catholic (known as the spanish inquisition)56
9884197572russia during the middle agessuccumbed to the tatars under genghis khan (mongols). but the mongol power waned and the muscovy influence grew until Ivan III declared himself czar. he became known as ivan the terrible because he centralized government and used secret police, persecution, etc.57
9884197573T'ang Dynastychina expanded under emperor xuanzong, but it became so big that warlords were able to come in and cause its collapse. famous for its poetry. used the civil service exams. expanded transportation, paper money, and letters of credit. power was based on the military. founded the tribute system. during this dynasty was the reign of wu zhao, the first and only empress of china.58
9884197574Song Dynastyprospered under emperor taizu, but fell to the jurchen and mongols. developed the printing process (moveable type) which led to an increase in literacy. used the civil service exams. expanded transportation, paper money, and letters of credit. iron production waaaay increased, and invented steel. population rose a lot.59
9884197575women in china during the middle agesmuch inferior. had to endure the process of foot binding.60
9884197576religion in china during the middle agesprimarily bhuddism: mahayana and chan. mahayana stressed life outside of worldly values. chan = zen bhuddism = popular among the educated.61
9884197577neo-confucianismdaoists and confucians began to get angry at the prevalence of bhuddism in asia. So, in response, confucians created a more moderate version of confucianism. it became the focus of the song dynasty.62
9884197578japan in the middle agesled by the yamato clan, primarily followed shintoism (worshipped fami, or nature and all of the forces of nature). but eventually chinese missionaries came over and japan adopted many aspects of chinese culture. but bhuddism and shintoism were able to coexist. later, prince shotoku bassed the taika reforms, which made japan resemble china even more. then the capital was moved to heian and was ruled by the fujiwara family, when it experienced a golden age.63
9884197579korea in the middle agesa vassal state of t'ang china.64
9884197580vietnam in the middle agesresistant to t'ang authorities - maintained confucianism, but had constant battles with chinese65
9884197581delhi sultanategovernment with a bunch of islamic sultans who disliked hinduism. the majority of indians still held onto hinduism, but the sultans often destroyed temples, and persecuted hindus. but a lot of progress was also made under these sultans - universities were founded, irrigation was improved, etc.66
9884197582the mongol tribesunified by genghis khan, he created a huge mongol empire that was divided into hordes. the goldern horde was stationed in russia. in china, mongol forces were led by kublai khan. led by timur lang, they destroyed much of india and massacred thousands. They were so aggressive that many people just gave in once they learned that the mongols were pursueing them. once their domain was established, they stopped being as ruthless and the period known as pax mongolica began. however, they never had a golden age. they didnt really have an individual culture. this was because it generally accepted the native practices of any area it conquered. over time, amny mongols were assimilated into many societies.67
9884197583impacts of the mongol invasionsbecause the mongols were in russia for so long, they didnt unify or develop a culture in the same way as the west. Also, their empire was so vast that people became more aware of what was around them and world trade increased.68
9884197584kush and axumkush developed into axum around the same time as ancient egypt. axum traded ivory and gold, practiced both christianity and islam (which kept it in contact with the mediterranean)69
9884197585the aztecsalso known as the mexica, they built they're civilization in current -day mexico with Tenochtitlan as their capital. they dominated all the areas around them, but allowed the areas they conquered to govern themselves. Women mostly worked in the home. The aztec religious system was tied to the military because they took people from the areas they conquered as human sacrifices.70
9884197586the incaslocated in the andes mtns in peru. they also controlled lots of territory along the south american coastline. majority of labor was human. were polythesitic, centered around their sun god. had a strong sense of morals - punishment for bad and reward for good. everything was owned by the ruler, who was thought to have descended from the sun god. they were very skilled builders - they are famous for the construction of the temple od the sun and machu picchu. they also created a record keeping system (knots in string) calld quipu.71
9884197587indian ocean tradedominated by the persians and the arabs. dependent on the monsoons.72
9884197588the silk roadconnected china to the mediterranean, carried much more than silk - carried religion and other food.73
9884197589reasons people moved around other than conquest and tradepopulations grew, causing people to need to spread out. cities were established with the purpose of attracting people. and pilgrimages.74
9884197590treaty of tordesillasportugal and spain were fighting over territory, so they established the treaty of tordesillas, which made a line of demarcation on a longitudinal (morth-south) line that runs through the western atlantic ocean. everything to the east of the line belonged to portugal and everything on the west belonged to spain.75
9884197591amerigo vespuccihe explored south america on several trips around 1500; realized that the continent was huge and not part of asia; america was named for him76
9884197592ponce de leonin 1513, he explored florida for spain in search of the fountain of youth77
9884197593vasco de balboain 1513, he explored much of central america for spain; laid sight on the pacific ocean78
9884197594ferdinand magellanin 1519, he sailed around the tip of south america to the pacific ocean for portugal. he made it as far as the philippinesm where he diedl his crew continued, however, and became the first to circumnavigate the globe.79
9884197595giovanni de verrazanoin 1524, he explored the north american coast for france80
9884197596sir francis drakein 1578, he became the first englishman to circumnavigate the globe81
9884197597john cabotin 1597, he explored the coast of north america for england82
9884197598henry hudsonin 1609, he sailed for the dutch looking for a northwest passafe to asia; explored the hudson river and made claims to the area for the dutch83
9884197599technology that helped cause explorationsternpost rudder (from han china), lateen sails (allowed ships to sail in any direction regardless of wind), the astrolabe (portable navigation systems), the magnetic compass, and three-masted caravels84
9884197600spain after ferdinand and isabellacontrolled by Charles V (a hapsburg), who was the holy roman emperor, therefore had control over lots of territory other than spain. he had so much land to rule that he decided to abdicate the throne and gave control to his brother Phillip II. Under Phillip II, there was a LOT of expansion for Spain. This was also the period of the Spanis Inquisition. But then the Spanish armada was defeated byEngland and its power deteriorated.85
9884197601Habeas Corpus Actan act that protects people from arrests without due processes86
9884197602the Holy Roman Empire circa 1450 - 1750lost parts of Hungary to the Ottoman Turks in the early sixteenth century, the thirty years wat devastated the region and significantly weakened the role o the holy roman emperors inthe section of the ottoman empire. by the eighteenth century, the northern german city-states, especially Prussia, were gaining momentum and power.87
9884197603russia out of isolationRussian leaders were overthrowing the Mongols. Ivan III declared them free of Mongol Rule Ivan IV established absolute rule in russia and expanded russia. the land was conquered by the peasants, known as the Cossacks. Ivan IV became known as Ivan the Terrible because he expanded so far and ruled so ruthlessly. After Ivan the Terrible's death, Russia went into a period called the Time of Troubles because so many people tried to take the throne and failed. The Michael Romanov took the throne and was just as harsh as Ivan the Terrible had been. The Peter the Great came along and decided to Westernize Russia. Then Catherine the Great rose to power and continued to Westernize but also inforced repressive serfdom, which hurt Russia.88

AP World History - Chapter 1 Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
7273856275Austronesian 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 islands and Madagascar in a series of seaborne migrations that began around 3,500 years ago. (pron. aws-troe-NEEZH-an)0
7273856276Brotherhood of the TomolA prestigious craft guild that monopolized the building and ownership of large oceangoing canoes, or tomols (pron. toe-mole), among the Chumash people (located in what is now southern California).1
7273856277Chumash culturePaleolithic culture of southern California that survived until the modern era.2
7273856278Clovis cultureThe earliest widespread and distinctive culture of North America; named from the Clovis point, a particular kind of projectile point.3
7273856279DreamtimeA complex worldview of Australia's Aboriginal people that held that current humans live in a vibration or echo of ancestral happenings.4
7273856280Flores manA recently discovered hominid species of Indonesia.5
7273856281"gathering and hunting peoples"As the name suggests, people who live by collecting food rather than producing it. Recent scholars have turned to this term instead of the older "hunter-gatherer" in recognition that such societies depend much more heavily on gathering than on hunting for survival.6
7273856282great goddessAccording to one theory, a dominant deity of the Paleolithic era.7
7273856283HadzaA people of northern Tanzania, almost the last surviving Paleolithic society. (pron. HAHD-zah)8
7273856284"human revolution"The term used to describe the transition of humans from acting out of biological imperative to dependence on learned or invented ways of living (culture).9
7273856285Ice AgeAny of a number of cold periods in the earth's history; the last Ice Age was at its peak around 20,000 years ago.10
7273856286"insulting the meat"A San cultural practice meant to deflate pride that involved negative comments about the meat brought in by a hunter and the expectation that a successful hunter would disparage his own kill.11
7273856287Jomon cultureA settled Paleolithic culture of prehistoric Japan, characterized by seaside villages and the creation of some of the world's earliest pottery. (pron. JOE-mahn)12
7273856288megafaunal extinctionDying out of a number of large animal species, including the mammoth and several species of horses and camels, that occurred 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 climate of the era. (pron. meg-ah-FAWN-al)13
7273856289NeanderthalsHomo sapiens neanderthalensis, a European variant of Homo sapiens that died out about 25,000 years ago.14
7273856290n/umAmong the San, a spiritual potency that becomes activated during "curing dances" and protects humans from the malevolent forces of gods or ancestral spirits.15
7273856291"the original affluent society"Term coined by the scholar Marshall Sahlins in 1972 to describe Paleolithic societies, which he regarded as affluent not because they had so much but because they wanted or needed so little.16
7273856292PaleolithicLiterally "old stone age"; the term used to describe early Homo sapiens societies in the period before the development of agriculture.17
7273856293Paleolithic rock artWhile this term can refer to the art of any gathering and hunting society, it is typically used to describe the hundreds of Paleolithic paintings discovered in Spain and France and dating to about 20,000 years ago; these paintings usually depict a range of animals, although human figures and abstract designs are also found. The purpose of this art is debated.18
7273856294Paleolithic "settling down"The 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 society.19
7273856295San, or Ju/'hoansiA Paleolithic people still living on the northern fringe of the Kalahari desert in southern Africa. (pron. ZHUN-twasi)20
7273856296shamanIn many early societies, a person believed to have the ability to act as a bridge between living humans and supernatural forces, often by means of trances induced by psychoactive drugs.21
7273856297trance danceIn San culture, a nightlong ritual held to activate a human being's inner 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 Ju/'hoansi are a surviving remnant.22
7273856298Venus figurinesPaleolithic carvings of the female form, often with exaggerated breasts, buttocks, hips, and stomachs, which may have had religious significance.23

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