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AP World History Chapter 13 Flashcards

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5645710116BeninTerritorial state that emerged by the fifteenth century in the region that is now southern Nigeria; ruled by a warrior king who consolidated his state through widespread conquest0
5645719297FubleWest Africa's largest pastoral society, whose members gradually adopted Islam and took on a religious leadership role that led to the creation of a number of new states.1
5645727663IgboPeople whose lands were east of the Niger River in what is now southern Nigeria in West Africa; they built a complex society that rejected kingship and centralized statehood and relied on other institutions to provide social coherence.2
5645733621Inca EmpireThe Western Hemisphere's largest imperial state in the fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries; built by a relatively small community of Quechua-speaking people (the Inca), the empire stretched some 2,500 miles along the Andes Mountains, which run nearly the entire length of the west coast of South America, and contained perhaps 10 million subjects.3
5645738796quipu-asystem of record-keeping that involved using strings of knotted ropes.4
5645747680Virgins of the Sun"chosen women": Among the Incas, girls who were removed from their homes at a young age, trained in Inca ideology, and set to producing corn beer and textiles; they later were given as wives to distinguished men or sent to serve as priestesses.5
5645751727Iroquois League of Five NationsConfederation of five Iroquois peoples in what is now New York State; the loose alliance was based on the Great Law of Peace, an agreement to settle disputes peacefully through a council of clan leaders, include respect for human rights6
5645863401MalaccaMuslim port city that came to prominence on the waterway between Sumatra and Malaya in the fifteenth century C.E.; it was the springboard for the spread of a syncretic form of Islam throughout the region.7
5645867768Ming DynastyChinese dynasty (1368-1644) that succeeded the Yuan dynasty of the Mongols; noted for its return to traditional Chinese ways and restoration of the land after the destructiveness of the Mongols.8
5645877290YongleChinese emperor (r. 1402-1422) during the Ming dynasty who was a key figure in the restoration of China to greatness and who commissioned an enormous fleet to spread awareness of Chinese superiority to much of Asia and eastern Africa-treasure fleet of Zheng He.9
5645880617Zheng HeGreat Chinese admiral (1371-1433) who commanded a fleet of more than 300 ships in a series of voyages of contact and exploration that began in 140510
5645884533Mughal EmpireOne of the most successful empires of India, a state founded by an Islamized Turkic group that invaded India in 1526; the Mughals' rule was noted for their efforts to create partnerships between Hindus and Muslims. Emperor Akbar fused Hindu and Muslim traditions; Emperor Jahangir builds Taj Mahal11
5645888821Ottoman EmpireMajor Islamic state centered on Anatolia that came to include the Balkans, the Near East, and much of North Africa. Conquered the Byzantine Empire in 1453. Ruled by sultans, the most important Suleyman the Magnificent.12
5645896234Safavid EmpireMajor Turkic empire of Persia founded in the early sixteenth century, notable for it efforts to convert its populace to Shia Islam. Rival to the Ottomans who were Sunni.13
5645899345Songhay Empire: Major Islamic state of West Africa that formed in the second half of the fifteenth century. The largest of the African Empires-cities of Timbuktu and Jenne Jenno prospered with salt and gold trade. Use Islam as a way to conquer neighbors and expand the empire. Use of weapons provided by the Portuguese.14
5645903484TimbuktuGreat city of West Africa, noted in the fourteenth-sixteenth centuries as a center of Islamic scholarship.15
5645911783TimurTurkic warrior created great kingdom in central Asia (1336-1405), also known as Tamerlane, whose efforts to restore the Mongol Empire devastated much of Persia, Russia, and India. Mughal are his descendants.16

AP World History Strayer Chapter 2 Ericson Flashcards

Second Ed. Book

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6328045911Norte ChicoA region along the coast of Peru that possessed a highly-developed urban culture as early as 2500 B.C.E. Characterized by massive stepped pyramids and extensive use of cotton.0
6328045912Indus Valley CivilizationAn ancient civilization thriving along the Indus River in what is now Pakistan and western India; also sometimes referred to as the Harappan Civilization of the Indus Valley.1
6328045914Olmec CivilizationEarliest known American civilization, located in southern Mexico and known for its pyramids and huge stone heads2
6328045915UrukUruk was an ancient city of Sumer and later Babylonia. It is famous for its king Gilgamesh and is considered the first true city, the origin of writing, and the origin of the ziggurat.3
6328045916Mohenjo-Daro / Harappathe two main cities of india, know as twin capitals and both 3 miles in circumference4
6328045917Epic of GilgemeshMesopotamian flood story that includes legends and myths, the friendship of Gilgamesh and Enkidu5
6328045918Code of HammurabiEarliest know written laws which were enforced under Hammurabi's Rule, the king of Babylon.6
6328045919PatriarchyA form of social organization in which a male is the family head and title is traced through the male line; often a system where men were regarded as superior to women.7
6328045921EgyptFirst civilization/early empire to emerge along Africa's longest river, the Nile, with a detailed form of writing.8
6328045922NubiaA civilization to the south of Egypt in the Nile Valley, noted for development of an alphabetic writing system and a major iron working industry by 500 BCE9
6328057480CivilizationA traditional and somewhat controversial term to describe an urbanized society with written language, complex social, political, and religious institutions; sometimes used by anthropologists to describe any group of people sharing a cultural trait.10
6328187577Rise of City StateA small independent state consisting of an urban center and the surrounding agricultural territory. A characteristic political form in early Mesopotamia, Archaic and Classical Greece, Phoenicia, and early Italy.11
6328213265EqualityThe state of being equal, especially in status, rights, and opportunites12
6328293412Gender RoleMany and varied ways cultures have defined meaning to sexual differences; roles considered appropriate for men and women.13
6328371548Mesopotamia(land between the rivers) The region between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers; birthplace of the Sumerian and Babylonian Civilizations.14
6328533618PolytheismBelief in or worship of more than one god.15

AP World History Final Flashcards

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9034846886Li ZichengThis person was a rebel leader and iron worker in China.0
9034846887Manchu ArmiesDuring the period of 1500-1800, who were the Chinese defending against?1
9034846888ManchuriaWhere were the Manchu from?2
9034846889The MingWhich empire did the Manchu overthrow?3
9034846890The QingWhat Dynasty did the Manchu found in China?4
9034846891FeudalWhat had the political structure of japan been like since the 12th century?5
9034846892HideyoshiWhich Daimyo rose to power and set sights of invading Korea?6
9034846893They Paid Tribute to ChinaWhat was Korea's relationship with China?7
9034846894EdoAfter the death of Hideyoshi, the administrative capital was moved to? (Currently Tokyo)8
9034846895A SamuraiWhat is a warrior in Japan referred to as?9
9034846896NagasakiWhat was the name of a foreign trading port city (the only one) in Japan?10
9034846897Treaty of NerchinskThis was an agreement between Russia and China.11
9034846898The StroganovsWhat was the name of a powerful family in Russia?12
9034846899The CossacksThese mercenaries were hired by a powerful family in Russia.13
9034846900The OttomansWhat was Russia's biggest foe in the South?14
9034846901The SwedishWhat was Russia's biggest foe in the North?15
9034846902St. PetersburgWhat is the name of what is called "The Window to the West" in Russia?16
9034846903The TokugawaWhat families played a key role in Japan's future?17
9034846904The Gunpowder RevolutionWhat is the name for the great changes in East Asia in the late 16th century?18
9034846905The inability to stabilize rice prices.What caused instability for the Tokugawa Shogunate?19
9034846906ManchuriaWhere did the Qing originate from?20
9034846907TaiwanWhat island is incorporated into imperial China for the first time under the Manchu?21
9034846908South Asia/China and IndiaWhat were the two most important areas of trade for Europeans?22
9034846909The Dutch East India CompanyWhat is the VOC?23
9034846910The DutchWho overtook the Portuguese in importance in Indian Ocean trade?24
9034846911Matteo RicciWhich European became a scholar in Confucian classics?25
9034846912VaccinesWhat medical progress did the Chinese share with Europeans?26
9034846913Grown 3x its sizeChina's population had done what since 1500?27
90348469142x the sizeHow much bigger was the Qing than the Ming?28
9034846915The Industrial RevolutionWhat made Russia a major European power capable of challenging its Asian and European neighbors?29
9034846916MoscowWhich Russian city rose to prominence under the Mongols?30
9034846917The Princes of MuscovyWho led the push to get rid of the Mongols in Russia?31
9034846918Prince Ivan IVWhich Russian leader pushed South and East?32
9034846919The MongolsWhat common enemy did Russia and China have that may have brought them to a treaty?33
9034846920IslamWhat religion replaced Christianity among Steppe people in Russia?34
9034846921Muscovite rulers to the BoyarsWho did the political power change from and to in Russia?35
9034846922The RomanovsWho did the Boyars in Russia pick to rule?36
9034846923There was a 2 week period where peasants could change nobles each year.How was Russia more flexible when it came to peasants and who they worked for?37
9034846924SerfsEventually the rights of peasants changed, resulting in them becoming ________.38
9034846925The RomanovsWhat ruling family was Peter the Great a part of?39
9034846926RussiaOf Russia, China, and Japan, which one had Naval power?40
9034846927JapanOf Russia, China, and Japan, which one was not open to new people?41
9034846928ChinaOf Russia, China, and Japan, which reacted the best to Christianity?42
9034846929Peter the GreatWhich Russian leader pushed the most for westernization in Russia?43
9034846930PortugalMerchants from which country were the first to arrive in East Asia?44
9034846931CantonIn China, Europeans were permitted to trade only at45
9034846932The availability of fur peltsThe motivation for Russian expansion into the east was46

AP World History - Chapter 18 Flashcards

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58192911501. Explain why the Industrial Revolution occurred in Europe first rather than elsewhere.Certain patterns of Europe's internal development favored innovation. Its many small and highly competitive states provided an "insurance against economic and technological al stagnation," which the larger Chinese, Ottoman, or Mughal Empires perhaps lacked. In the absence of an effective tax collecting bureaucracy, the need for revenue pushed European monarchies into an unusual alliance with their merchant class. States were granted charters and monopolies to private trading companies, and governments founded scientific societies and offered prizes to promote innovation. European merchants and innovations from the 15th C. onward gained an unusual degree of freedom from state control and higher social status in some places than their counterparts. (Original: p. 530; With Sources: pp. 828-829)0
58192911512. What does Peter Stearns say about the Industrial Revolution?Europe's Industrial Revolution stemmed in great part from Europe's ability to draw disproportionately on world resources. (Original: p. 532; With Sources: p. 830)1
58192911523. What did the new societies of the Americas offer?They offered a growing market for European machine-produced goods and generated substantial profits for European merchants and entrepreneurs. (Original: p. 532; With Sources: p. 830)2
58192911534. What was distinctive about Britain that may help to explain its status as the breakthrough point of the Industrial Revolution? It was the most commercialized country in Europe. It had a growing population that ensured a steady supply of workers. British aristocrats engaged in new mining and manufacturing enterprises. The merchant fleet was protected by the British Navy. Its policy of religious toleration welcomed people with technical skills regardless of their faith unlike France's persecution of Protestants. It had tariffs to help cut cheaper Indian textiles. Britain made laws to easily form companies and forbid unions. Roads and canals helped to unify the internal market. It had patent laws and helped to protect the interests of investors. The country had a ready supply of coal and iron. The country's island location protected it from invasions that so many continental European states had suffered. (Original: pp. 532-533; With Sources: pp. 830-832)3
58192911545. How did the Industrial Revolution transform the British aristocracy?As large landowners, the British aristocracy declined as urban wealth increased with the rise of businessmen, manufacturers, and bankers who had been newly enriched by the Industrial Revolution. By the end of the century, landownership had largely ceased to be the basis of great wealth and businessmen, rather than aristocrats, led the major political parties. (Original: p. 535; With Sources: pp. 833-834)4
58192911556. How did Britain's middle class change the roles of women? Women were cast as homemakers, wives, and mothers charged with creating an emotional haven for their men. They were the moral center of family life, educators of respectability, as well as consumers. Middle class women on the farms or in artisan's shops were subordinate and worked alongside their husbands. However, by the 19th C. some middle class women began to enter teaching, clerical, and nursing professions. A lower middle class began to rise and included clerks, salespeople, bank tellers, hotel staff, secretaries, etc. This class represented about 20% of Britain's population and provided new employment opportunities for women. (Original: pp. 536-537; With Sources: pp. 834-835)5
58192911567. Over time, which class suffered most and benefited least from the transformations of the Industrial Revolution?The laboring classes. (Original: p. 537; With Sources: p. 835)6
58192911578. How was the environment in which most urban workers lived?Cities were vastly overcrowded, smoky, poor sanitation, periodic epidemics, few public services or open spaces, and inadequate water supplies. (Original: pp. 537-538; With Sources: p. 836)7
58192911589. How did industrial factories offer a work environment different from the artisan's shops or the tenant's farm?Long hours, low wages, and child labor were nothing new to the poor, but the routine and monotony of the work, dictated by the factory whistle and the needs of the machines, imposed novel and highly unwelcome conditions of labor. (Original: p. 538; With Sources: p. 836)8
581929115910. How did Karl Marx understand the Industrial Revolution?For Marx, class struggle was the central dynamic of industrial capitalist societies. (Original: p. 539)9
581929116011. What did Marx believe about capitalist societies and capitalism in general?Capitalist societies could never deliver on the promise of ending poverty because private property, competition, and class hostility prevented those societies from distributing the abundance of industrial economies to the workers whose labor had created that abundance. Capitalism was flawed, doomed to collapse amid a working class revolution as society polarized into rich and poor. (Original: p.539; With Sources: p. 837)10
581929116112. What did Marx look forward to?He looked forward to a communist future in which the great productive potential of industrial technology would be placed in service to the entire community. (Original: p. 539)11
581929116213. What hadn't Marx foreseen?Marx hadn't foreseen the development of a strong middle class social group, nor had he imagined that workers could better their standard of living within a capitalist framework. (Original: p. 540; With Sources: p. 838)12
581929116314. What were some reasons that Marxist socialism did not take root in the U.S.? One is the relative conservatism of major union organizations The immense religious, ethnic, and racial divisions of American society undermined the class solidarity of American workers, and made it more difficult to sustain class-oriented political parties and socialist labor movements. There was a higher standard of living for American workers in response to the country's remarkable economic growth. Higher level of home ownership among U.S. workers By 1910, white collar workers in sales, services, and offices outnumbered factory labor. (Original: p. 544; With Sources: p. 843)13
581929116415. What were the differences between industrialization in the U.S. and that in Russia? (Original: p. 542-547; With Sources: pp. 841-846)United States U.S. was the Western world's most exuberant democracy in the 19th C. Change bubbled up from society as free farmers, workers, and businessmen sought new opportunities and operated in a political system that gave them varying degrees of expression. Workers in the U.S. were treated better and had more outlets for grievances because of trade unions. U.S. industrialization was associated with capitalism and competition. Russia Russia remained an outpost of absolute monarchy. Change was far more initiated by the state itself in its efforts to catch up with the more powerful innovated states of Europe. Russia developed an unusually radical class consciousness, based on harsh conditions and the absence of any legal outlet for the grievances. Industrialization in Russia was associated with violent social revolutions through a socialist political party inspired by the teachings of Karl Marx.14
581929116516. What did Peter the Great do for Russia? enlarged and modernized the Russian Army created a new education system for sons of noblemen Russian nobles were instructed to dress in European styles and to shave their beards. St. Petersburg—the newly created capital—was to be Russia's "window on the West." (Original: p. 546; With Sources: p. 844)15
581929116617. Until 1897, a thirteen hour work day was common. What other factors contributed to the making of a revolutionary situation in Russia? Ruthless discipline and overt disrespect from supervisors created resentment. Life in large and unsanitary barracks added to workers' sense of injustice. The absence of legal unions and political parties often erupted into large-scale strikes. Peasant uprisings, student demonstrations, revolts of non-Russian nationalities, and mutinies in the military all contributed to the upheaval. (Original: p. 547; With Sources: p. 845)16
581929116718. Explain the tsar's limited political reforms. failed to tame working-class radicalism or to bring social stability to Russia In 1906-1907, when a newly elected and radically inclined Duma refused to cooperate with the tsar's new political system, Tsar Nicholas II twice dissolved that elected body and finally changed the electoral laws to favor the landed nobility. In Russian political life, the people had only a limited voice. (Original: p. 547; With Sources: pp. 845- 846)17
581929116819. What were the raw materials being exported from Latin America after 1860?Chile—copper Bolivia—tin Peru—guano Amazon rain forest—wild rubber Mexico—sisal Central America—bananas Argentina—beef Ecuador—cacao Brazil and Guatemala—coffee Cuba—sugar (Original: p. 550; With Sources: p. 848)18
581929116920. In return, what did Latin Americans import?Textiles, machinery, tools, weapons, and luxury goods (Original: p. 550; With Sources: p. 849)19
581929117021. What was the impact of the export boom on the various social segments of Latin American society?(Original: p. 552; With Sources: pp. 850-851) Positive Effects Negative Effects Upper Class Land-owning upper class was 1% of the population They saw their property values increase. They benefited the most. They benefited the most. Middle Class Middle class was 8% of the population Skills proved valuable and prosperity grew Lower Class Urban workers who labored in the mines, ports, in the railroads, and a few factories organized themselves and created unions and engaged in strikes. Suffered the most and benefited the least from the export boom Many farmers lost land from the government attacks on communal landholdings and peasant indebtedness to wealthy landowners. Women and children now were required to work as field laborers.20
581929117122. What was the result of the Mexican Revolution of 1917? Mexico had a new constitution that proclaimed universal suffrage. It provided for the redistribution of land. It stripped the Catholic Church of any role in public education and forbade it to own land. It gave more fights to workers, such as a minimum wage and an eight-hour work day. It placed restrictions on foreign ownership of property. (Original: p. 553; With Sources: pp. 851-852)21
581929117223. Was Latin America able to participate in the global economy through an industrial revolution of its own? Why or Why not?No. It developed a form of economic growth that was largely financed by capital from abroad and dependent on European and North American prosperity and decisions. (Original: p. 554; With Sources: p. 852)22
581929117324. How does Strayer explain "dependent development" as a new form of colonialism? Give examples. It was expressed in the power exercised by foreign investors. The U.S. owned United Fruit Company in Central America was allied with large landowners and compliant politicians, and the company pressured the governments of these "banana republics" to maintain favorable conditions to U.S. businessmen. This indirect imperialism was supplemented by repeated U.S. military intervention in support of American corporate interests in Cuba, Haiti, the Dominican Republic, Nicaragua, and Mexico. The U.S. also controlled the Panama Canal and acquired Puerto Rico as territory (Original: p. 554; With Sources: pp. 852-853)23
581929117425. Big Picture Question: In your synthesis of the chapter, what did humankind gain from the Industrial Revolution and what did it lose? Among the gains were an enormous increase in the output of goods and services because of a wholly unprecedented jump in the capacities of human societies to produce wealth. Other gains included unprecedented technological innovation; new sources of power; and new employment opportunities for participants. The losses included the destruction of some older ways of life; the demise of some older methods of production; miserable working and living conditions for many of the laboring classes; new and sometimes bitter social-and class-based conflicts; and environmental degradation. (Original: See entire chapter.)24
5819294843BourgeoisieTerm that Karl Marx used to describe the owners of industrial capital; originally meant "townspeople" (Original: p. 539)25
5819294844ProletariatTerm that Karl Marx used to describe the industrial working class; originally used in ancient Rome to describe the poorest part of the urban population (Original: p. 539)26
5819294845DumaThe elected representative assemble grudgingly created in Russia by Tsar Nicholas II in response to the 1905 revolution (Original: p. 547; With Sources: p. 845)27
5819294846BolsheviksMembers of the most radical of the socialist groups in Russia (Original: p. 547; With Sources: p. 846)28
5819294847LeninPen name of Russian Bolshevik Vladimir Ulyanov who was the main leader of the Russian Revolution of 1917 (Original: pp. 547-548; With Sources: p. 846)29
5819294848CaudilloA military strongman who seized control of a government in nineteenth century Latin America (Original: p. 549; With Sources: p. 847)30
5819294849HaciendasPlantations of the wealthy (Original: p. 549; With Sources: p. 848)31

AP WORLD HISTORY VOCAB Flashcards

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7290389415Autonomy (autonomous)The right or power to govern oneself; self-determination.0
7290403940CapitalismAn economic system based on private ownership of the means of production (land, labor, raw materials, tools, etc.) open competition, and desire for profit [opposite of socialism]1
7294234178CivilizationA complex society with a permanent location, urban areas, specialization of labor, social classes, and advanced technology.2
7294243836ColonyA foreign territory ruled by a "parent" state.3
7294250826CosmopolitanConsisting of a group of people or cultures from around the world; a diverse, multi-cultural or multi-ethnic community.4
7294254658DemocracyA government where the citizens exercise political power through voting.5
7294258521DemographicsThe statistical characteristics of human populations (ex: size, growth rate, death rate, migration)6
7294268658DiasporaThe breaking up and scattering of a people (often as a result of forced migration)7
7294273002DiffusionThe spread of cultural traditions from one area or group to another.8
7294276974EmpireA group of territories or peoples ruled by a single sovereign authority (Emperor).9
7294286653Franchise (enfranchisement)The right to vote; any right or freedom granted by the government.10
7294288977GenderThe behavioral and cultural traits typically associated with one sex (male or female).11
7294292401GlobalizationThe process of developing economic, cultural and political integration across national borders.12
7294298285HegemonyDominant influence or authority over others.13
7294299824HierarchyThe classification (or ranking) of people based on economic, social, or professional standing; a system of social classes.14
7294303874IdeologySet of beliefs, especially relating to human life, culture, or government.15
7294310569Inter-regionalBetween two or more world regions (ex: interregional trade linking Europe and Africa)16
7294318479MatriarchyA society ruled by women; a community in which women are considered the head of the family.17
7294321419Millennium (plural=millennia)A period of 1,000 years.18
7294323983MonarchyA government ruled by a single person, typically chosen from a royal family or dynasty.19
7294329304OligarchyA government ruled by a small group of elites.20
7294331468PatriarchyA society ruled by men; social organization marked by the supremacy of the father, legal dependence of wives and children, and inheritance through the male line.21
7294337625RevolutionA dramatic change in ways of thinking and behaving; the overthrow of a ruler or political system.22
7294340248RuralRelating to the countryside [opposite of urban]23
7294349473SocialismAn economic system based on public ownership of the means of production (land, labor, raw materials, tools, etc.), sharing of resources, and the desire to create economic equality [opposite of capitalism].24
7294356783Sovereignty (sovereign)Supreme authority within territorial boundaries.25
7294362012Spatial (spatially)Relating to, or occupying space; "across space"26
7294365318SpecializationProcess of becoming trained or designed for one particular reason or occupation.27
7294368925StateAn area with its own fully independent government [NOTE: State can refer to the place (country) or the government. This is different from CA being a U.S state].28
7294376556SuffrageThe legal right to vote.29
7294377705SyncretismThe blending of two or more religious or cultural traditions.30
7294381948Temporal (temporally)Relating to the sequence of time; "over time"31
7294385428UrbanRelating to a city.32

AP World History- Stearns Chapter 2 (3) Flashcards

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7596853808XianAlong with Loyang, capital of the Zhou dynasty0
7596853809Shi HuangdiFounder of the Qin dynasty in 221 BCE1
7596853810Ideographic writingPictographic characters grouped together to create new concepts; typical of Chinese writing2
7596853811Scholar-gentryChinese class created by the marital linkage of the local land-holding aristocracy with the office-holding shi; superseded shi as governors of China3
7596853812ShiProbably originally priests; transformed into corps of professional bureaucrats because of knowledge of writing during Zhou dynasty4
7596853813Nuclear familiesConsisted of husband and wife, their children, and perhaps a grandmother or orphaned cousin; typical of Chinese peasantry5
7596853814OraclesShamans or priest in Chinese society who foretold the future through interpretations of animal bones cracked by heat; inscriptions on bones led to Chinese writing6
7596853815Han dynastyChinese dynasty that succeeded the Qin in 202 BCE; ruled for the next 400 years7
7596853816ShangFirst Chinese dynasty for which archeological evidence exists; capital located in Ordos bend8
7596853817EunuchsCastrated males used within the households of Chinese emperors, usually to guard the emperor's concubine; became political counterbalance to powerful marital relatives during later Han9
7596853818LaoziAKA Lao Tsu; major Chinese philosopher; recommended retreat from society into nature; individual should seek to become attuned with Dao10
7596853819PatrilinealFamily descent and inheritance traced through the male line11
7596853820Qin dynastyEstablished in 221 BCE at the end of the Warring States period following the decline of the Zhou dynasty; fell in 207 BCE12
7596853821FeudalismThe social organization crated by exchanging grants of land of fiefs in return for formal oaths of allegiance and promises of loyal service; typically of Zhou dynasty and European Middle Ages; greater lords provided protection and aid to lesser lords in return for military service13
7596853822Secret societiesChinese peasant organizations; provided financial support in hard times and physical protection in case of disputes with local aristocracy14
7596853823WuFirst of the Zhou to be recognized as king, 1122 BCE15
7596853824Ordos bulgeLocated on Huanghe River; region of fertile soil; site of Yangshao and Longshan cultures16
7596853825LoessFine grained soil deposited in Ordos region in China bent by winds from central Asia; created fertile soil for sedentary agriculture communities17
7596853826SunziA 4th century BCE advisor to Chinese monarch, who wrote the treatise The Art of War18
7596853827Mandate of HeavenThe divine source for political legitimacy of Chinese rulers; established by Zhou to justify overthrow of Shang19
7596853828Wang MangMember of one of the powerful families related to the Han emperors through marriage; temporarily overthrew the Han between 9 and 23 CE20
7596853829YuA possible mythical Chinese ruler revered for the construction of an effective system of flood control along the Huanghe River valley; founder of the Xia kingdom21
7596853830Great WallChinese defensive fortification intended to keep out the nomadic invaders from the north; initiated during Qin dynasty and reign of Shi Huangdi22
7596853831Hsiung-nuAKA the Huns; horse nomads responsible for the disruption of Chinese, Gupta, and Roman civilizations23
7596853832DaoismPhilosophy associated with Laozi; stressed need for alignment with Dao or cosmic force24
7596853833MenciusAKA Meng Ko; follower of Confucius; stressed consent of the common people25
7596853834Extended familiesConsisted of several generations, including the family patriarch's sons and grandsons with their wives and children; typical of Shang China elites26
7596853835ZhouOriginally a vassal family of Shang China; possibly Turkic in origin; overthrew Shang and established second historical Chinese dynasty27
7596853836Vassal retainersMembers of former ruling families granted control over the peasant and artisan populations of areas throughout Shang kingdom; indirectly exploited wealth of their territories28
7596853837Forbidden cityImperial precinct within the capital cities of China; only imperial family, advisors, and household were permitted to enter29
7596853838ConfuciusAKA Kung Fuzi; major Chinese philosopher; born in 6th century BCE; author of Analects; philosophy based on need for restoration of order through advice of superior men to be found among the shi30
7596853839LoyangAlong with Xian, capital of the Zhou dynasty31
7596853840Liu BangFounder of the Han dynasty in 202 BCE32
7596853841XiaChina's first, possibly mythical, kingdom; no archeological sites have been connected to it; ruled by Yu33
7596853842TianHeaven; an abstract conception in early Chinese religion; possibly the combined spirits of all male ancestors; first appeared during Zhou dynasty34
7596853843Yellow RiverAKA the Huanghe; site of development of sedentary agriculture in China35

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