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AP World History Chapter 11 Flashcards

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7791270768Vikingsseagoing Scandinavian raiders from Sweden, Denmark, and Norway who disrupted coastal areas of western Europe from the 8th to the 11th centuries0
7791286421manorialismsystem that described economic and political relations between landlords and their peasant laborers during the middle ages involved a hierarchy of reciprocal obligations that exchanged labor or rents for access to land1
7791290729serfspeasant agricultural laborers within the manorial system of the Middle Age2
7791347164moldboardHeavy plow introduced in northern Europe during the Middle Ages permitted deeper cultivation of heavier soils a technological innovation of the medieval agricultural system3
7791357683three-field systemsystem of agricultural cultivation by 9th century in western Europe included one-third in spring grains, one-third fallow4
7791379423ClovisEarly Frankish king converted Franks to Christianity c. 496 allowed establishment of Frankish kingdom5
7791386297CarolingiansRoyal house of Franks after 8th century until their replacement in 10th century6
7791391373Charles Martel (686-741)Carolingian monarch of Franks responsible for defeating Muslims in battle of Tours in732 ended Muslim threat to western Europe7
7791401216CharlemagneCharles the great Carolingian monarch who established substantial empire in France and Germany c, 8008
7791502723Holy roman emperorsemperors in northern Italy and Germany following split of Charlemagne's empire claimed title of emperor c. 10th century failed to develop centralized monarchy in Germany9
7791523419vassalsmembers of the military elite who received land of a benefice from a feudal lord in return for military service and loyalty10
7791536261William the ConquerorInvaded England from Normandy in 1066 extended tight feudal system to England established administrative system based on sheriffs established centralized monarchy11
7791676188Magna CartaGreat Charter issued by King John of England in 1215 confirmed feudal rights against monarchical claims represented principle of mutual limits and obligations between rulers and feudal aristocracy12
7791700924parliamentsBodies representing privileged groups institutionalized feudal principle that rulers should consult with their vassals found in England, Spain, Germany, and France13
7866781146three estatesthe three social groups considered most powerful in Western countries: church, nobles, and urban leaders14
7866792974Hundred Years' WarConflict between England and France from 1137 to 1453 fought over lands England possessed in France and Feudal rights versus the emerging claims of national states15
7866844143Urban IICalled for First Crusade in1095 appealed to Christians to mount military assault to free the Holy Land from the Muslims16
7867062840Gregory VIIPope during the 11th century who attempted to free church from interference of feudal lords quarreled with Holy Roman Emperor Henry IV over practice of lay investiture17
7867076334investiturePractice of state appointment of bishops Pope Gregory VII attempted to ban the practice of lay investiture , leading to war with Holy Roman Emperor Henry IV18
7867087794Abelard, Peter (1079-1142)Author of Yes and No university scholar who applied logic to problems of theology demonstrated logical contradictions within established doctrine19
7867099454Bernard of Clairvaux (1090-1153)Emphasized role of faith in preference to logic stressed importance of mystical union with God successfully challenged Abelard and had him driven from the universities20
7867128782Aquinas, Thomas (1225-1274)Creator of one of the great syntheses of medieval learning taught at University of Paris author of several Summas believed through reason it was possible to know much about natural order, moral law, and nature of God21
7867157208ScholasticismDominant medieval philosophical approach so called because of its base in the schools or universities based on use of logic to resolve theological problems22
7867167771GothicAn architectural style that developed during the Middle Ages in western Europe featured pointed arches and flying buttresses as external supports on main walls23
7867180873Hanseatic LeagueAn organization of cities in northern Germany and southern Scandinavia for the purpose of establishing a commercial alliance24
7867191784capitalismEconomic system based on profit-seeking, private ownership, and investment25
7867197306GuildsSworn associations of people in the same business or craft in a single city stressed security and mutual control limited membership, regulated apprenticeship, guaranteed good workmanship often established franchise within cities26
7867207391Black DeathPlague that struck Europe in 14th Century significantly reduced Europe's population affected social structure27

AP World History Chapter 10 Flashcards

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9562900738Asian Christianity1. The challenge of Islam, yet many cases of tolerance: While Christianity had spread through much of North Africa and the Middle East, the unexpected rise of a new monotheistic faith meant the end of some Christian communities, especially in the Arabian Peninsula. However, the treatment of Christians was not uniform and was very much dependent on the attitude of local Muslim rulers. In Syria, Jerusalem, and Armenia, Christian leaders negotiated agreements with the Islamic forces and the communities survived. 2. Nestorian Christians in the Middle East and China: In Syria, Iraq, and Persia, a Church of the East, the Nestorians, found accommodation with Islamic rulers by not preaching to Muslims and by abandoning their sacred image as offensive to Islam's rules against idolatry. In China, the Nestorian Christians adapted to Chinese culture and used familiar terms to communicate the message of Jesus. From the 600s to the mid 800s, this church survived thanks to state tolerance; however, this changed when the dynasty moved against all foreign faiths, including Islam and Buddhism. 3. Mongols and Christians: The Mongols were tolerant in regards to issues of religion, and some even saw Jesus as a strong shaman and converted. Others preferred Christianity to Buddhism and Islam as they wanted to eat meat and drink alcohol. It is unclear what impact Jesus' message of peace had on these fierce warriors of the steppes0
9562904947African Christianity1. Coptic Church in Egypt: Christians in Egypt developed their own interpretations of the life of Jesus and their own Coptic language for worship. They were tolerated by Arab rulers until violent campaigns against them in the mid-fourteenth century (related to the Crusades and the Mongol invasion). In the good years, Copts preferred Arab rule to Byzantium as the Greek Orthodox Church viewed them as heretics. 2. Nubia: Further south in Nubia, Christianity flourished for some 600 years. Many political leaders also held religious office. Yet by 1500, pressure from Egypt, conversions, and Arab migrations spelled the end of this community. 3. Ethiopia: In the highlands of Ethiopia, a unique form of Christianity developed and survives until this day, where 60 percent of the population are Christian. Isolated from its Islamic neighbors by geography and protected by memories of the Ethiopians' shelter of Muslim refugees from Mecca during the prophet's life, the faith followed its own course without contact with other Christian churches. Ethiopians developed a fascination with Judaism and Jerusalem.1
9562909492The Byzantine State1. A smaller but more organized Roman Empire: Byzantium was really the eastern section of the Roman Empire, becoming the sole heir to Rome after it fell in 476. While Byzantium never regained control over the western Mediterranean (except for a brief period under Emperor Justinian, 527-565) and was much smaller in terms of territory, it had a strong administration and could mobilize its wealth for warfare. 2. Wealth and splendor of the court: Sitting astride the trade routes between the East and West, the empire was extremely wealthy. The empire had a decidedly Greek character but also influences from Persian court ceremonies, such as high officials in silk robes. Political power was centralized in the figure of the emperor who was celebrated in the court with a mechanical throne that rose above his visitors and mechanical lions that roared. 3. Under attack from the West and East, 1085-1453: The empire sustained some four centuries of assaults from hostile Western states such as Venice, Catholic crusaders, and Muslim Turkic armies before Constantinople finally fell to the Ottoman forces in 1453.2
9562919016The Byzantine Church and Christian Divergence1. Caesaropapism: While in Western Europe there was an intense competition between political and religious authority, in the east, the Byzantine emperor was head of the church and the state. 2. Intense internal theological debates: Within the Orthodox faith, there were intense and complicated debates over the nature of Jesus and his relationship to the Trinity and whether or not icons should be used as representations of God and Jesus. Many of these disputes resulted in violence within Byzantium. 3. Orthodox/Catholic divide: While both Western and Eastern Europe were Christian and had many similarities stemming from a shared faith, they each interpreted the faith in their own manner and were extremely suspicious of and hostile to the other faith. When the Roman Pope declared that he was the head of all Christians, the Byzantine emperor who was head of state and the church strongly disagreed. In 1054, representatives of both churches excommunicated each other, thus saying that the other faith was not truly Christian. 4. Impact of the Crusades: When the Crusades started in 1095, things went from bad to worse as Catholic troops behaved poorly, if not violently, in Byzantine lands. The Fourth Crusade of 1204 plundered Constantinople and held the city for several decades. Thus, the Crusades marked an irreparable divide between east and west.3
9562924689Byzantium and the World1. Conflicts with Persians, Arabs, and Turks: Byzantium continued the Roman Empire's conflict with the Persian Empire, which in turn weakened both of them and allowed the Arabs to seize Persia. Byzantium held out against the Arab attacks, using such technology as "Greek fire," an early form of flamethrowers. The empire finally fell to the Turkish advance, thus allowing Islam into southeastern Europe. 2. Long-distance trade, coins, and silk production: Sitting at one of the key hinges of trade, the empire became very wealthy. Its coins were used as currency and even jewelry throughout the Mediterranean for some five centuries. The Byzantines also produced much silk for both domestic and external consumption. 3. Preservation of Greek learning: Byzantine libraries preserved Greek texts from the golden age of Hellenic thought at a time when such learning was lost in the West. These texts would later be introduced to the West. 4. Slavic world and Cyrillic script: Blocked to the south and east by the Islamic world, the Byzantines spread their culture northwards into Slavic lands. In the ninth century, two Byzantine missionaries, Cyril and Methodius, developed a writing system for the Slavs based on Greek letters. This allowed for the translation of the Bible and the spreading of the faith4
9562929718The Conversion of Russia1. Kievan Rus: This was a state in present Russia and the Ukraine. Composed of diverse people including Finns, Vikings, and Balts as well as Slavs, the area engaged in long-distance trade networks along its rivers that linked Scandinavia to Byzantium. The region had a diverse religious makeup with various nature gods and small numbers of Jews, Christians, and Muslims. 2. Prince Vladimir of Kiev: In the tenth century, this leader decided the state needed a religion that would link it to the outside world. According to chronicles, he decided against Islam as his people were fond of drinking— perhaps a little too fond, some might say. Eastern Orthodoxy was attractive as the Byzantine state was wealthy and powerful and a marriage alliance sealed the decision. Importantly, this conversion was a free decision made without a military invasion, and the faith made deep inroads into the people of the region. 3. Doctrine of a "third Rome": The Rus borrowed extensively from Byzantium, including the use of icons, architectural style, a monastic tradition, and imperial control of the church. When Constantinople fell in 1453, the Rus declared that they were the "third Rome" as the first Rome had abandoned its faith and the second fell to the Muslims.5
9562937173Political Life in Western Europe, 500-10001. What was lost with the fall of Rome? With overthrow of the last Roman emperor in the West by the German general Odoacer in 476, Rome officially fell. However, this was merely a moment in a long-term decline of central authority and civilization in the West. Central political authority collapsed, cities shrunk and decayed, literacy was lost, roads fell apart, trade broke down, barter replaced a standard currency, and diseases spread among desperate people. 2. What aspects of Rome survived? While things fell apart in the Mediterranean, aspects of Rome survived in northwest Europe. Germanic peoples, once viewed as barbarians by Romans, adopted Roman law and military organization. 3. Charlemagne as a Roman emperor, 800: The survival of the dream of Rome is best seen in the crowning of King Charlemagne (r. 768-814) as a new Roman emperor by the Pope in 800. As king of the Carolingian Empire, he sought to re-establish a standard imperial infrastructure, bureaucracy, and system of weights and measures. Later Otto I of Saxony (r. 936-973) would take the title of Holy Roman Emperor.6
9562945400Society and the Church1. Feudalism and Serfdom: When Roman authority collapsed, an ad hoc political and military system developed as the political, economic, and social power of isolated land estates or manors fell into the hands of wealthy warriors. As these warrior elites were in constant competition with each other, lesser knights and lords swore loyalty to the stronger warriors. Frequently they would receive land and loot for their military service. While the slavery of the Roman Empire faded away, peasants were increasingly not personal property but were tied to the land on which they worked and not free to leave. In return for access to land, they had to pay some of their crops and other produce to the lord. In return they also received protection. 2. Role of the church: The Roman Catholic Church, with its hierarchical organization of priests, bishops, and cardinals, was the only surviving institution of the Roman past. Its organization allowed it to administer the faith, in Latin, and also to amass wealth via taxation. 3. Spreading the faith: The church worked to convert pagan Europeans to Christianity in a long and sometimes slow process. Often pagan practices, sites, and holidays were remade as Christian rituals, churches, and sacred days. On occasion, force was used to spread the faith. 4. Conflicts between church and state: With the church being the only pan-European institution and relatively weak kings eager to build power within their realms, secular-sacred tensions flared over wealth and the right to appoint bishops.7
9562950172Accelerating Change in the West1. New security after 1000: After centuries of Muslim, Viking, and Magyar attacks, security settled into Europe. 2. High Middle Ages (1000-1300): This era of economic, political, and demographic growth is known as the High Middle Ages. 3. Revival of long-distance trade: Essential to economic growth was the revival of trade routes. Regional routes connected the British Isles to the coast and onto the Baltic Sea, rivers connected the coasts to the interior, and the cities of the Mediterranean established circuits of commerce. 4. Urbanization and specialization of labor: Substantial growth in the cities saw a specialization of labor and professions. Guilds served as a method of organizing and monitoring specific professions. 5. Territorial kingdoms, Italian city-states, and German principalities: With the new security and economic growth, the states became more powerful. Some kingdoms in the northwest developed large land bases while commercially vibrant city-states characterized Italy and numerous small states dominated the German lands. 6. Rise and fall of opportunities for women: Initially, economic growth opened up opportunities for women in both the labor force and the church. However, men reasserted control and either removed women from certain trades or downgraded their role. Women also lost control over certain church to men from the clergy.8
9562958041Europe Outward Bound: The Crusading Tradition1. Merchants, diplomats, and missionaries: These Europeans established connections to the outside world and taught an isolated Europe what was out there. 2. Christian piety and warrior values: The crusading spirit combined the two most important forces of the Middle Ages: religious piety and the warrior ethos. Evidently, the European knights were able to overcome Jesus' teachings about peace and love. 3. Seizure of Jerusalem, 1099: The siege and taking of Jerusalem ended in a massive massacre of Muslims and Jews in the very place where Jesus was to have walked and taught his message of love. 4. Crusader states, 1099-1291: These were states in the Middle East held by crusading knights for almost two centuries. 5. Iberia, Baltic Sea, Byzantium, and Russia: These regions also experienced attacks from crusading knights. The Christians fought against Muslims, pagans, and Eastern Orthodox communities. 6. Less important than Turks and Mongols: For the Middle East, the Crusades were much less important than the invasions from Turkic peoples and the Mongols. It was not until the era of 19th and 20th century western imperialism that the Crusades were widely discussed in the Islamic world. 7. Cross-cultural trade, technology transfer, and intellectual exchange: The Crusades did give Europeans exposure to new goods such as sugar and spice and ideas from Islamic technology to Greek learning. 8. Hardening of boundaries: While trade did come from the Crusades, they also hardened the divisions between Roman Catholics and Muslims, Jews, and Eastern Orthodox Christians.9
9562965238Catching Up1. Backwards Europe: In all measures of comparison, Western Europe was behind the great civilizations of Eurasia. Visitors to Europe saw them as barbarians, and Europeans who went abroad realized their poverty. 2. New trade initiatives: Thanks to the exposure to the outside world, new trade missions reached out to the rest of the world. When the Mongols conquered the entire Silk Roads, European merchants such as Marco Polo ventured all the way to China and brought back tales of wealth and sophistication. 3. Agricultural breakthroughs: The foundation for Europe's growth lay in its agricultural revolution. New plows, horse harnesses, and crop rotation techniques increased grain production, which allowed for population growth, developed of a surplus, and labor specialization. 4. Wind and water mills: Europeans used wind and water mills to grind grain but also power the production of crafts goods from tanned hides to beer. 5. Gunpowder and maritime technology: A variety of technologies came from China, India, and the Arab world, and Europeans incorporated and built upon them. This is clearly seen in the development of cannons and the use of magnetic compasses, shipbuilding, advances in sails and rudders, and navigations techniques that allowed Europeans to start to project power overseas.10
9562969848Pluralism in Politics1. A system of competing states: As there was no overall power in Europe, there was a system of competing states that struggled with each other for centuries. These long-term conflicts created a militarized society with a warrior elite at its head, in contrast to China where the scholar-gentry ruled. 2. Gunpowder revolution: This interstate competition led to increased innovations in technology and military organization, as well as systems of state taxation to pay for warfare. 3. States, the church, and the nobility: A three-way political conflict developed between the heads of state, the international reach of the church in Rome, and nobles who jealously guarded their wealth and right against their kings. 4. Merchant independence: The three-way political struggle allowed merchants a great deal of independence and autonomy.11
9562974973Reason and Faith1. Connections to Greek thought: In the early years of Christianity, Greek philosophy was part of the explanation and understanding of faith. However, with the post-Roman decline, access to these texts and ideas was lost. 2. Autonomous universities: Stemming from the tradition of church schools, universities were established in various cities. Importantly, they maintained a high degree of independence and intellectual freedom. 3. A new interest in rational thought: With the growth of universities came a new interest in applying reason to explain the world and to explain the Christian faith. This was first seen in subjecting theology to critical inquiry, and later rational inquiry was applied to the natural world. 4. Search for Greek texts: As contact with the Byzantine and Arab world grew with the Crusades, there was a growing desire to get to the original source material. Scholars got ahold of texts from centers of learning in these cultures. Direct access to these texts spurred further study and the development of philosophical activity. 5. Comparisons with Byzantium and the Islamic World: While the Byzantines had many Greek texts, they were not interested in natural philosophy and focused more on the humanities. They were also suspicious of the pagan roots of much of this learning. In the Muslim world, many Greek texts were translated into Arabic, but debates arose regarding whether reason was an aid or a threat to faith.12
9562979118Christendom's legaciesMany of the features of the modern world can be traced back to the period between 500 and 1300.13
9562982560Misleading history?Yet, as we know the end of the story, it is sometimes too easy to write Europe's rise back into the history. We can this misconstruction Europe as destined for world power.14

AP World History Topic Review Flashcards

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67772342461. Discuss the innovations and technological advances that made possible the transition from sedentary to agricultural societies.Begin with conditions at places like Jerico and Çatal Huyuk and then move on to the larger populations typical of civilization. Factors to discuss are the spread of sedentary agriculture through the Middle East, the growth of the concept of private property, the need for new laws and enforcement, the development of more complex government, the building of irrigation systems, the status of women, and the invention of new tools.0
6777234247Compare and contrast the civilizations of Mesopotamia and Egypt.The following factors can be compared to illuminate the differences between the two civilizations: social stratification (the roles of land-holding nobles, priests, agricultural workers, slaves), emphasis on astronomy and related sciences, conservatism to change, the degree of political centralization, monumental architecture, literary traditions, technological development, status of women.1
6777234248Discuss the proposition that the Mongol era was simply an extension of the incursions of nomadic peoples into the affairs of sedentary civilizations. In what sense was it a civilization in its own right?Mongol khanates remained dependent on tribal organization and herding. They attempted to maintain their separateness as a people with nomadic cultural patterns. Even in China under the Yuan dynasty strict efforts were made to uphold cultural differences. Their control of trade was typical of nomadic incursions; so was the limited period of Yuan rule and use of cities. Chinggis Khan did establish a uniquely Mongol administration for an empire based on such Islamic and Chinese precedents as a universal legal code, adoption of a Mongol script, maintenance of empire wide peace, and promotion of commerce and travel.2
6777234249Discuss how the Mongol conquests can be said to have brought an end to the postclassical civilizations in Eastern Europe, Western Europe, and Islam.In Eastern Europe the conquests marked the end of Kievan dominance; the political balance shifted to Moscow as it took up chief resistance to Mongol rule. The religious center also moved to Moscow. The moves marked the beginning of Russian political centralization. For Byzantium the Mongol conquests meant the opening of Ottoman dominance in Asia Minor and the eventual loss of Constantinople. The Mongol influence in Western Europe had a limited direct impact as the conquest was quickly halted. An important indirect impact was the facilitating of the transmission of the Black Death to Western Europe. The conquests marked the end of the Western European postclassical period: the opening of trade with the East marked the beginning of the aggressive Western commerce typical of the early modem period. For Islam the conquests ended Abbasid and other minor dynastic rule; they opened the path for the political division of the Islamic heartland between the Ottomans and Mamluks.3
6777234250Discuss the definition of civilization.Civilizations are societies with reliance on sedentary agriculture, the ability to produce food surpluses, and possessing nonfarming elites, along with merchant and manufacturing groups. There have been changes in the concept of civilization through time. Early peoples used a cultural definition: uncivilized peoples were those organized differently. During the 17th and 18th centuries Europeans classified peoples according to their definition of stages in human development and in the 19th century Europeans and Americans divided societies according to supposed racially derived attributes.4
6777234251Discuss the patterns of life in paleolithic society.People in paleolithic society lived in small groups, and relied upon hunting and gathering for survival. Their life-style meant a very limited material culture. They had discovered fire and made wood, bone, and stone tools. They lived in open ground and not in caves. In gender roles there was a social deference of males to females. They developed forms of artistic expression.5
6777234252Discuss the first sedentary agricultural communities.Describe how the first communities domesticated plants and animals. Focus on the first efforts in central Russia and the Natufian complex, and then on the later developments at Jerico and Çatal Huyuk. Explain their legacy for the future.6
6777234253The neolithic agrarian revolution.What was the revolution about? Explain how the transformation made possible a better life for humans through developments in tools, seed selection, planting, fertilization, irrigation, housing, fortifications, and fiber plants. Also discuss the resulting changes in social organization: political and religious elites; specialized production of tools, weapons, pottery; merchants; lack of clearly defined social classes.7
6777234254Compare and contrast the Communist revolution in China with the Russian Revolution of 1917.The Russian Revolution followed the lack of success during World War I; Russia had not been colonized by a European power. China had been exposed to Western imperialism. Lenin had imposed a system of revolution based on an urban proletariat; Chinese communists, especially Mao, emphasized the peasantry. Both countries had an insubstantial middle class to support liberal democratic experiments; both collectivized agriculture early in their revolutionary development. Both also had five-year industrialization plans, although Russia's was much more successful than China's. Mao, through his opposition to a technocratic elite, introduced programs aimed at destroying urbanized industrialization; the Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution retarded economic development. Both regimes expanded into neighboring regions. The two regimes during their middle periods were dominated by charismatic leaders - Mao, Stalin. Both countries have introduced reforms and increased Westernization since the 1980s, but Russia's reforms have gone much farther than China's.8
6777234255Compare and contrast the experience in China and Vietnam with the process of decolonization elsewhere in the Asia and Africa.The similarities include an exposure to Western imperialism during the 19th century and to that of Japan during the 20th century. By that century they had been reduced to economic dependency in the global trade network. They had failed to industrialize and shared overpopulation problems and poverty. Their differences from other African and Asian colonial territories included the failure to development a Western-educated middle class and to undertake a lengthy period of nationalist, democratic government. They accepted a peasant-oriented form of Marxism, achieved greater success in raising the status of women, and were able to maintain independence from the diplomatic systems of the United States and the Soviet Union. Both had a secular orientation; they lacked the Catholicism of Latin America or the religious focus provided by Islam and Hinduism. They emphasized the peasantry rather than an urban working class.9
6777234256Compare and contrast the political, social, and economic development of Asian and African countries after independence with the countries of Latin America.Each region demonstrated a variety of responses to independence: failure of nationalist governments, establishment of one-party government, military regimes, charismatic populist governments. Latin America did not have a successful fundamentalist revolt similar to that of Iran. Continuing revolutions were common in all regions. Latin America has a different social hierarchy than elsewhere based on color and ethnic background. South Africa had a system where a white minority ruled and discriminated against an African majority. Many of the regions had a significant underclass. In economics all regions had difficulties in overcoming the disadvantages of an absence of industrialization, an inability to shake off economic dependency within the global trade network, the creation of huge cities full of the unemployed, and population growth swallowing any economic gains.10
6777234257Discuss whether the problems in newly-independent Asian and African nations were the creation of imperialism or the result of indigenous factors.Certain problems clearly were associated with imperialism: lack of industrialization; dependence on the sale of cash food products, minerals, and raw materials; continued economic dependency within the global trade network; cultural intrusions; artificial boundaries throwing together different ethnic and religious groups. Among indigenous problems the greatest probably is overpopulation, its effects magnified by a lack of an industrial sector to provide employment. Other indigenous problems are repressive military regimes, political corruption, and failure to distribute benefits to the majority.11
6777234258Discuss whether the decolonization movements were the result of growing strength among colonial populations or of progressive Western weakness.The colonies gained some strength as a result of the European world wars. The development of industrialization was connected with European preoccupation elsewhere. Colonial elites also obtained positions of influence because of the wars, as the European need for support gave colonies bargaining powers previously absent. The Western powers were weakened by the two global wars and the Great Depression. Treasuries were exhausted and war weariness among populations curtailed enthusiasm for colonial involvements. Thus the colonial powers were vulnerable to demands from indigenous peoples, particularly from nonviolent movements. Britain, France, and other powers used some force (Suez Canal, Indochina, Algeria) but did not win the confrontations.12
6777234259Discuss the common elements of all colonization movements in south Asia, the Middle East, and Africa.Nearly all nationalist movements were led by Western-educated elites who often had prior experience in the colonial administration. There often was a charismatic leader (Gandhi, Nkrumah). With the exception of the settler colonies and in the Middle East, decolonization usually was achieved by nonviolent confrontation on the model of India. In settler territories European populations prevented peaceful reform leading to majority rule. In the Middle East the move was complicated by Zionism which resulted in the introduction of a significant foreign Jewish population into Palestine,. In many ways the problem of Palestine resembles the problems of colonialism in the settler colonies.13
6777234260Compare and contrast the political and economic development of those economies that industrialized in the 20th centurythe Soviet Union and the Pacific rim - with that of Latin America. All of the areas have tended to authoritarian governments, whether Marxist, democratic, or authoritarian. Japan and Mexico developed forms of one-party government. Urbanization was common to all. Among the contrasts is a lack of political stability in Latin America. That region also is less industrialized than the others and remains largely dependent on 1st and 2nd world economies. Latin America has failed to develop a significant middle class, even when compared to the Soviet Union's managerial class. There is a greater underclass in Latin America, and much more of the population are peasants. Except for the Soviet Union, there is less problem with ethnic and racial diversity in other regions than in Latin America.14
6777234261Discuss the various political responses to political, economic, and social problems in Latin America and give your opinion on which response has been the most successful.The various approaches are liberal democracy, one-party rule (Mexico), populist government, populist nationalists, reformist nationalists, military governments, communist government (Cuba). For an answer it can be argued that the most successful government in Latin America, in terms of stability and economic development, has been the one-party system of the PRI in Mexico. The communist government of Cuba also has provided stability and created a broad socialist system giving significant improvements in education, housing, and health. Other governments, including the military, are often only temporary. None of the governments have resulted in the types of liberal democracy typical of the industrialized nations of the West.15
6777234262Compare the economic development and political and social organization of the Pacific Rim states to that of the Soviet Union and east Europe during the 20th century.A common theme is successful industrialization, in the Soviet Union based on heavy industry and more mixed in Japan and the rim states. In both cases consumer goods initially lagged behind, but the rim states gave greater attention to consumer life-styles. Both programs of industrialization were accomplished through state planning and central control, but with much greater recognition of private initiative in the Pacific Rim. In the Soviet Union the state provided for welfare aspects and social solidarity; in the Pacific Rim corporations provided housing, education, and social solidarity. Women were a higher percentage of the work force in the Soviet Union. Political organization in both areas depended on central planning systems with a tendency to authoritarian government. There was a greater tradition of parliamentary democracy in the rim states (especially Japan), but it was often mitigated by strong rulers (Singapore, Korea). Patterns of government have moved closer together since 1985.16
6777234263Discuss the ways in which the development of the Pacific Rim continues the traditions of Asian (primarily Chinese) civilization and the ways in which the Pacific Rim departs from that past.Chinese traditions continue to exist, including elements of the Confucian state and social system (emphasis on group solidarity and cooperation rather than competition, the concept that rulers must act to benefit all, an emphasis on central control leading to central planning and authoritarianism, tight links between government and society, a sense of cultural superiority over the West, and a retention of aspects of traditional culture - poetry, theater, art). Aspects of tradition that have been overcome are the mistrust of commercial classes replaced by the growth of corporate businessmen as social leaders, the growing acceptance of aspects of Western culture, and a more complete entry into the world trade system.17
6777234264Discuss the aspects of traditional Russian culture and politics retained by the Soviet Union and the ways in which the Soviets most departed from that past.The Russian emphasis on authoritarian government with extreme centralization of power remained. The emphasis on territorial acquisition was maintained with the domination of Eastern Europe after 1945. Among the continuities were a sense of cultural isolation from the West, Russian ethnic domination over minority ethnic and religious groups, and the predominance of the novel as a literary form. Among the differences were the destruction of the powerful landholding aristocracy, the deemphasization of the role of Orthodox Christianity, the creation of an industrialized society with a social hierarchy, the presence of household patterns typical of an industrialized state, the attempt to introduce "socialist realism" into the arts, and the collapse of isolation.18
6777234265Compare Russian and Western economic development during the 20th century.Russian industrialization resembles the 19th century accomplishments of the West, including urbanization, impact on life-styles, family formation, and birthrates. By the 1 950s The Soviets had equaled Western heavy industry productivity. They differed with an emphasis on heavy industry at the expense of consumer goods, direct control of capitalization, use of resources, and planning. Political development was very different. The West moved to parliamentary democracy while Russia and eastern Europe until 1985 followed more authoritarian forms; since then there has been a move to Western patterns. The West lost its colonies after 1945; the Soviets at first kept their subjugated lands, but lost many during the 1980s. In many ways Soviet developments parallel those of the West after a period of delay.19
6777234266Discuss whether late 20th-century European political and cultural development has been defined by the United States.The 20th century can be called an American century because of the role of the United States during World War II and the Cold War. The Americans managed the diplomatic structure of Western Europe to offset the power of the Soviet Union. The United States led in militarization while European arms spending decreased. The United States could make demands on Europeans because of its Cold War contributions; it also took over the lead in technology and through the Marshall Plan asserted economic dominance after 1945. American dominance was partially offset by the development of the European Economic Community. American cultural leadership was related to consumerism and popular culture: the United States led in the development of television and consumer fads.20
6777234267Compare and contrast the political and diplomatic structure of Europe before and after World War II.In the political sphere prior to World War II there was a decline of parliamentary government. Radical governments took power in Italy and Germany. After the war parliamentary democracies became the dominant form in western and southern Europe. In diplomacy before World War II the passivity of the greater Western nations and the United States allowed the expansion of aggressive governments that ended in general war. After the war two major alliance systems formed (NATO, Warsaw Pact) that gave the United States and Russia dominance in their respective spheres.21
6777234268Compare and contrast Harappan and Chinese civilization.1st consider their agricultural systems, religious practices, and political organization. Both agricultural systems were based on irrigation; the Harappans grew wheat, rye, peas, and rice; the Chinese produced millet and silk. In religion the Harappans emphasized fertility rituals; they had a pantheon of gods, the most significant of which may have been a nude male deity with horns; there might have been ritual bathing. The early Chinese also were concerned with fertility and practiced human sacrifice; divination was practiced on animal bones. In political organization Harappan society was closely supervised from Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro; a priestly elite probably ruled. The Chinese were governed through feudalism: decentralized under the Shang, centralized under the Zhou.22
6777234269Discuss the responses of Harappan and Chinese civilizations to contacts with outsiders and external migration.Harappan civilization was conservative, but it did have commercial contacts with foreigners; it was unable to withstand the migration of the Aryans. The Chinese were able to handle migration by absorbing invaders. The Zhou might replace the Shang, but the fundamental nature of Chinese civilization remained.23
6777234270Discuss political centralization under the Qin and Han dynasties. Discuss the factors associated with the creation of political unity in classical China.They include: the development of appropriate political philosophies; the contributions of Confucius and his disciples; other philosophies (Daoism, Legalism); the institutionalism of the teachings of Confucius in the examination system; the rise and triumph of the shi; the destruction of regional states and the feudal aristocracy; the creation of a unified political infrastructure.24
6777234271Compare the social organization of China under the Zhou and Han dynasties.Zhou China was based upon the existence of a regional aristocracy that governed as feudal vassals; the aristocracy were often members of the royal family and more closely controlled by the dynasty than under the earlier Shang rulers. Beneath the warriors were the peasantry and artisans. Han China was ruled by the imperial family and the shi who evolved into the scholar-gentry. The peasantry was divided into those with land and those without who served as agricultural laborers; artisans were growing in numbers; merchants were becoming wealthy but remained with low social status. The clear difference between the Zhou and Han was the replacement of the feudal aristocracy by the scholar-gentry and the growing importance of artisans and merchants.25
6777234272Discuss the differences in political organization between Greece and China.Greece was less politically united and hierarchic; it lacked imperial unity except briefly under Alexander; it did not have a formal bureaucracy. Both China and Greece developed formal theories of government. In social structure both held merchants and women in low social esteem, although women were marginally better off in Greek culture. The Greeks did not have a scholar-gentry class and they depended more on slavery than the Chinese. In philosophy both developed major systems: the Chinese with Confucius emphasized social and political order and with Laozi stress on unity with nature; the Greeks stressed the rational basis for the political order (Plato and Aristotle) and the natural world. Greek philosophy tended to be more dependent on general theories based on rational explanation of phenomena than the Chinese.26
6777234273Discuss the reasons for political and social fragmentation in classical Greece.Greek geography fostered political separatism. Their form of political organization, received from Mycenean civilization, was the city-state, not the empire. The city-states retained their separate identities until the Hellenistic period and existed in some form thereafter; competition between the city-states often ended in war. In social affairs there was always a gulf between the aristocratic elite and the lower classes. They had separate religious practices; philosophy did not appeal to the lower classes. The economy depended on slavery. In all, there was a greater gulf between social groups in Greece than in many other civilizations.27
6777234274Discuss the proposition that both the causes and the outcome of World War II were the result of problems created in the Treaty of Versailles.Versailles had alienated German, Japan, and Italy and helped to create radical governments in each that advocated programs of aggressive territorial acquisition. Eastern Europe, through the creation of many small nations, emerged unstable. World War II delivered almost all of them to the Soviet orbit. Control of the Pacific, including Japan, went to the United States. The problems resulting form the division of the Ottoman Empire were still unresolved after 1945. The process of decolonization initiated during World War I led to rebellion and independence after World War II. The failure of the League of Nations led to the creation of a more powerful United Nations.28
6777234275Discuss the influence of global wars and the Great Depression on the destruction of Western global dominion.Both wars demonstrated the application of industrial society to warfare. Capitalization was required. Europeans met their needs through deficit spending and borrowing, thus causing excessive inflation. The depression of 1929 was partly caused by such actions. It disrupted the global network where the West supplied manufactured goods in return for agricultural products and raw materials from dependent economies. The spread of the depression to the latter at least temporally broke the cycle of dependency. World War II ended the depression and resulted in new core economies (United States, Japan). It also destroyed the military and imperial dominance of Western Europe. The United States and Russia emerged as the great powers.29
6777234276Discuss the differing Islamic and Chinese responses to the challenge of the West and explain which society was best able to retain aspects of its traditional civilization.Islam had been in conflict with the West since its first centuries; China's conflicts. were more recent. Muslims had incorporated more of Western technology than the Chinese. Muslims shared a Judeo-Christian background with the West as well classical rationalism; Chinese culture was isolated from Western thought. Muslims were not united in one state and thus had many separate centers to defend; they were not as vulnerable to a single defeat as were the politically unified Chinese. When Chinese suffered defeats they had to fall back on a defense of the Qing dynasty as summation of their civilization; the Muslims could fall back on the religious centrality of Islamic civilization. The Western incursion into China was fatal to a traditional civilization that depended on a centralized state run by an imperial dynasty and a Confucian scholar- gentry bureaucracy. Islam, although not easily, was better able to retain traditional Muslim culture while adapting to Western military technological advance.30
6777234277Compare and contrast the incursion of the European nations into the Islamic heartland and China with their entry into Africa.Western incursions into Africa and China were initially similar: the Europeans operated from ports under indigenous control for trade with the interior. Europeans traded socially "unacceptable" commodities with both: slaves and opium; later more traditional products prevailed. Africans lost territory to the Europeans during the 19th century; the Chinese had European spheres of influence in their lands. The British intervention into Egypt was similar to interventions elsewhere in Africa: indigenous officials were retained and Western reforms were introduced. In both, Western-educated leaders led the path to independence.31
6777234278Compare and contrast the Islamic impact on India and Southeast Asia with that on sub-Saharan Africa.There were great similarities. Muslims arrived as traders and began a peaceful conversion process. Political systems remained under the control of indigenous rulers. The process made possible an accommodation between Islam and indigenous religions that made long-term conversion to Islam easier. Islam spread from cities to the countryside. The arrival of Muslims brought Africa into the Islamic world network; Southeast Asia and India expanded earlier contacts.32
6777234279Discuss the spread of Islam into Africa and its cultural impact.Islam naturally spread into regions that had contacts with Islamic societies: the savanna south of the Sahara and the Indian Ocean coastline. The cultures with the heaviest initial impact were the Sudanic kingdoms and the East African city-states. Islam brought to the various African peoples a universalistic religion and legal system. Its adoption strengthened the power of local rulers and provided contact with the wider commercial world of Islam. Trade went to the Mediterranean and the Middle East through the Sahara, and across the Indian Ocean to Arabia, Persia, and India. Africa exported raw materials in return for imported manufactures.33
6777234280Discuss the political, cultural, and economic characteristics of the Abbasid Empire.In political organization the Abbasids suffered from a loss of central authority and a growth of regional dynasties. There were many revolts by Shi'i, mercenary armies, and peasants. The dynasty crumbled from the invasions of Buyids, Seljuk Turks, and Mongols. The Abbasid economy depended on agriculture and trade. Agriculture required irrigation and this failed under the later dynasty. Cities grew and prospered; long-distance trade reached into India and Southeast Asia. In culture the Abbasids were the zenith of Islamic civilization, with advances in science, literature, mathematics, and philosophy.34
6777234281Compare and contrast the initial spread of Islam throughout the Mediterranean and the Middle East with the Islamic incursions into India and Southeast Asia.Most of the first expansion in the Mediterranean region and the Middle East was by Arabian tribesmen. The government under the Umayyads retained the initial concept of rule by a small Arab elite; full citizenship for mawali was denied. The Abbasids gave full citizenship to non-Arabs. The second stage of Islamic expansion was led by non-Arabs. The presence of Sufi missionaries made for a more peaceful expansion and to less restrictive forms of Islam. Converts, as in the Delhi sultanate, retained many of their previous Hindu beliefs and social systems.35
6777234282Discuss why the disputes over authority after the death of Muhammad served to hinder future Muslim unity.Muhammad did not leave a principle for succession within Islam; he was the final prophet. Successors to lead the Muslim community first were elected by the umma. Ali contested the system by advocating descent from Muhammad; this became the focal point of Shi'ism. Ali's opposition caused civil war and Umayyad success led to their founding of a dynasty. The Shi'i never accepted defeat; descendants of Muhammad were always present to contest rule over Muslims. A fundamental division remained between the Sunni and Shi'i divisions of Islam.36
6777234283Discuss how a nomadic pastoral society produced a religion capable of achieving global dominance.Arabia before Islam was the home of a typical pastoral nomadic society; the region lacked true urbanization, occupational specialization, and the degree of social stratification usually found in civilizations that allowed the maintenance of specialized bureaucracies. Also missing were industries associated with civilization, a rich material culture, and a writing system. Islam allowed the bedouin to overcome the problems of tribalism and to unify into a religio-political system that transcended clan and tribal limits. Islamic warriors then were able to overcome their civilized, but weak, neighbors. After conquest the Muslims incorporated influences from civilizations: bureaucracies, urbanization, social stratification, occupational specialization. Unity came from religious beliefs, a single law code, and an evolving distinctive Islamic culture.37
6777234284Compare and contrast the political and social organization of Rome, Gupta India, and Han ChinaIn political organization all three developed imperial forms. The Gupta were the least centralized; they basically were a tribute-collecting network of otherwise independent petty states. The Romans also allowed substantial local autonomy in government, but exercised centralization through legal codes applicable to all residents of the empire. The Han, with its professionalized bureaucracy working in the emperor's name, was the most centralized. In social organization all three had rigid social classifications based on principles of social inequality. Each had different elites: brahmans in India, scholar-gentry in China, land-owning aristocracy in Rome. Social mobility varied greatly. In India there was virtually none; in Rome acquired wealth was recognized; in China the examination system allowed advancement. The lowest classes in India, the untouchables, performed polluting occupations. The Romans had slavery as a major institution.38
6777234285Discuss whether Rome was simply a continuation of Greek civilization or an innovator in the Mediterranean world.Rome served primarily to maintain the cultural accomplishments of the Greeks, especially in science, art, literature, and philosophy. The Roman developed significant innovations in engineering. In politics the Roman republic began in the Greek tradition with a balanced constitution typical of a city-state. The Roman empire was something new in Mediterranean civilization; its most innovative aspect was the formation of a universal legal code. The empire also presided over the development of Christianity, a major world religion.MS39
6777234286Discuss the importance of the brahmans and the caste system to Indian development.In India, despite the achievements of the Maurya, Kushana, and Gupta empires, a division into many petty states governed by the Aryan warrior elite was most common. The duration of empires was relatively brief. Conversely, Indian social organization, although it became more complex and rigid as time passed, was constant throughout the classical period. The brahmans enjoyed both social dominance and religious authority; they were one of the highest castes and were monopolists of the rituals associated with the Vedas. Except for the Maurya empire under Ashoka, governments accepted the social position of the brahmans and patronized their religious authority.40
6777234287Compare and contrast the political, social, and religious organization of Gupta India and Han China.In political life the Han state was vastly more centralized than the Gupta. The Han governed through the scholar-gentry, an educated and professional bureaucracy certified through national examinations; regional authority was limited. The Gupta depended on the brahmans for political advice and administrative personnel; they never directly controlled the various petty state subdivisions that paid tribute. Both Han and Gupta societies possessed substantial social stratification. In China the scholar-gentry joined land-holding with administrative authority; beneath them were artisans and peasants. Merchants, although wealthy, held low social status. In India the caste system provided social stability; brahmans, warriors, and merchants composed the higher castes; artisans and peasants were next. At the bottom were the untouchables. In religion Han China depended on the political and ethical teachings of Confucius institutionalized through the university and examination system. Gupta India patronized the revitalized Hinduism of the brahmans; their position in society was institutionalized by social tradition and religion rather than by state authority.41
6777234288Discuss the social, political, and economic bases of civilization in the Americas.In both Americas social stratification was based on a priesthood, a warlike nobility, and agricultural commoners; kinship groups were significant. In political life the creation of empires based on control of broad regions was more common in Mesoamerican than Andean civilizations. Political life centered on urbanized temple complexes with monumental architecture devoted to religious ceremonies; scribes and bureaucracies were associated with priesthood. Economic life was based on sedentary agriculture that required irrigation; that need may have led to increasing social complexity and more sophisticated political forms. The existence of microecologies led to a variety of products and elements of trade. Trade networks were widespread within empires.42
6777234289Compare and contrast American civilizations with the early civilizations of the Middle East, Harappa, and Shang China.One basic difference was topographical and geographical: with the exception of the moundbuilding cultures of North America, American civilizations were not based on river valleys. Both Old and New World civilizations emerged in relation to the development of irrigation; in the New World forms of terracing and ridging were used. In the New World topography divided into multiple microecologies unlike the more general ecological zones of the Old World. In both Old and New Worlds formative civilizations evolved from urbanized temple complexes featuring monumental architecture. Pyramid forms were found in Egypt and the Americas; walled ceremonial complexes in moundbuilding cultures and all three Old World Cultures. Writing - primarily found in the Americas in Mesoamerica - was not as common as in the Old World. The New World had a simpler material culture, a more limited technology, and a general lack of pastoralism.43
6777234290Compare and contrast the developing societies of Africa, northern Europe, Japan, and Polynesia to the classical cultures of the core civilizations.The core civilizations influenced the others through the importation of agriculture (grains, domesticated animals in Africa, wet rice in Japan). The imports increased the complexity of social and political organization. Egyptian customs may have influenced some African societies. Religious influence came from the core through Christianity passing to Axum, Islam to African regions, and Buddhism to Japan. Iron metallurgy spread to Africa and Japan. The developing societies, particularly in northern Europe and Polynesia, lacked the political centralization found in classical civilizations; they instead had tribal chiefdoms. They also lacked urbanization and writing systems.44
6777234291Discuss whether the developing societies were dependent on the core civilizations for important social and political developments.The issue can be debated. Egypt may have influenced parts of Africa. In Japan and some African cases the influence was critical. This is less demonstrable for northern Europe and especially for Polynesia. All the developing societies retained vital aspects of their indigenous culture: Shinto religion in Japan, tribal organization in northern Europe, Polynesia, and Africa. In Polynesia sophisticated woodworking operated in place of metallurgy.45
6777234292Discuss the nature of Byzantine political organization and culture and how they affected the development of Eastern Europe.Byzantine political organization was based on a centralized monarchy supported by a trained bureaucracy educated in classical traditions. Local administrators were appointed by the central administration. Political ideology focused on the principle of a divinely authorized monarchy supported by elaborate court ritual. The Byzantines continued the use of Roman patterns of government as typified by the use of legal codes to organize society. The military were recruited from the imperial population in return for grants of heritable land leading eventually to regional control by military commanders. There was a close relationship between the Orthodox Church and the state, with the emperor as head of church organization. Byzantine culture expressed itself in religious artifacts (churches, icons, liturgical music). The expansion of Byzantine culture northward was through the conversion of Kiev to Orthodox Christianity. The Russians also adopted the concepts of a divinely inspired monarchy with close relations to a state-controlled church. Church-related art forms came along with Orthodoxy. The Russians, however, were unable to adopt the Byzantine trained bureaucracy.46
6777234293Compare and contrast the impact of Byzantium on Eastern Europe with the impact of the Islamic core on Africa and southern Asia.For Byzantine culture, see above. Both civilizations first spread their influence through missionaries; both civilizations passed on influences that produced centralized governments supported by the religious organization of the core cultures. Islam had a much greater impact than did Byzantium. The latter was limited to Eastern Europe while Islam spread into much of Asia and Africa. Byzantium's influence was more tenuous since there was less direct continuity over time because it did not survive the postclassical period. In Russia Byzantine influence was interrupted by the Mongol conquest. Islam has endured in all regions until the present.47
6777234294Discuss the ways in which the Middle Ages carried on the culture of ancient Mediterranean civilization and also added its own innovations.In its intellectual heritage the Middle Ages incorporated classical rationalism (especially in universities) and the use of Latin as a common language. Manorialism had its origins in the great farming estates of the ancient world. In religion the Middle Ages, although carrying forward elements of indigenous northern European beliefs, widely adopted Christianity. The political outlook was different because of the lack of an empire and a corresponding development of a local and regional political focus. In economics in the Middle Ages there was much more vitality in the economy and commercial structure (population growth was a strong influence here). There was use of credit, banking, accounting procedures, the creation of a wealthy class, and the end of slavery. Important innovations in culture included the creation of vernacular literary forms and of Gothic architecture.48
6777234295Compare and contrast the Medieval West from 1000 to 1500 with Islamic civilization during the same period.The medieval West was flourishing while the Islamic core was fragmenting. The lack of a concept of empire in the West differs from the imperial ideal of Islam, although in reality government in Islam demonstrated similar localization (as in the case of the Seljuk Turks). Both civilizations developed active commercial systems with a merchant class. The Islamic commercial empire was much more extensive and significant than that of the West. Both utilized religion as a means of carrying civilization to new territories. Islam expanded into Africa, India, and southeastern Asia, and the actual territory under Islam was much more extensive than that of the West. Islamic civilization was more technologically sophisticated than the West. Both societies showed similar tensions between religion and the adaptation of classical rationalism to theology, although both developed syntheses largely based on Aristotle's works.49

Key People AP World History Flashcards

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9785689378Great Goddessaccording to one theory, a dominant deity of the Palaeolithic era.0
9785689379Venus figurinesPalaeolithic carvings of the female form often with exaggerated breasts, buttocks, hips, and stomach, which may have had a religious significance.1
9785689380Hammurabi(code of) a series of laws publicized at the order of King Hammurabi of Babylon; not actually a code, but a number of laws that proclaim the king's commitment to social order2
9785689381Hatshepsut (hat-shep-soot)ancient Egypt's most famous (possibly influential) female queen; reigned 1472-57 BCE3
9785689382Abraham/Mosesfounder/important prophet in Judaism4
9785689383Isaiahone of the most important prophets of Judaism, whose teachings show the transformation of the religion in favor of compassion and social justice (8th century BCE)5
9785689384Qin Shi Huangdiliterally, "first emperor from the Qin"; Shi hungdi forcibly reunited China and established a strong & representative state6
9785689385Han WudiHan emperor who began the Chinese civil service system by establishing an academy to train imperial bureaucrats7
9785689386Confucius (Kong-Fuzi)the founder of Confucianism; an aristocrat of northern China who proved to be the greatest influence on Chinese culture in its history. (551-479 BCE)8
9785689387TheodosiusRoman emperor (r. 379-395 CE) who made Christianity the official religion of the Roman Empire, banning all polytheistic rituals (although many practices continued).9
9785689388Ashokathe most famous ruler of the Mauryan Empire, who converted to Buddhism & tried to rule peacefully and with tolerance10
9785689389Herodotus (hair-ODD-uh-tus)Greek historian known as the "father of history" (ca. 484-425 BCE). His Histories enunciated the Greek view of the fundamental divide between East & West, culminating in the Greco-Persian Wars of 490-480 BCE11
9785689390Cyrus (the Great)founder of the Persian Empire (r. 557-530 BCE); a ruler noted for his conquests, religious tolerance, and political moderation.12
9785689391Darius Igreat king of Persia (r. 522-486 BCE) following the upheavals after Cyrus's death; completed the establishment of the Persian Empire.13
9785689392Alexander the GreatAlexander III of Macedon (356-323 BCE), conqueror of the Persian Empire and part of northwest India.14
9785689393Paul of Tarsusaka Saint Paul; the first great popularizer of Christianity15
9785689394Thales of Miletusa Greek natural philosopher (ca. 624- ca. 547 BCE), noted for his application of reason to astronomy and for his questioning of the fundamental nature of the universe.16
9785689395Periclesa prominent and influential statesman of ancient Athens (ca. 495-429 BCE); presided over the Athenian "Golden Age".17
9785689396SpartacusRoman gladiator who led the most threatening slave revolt in history against the Roman Republic (73-71 BCE)18
9785689397Ahura Mazda & Angra MainyaZoroastrian gods of good & evil, engaged in a cosmic struggle against one another19
9785689398ConstantineRoman emperor whose conversion to Christianity paved the way for the spread of Christianity into Europe.20
9785689399Siddhartha Gautama (the Buddha)the Indian prince turned ascetic (ca. 566 ca. 486 BCE) who founded Buddhism. (siddARTH-uh gow-TAHM-uh)21
9785689400Daoisma Chinese philosophy / religious tradition that advocates simplicity, & understanding of the natural world, founded by Laozi22
9785689401Abraham/Mosesfounder/important prophet in Judaism23
9785689402Jesus of Nazarethcentral prophet / son of/& God in Christianity (ca. 6 BCE - ca. 30 CE)24
9785689403Muhammadreceived word of God (as told in the Quran) in Islam25
9785689404Hippocratesinfluential Greek medical theorist, considered the father of medicine26
9785689405Pythagorasgreek philosopher who believed in that an unchanging mathematical order underlines the apparent chaos of the world27
9785689406Socratesthe first great Greek philosopher to turn rationalism toward questions of human existence (469-399 BCE)28
9785689407Platoa disciple of Socrates whose Dialogues convey the teachings of his master while goings beyond them to express is own philosophy (429-348 BCE)29
9785689408Aristotlea Greek polymath (person of great or varied learning) philosopher; student of Plato and instructor of Alexander the Great (348-322 BCE)30
9785689409Laozi (low-tzuh)a legendary Chinese philosopher of the sixth century BCE; regarded as the founder of Daoism.31
9785689410Julius Caesarused military to seize power, dictator 47-44 BC, gave land to poor, political offices to friends, weakened Senate, changed to 365 day calendar (was Egyptian), left Octavian and Mark Antony to fight for power after assassination & 2nd Civil War32
9785689411Octavian AugustusCaesar's heir and grandnephew Mark Antony rival (whom had been a lover of both his mother & Cleopatra VII after Caesar's death) promise to restore the Republic, actually first emperor (consolidated), the Senate had less and less power, found city of brick, left city of marble, named God after death33
9785689412Aspasiaforeign woman who lived in Athens (ca. 470-400BCE) who worked with Pericles & was legendary for her learning & wit.34
9785689413Ban ZhaoChinese female writer and court official (ca.45-116CE) whose works provided insight into the lives & status of women in classical China.35
9785689414Apedemek (ah-PED-eh-mek)the lion god of classical Meroe; his popularity shows a turn away from Egyptian cultural influence.36
9785689415An Lushanforeign-born general who led a major revolt vs. Tang dynasty between 755-63 CE, perhaps provoking China's xenophobia37
9785689416Shotoku TaishiJapanese statesman who launched drives to make Japan a more centralized bureaucratic state modeled on China, wrote 17th Article Constitution, which laid out reforms38
9785689417Emperor WendiSui dynasty emperor (r. 581-604 CE) who particularly patronized Buddhism39
9785689418Muhammad ibn Musa al KhwarizmAn astronomer, ,geographer and mathematician, founded algebra and algorithms40
9785689419JustinianByzantine emperor (r.527-565 CE), noted for his short-lived re-conquest of much of the former western Roman Empire and for his codification of Roman law41
9785689420Vladimir Igrand prince of Kiev (r.978-1015 CE) who conversion to Orthodox Christianity led to the incorporation of Russia into the sphere of Eastern Orthodoxy42
9785689421Empress WuThe only female emperor in Chinese history (r. 690-705 CE), she patronized scholarships for & worked to improve the position of women; provoking backlash from Confucian scholars.43
9785689422Mansa Kankan Musathe tenth mansa or emperor of the Mali Empire during its height in the 14th century. He ruled as mansa from 1312 to 1337. Musa is most noted for his 1324 hajj to Mecca; where the wealth of the Mali kingdom was displayed and his role as a benefactor of Islamic scholarship.44
9785689423The Trung TwinsAfter two centuries of Chinese rule, the Vietnamese rose up under the leadership of two sisters, Trung Trac and Trung Nhi, who formed an army of 80,000. They trained 36 women to be generals & drove the Chinese out of Viet Nam in A.D. 40. They continued to fight the Chinese for three years, but, unsuccessful, they committed suicide.45
9785689424Tomoe Gozensamurai fought in Japan's Genpei War (1180-1185). Known for her skills with the sword & the bow, and her wild horse-breaking skills were also legendary.46
9785689425Genghis Khantitle means "universal ruler", that was given to the Mongol leader, born Temujin, in 1206 after he united the Mongols47
9785689426Kubilai KhanGrandson of Chinggis Khan who ruled China from 1271-1294 CE48
9785689427Timur/TamerlaneTurkic warrior king; restored much of the Mongol Empire devastating much of Persia, Russia, & India49
9785689428Hulegu KhanGrandson of Chinggis Khan (ca. 1217-1265) who became the first il-khan (subordinate khan) of Persia50
9785689429Ghazan Khanil-Khan of Persia who ruled from 1295-1304; he is noted for his efforts to repair the Mongol damage to Persia51
9785689430Marco PoloEuropean traveler in Middle Ages (1254-1324) whose accounts of his travels to & while in China were widely popular in Europe.52
9785689431YongleChinese emperor during the Ming dynasty, leading restoration, commissioned a huge fleet to spread awareness of Chinese superiority in Asia & East Africa53
9785689432Zheng HeChinese admiral who commanded a fleet of more than 300 ships in a series of voyages of contact & exploration from 1405-3354
9785689433Christopher ColumbusGenoese mariner commissioned by Spain to search for a new route to Asia; in 1492 he landed in the Bahamas (America) instead55
9785689434Vasco da GamaPortuguese explorer whose voyage was the first European to reach India by sailing around the southern tip of Africa56
9785689435Ferdinand MagellanPortuguese mariner who commanded the first European (Spanish) fleet to circumnavigate the globe (1519-21 CE)57
9785689436Leonardo da Vincipainter, sculptor, inventor, scientist (many examples of all) Famous Portrait: the Mona Lisa, self; Famous religious painting: The Last Supper58
9785689437Dante Alighieriwriter, philosopher; writes The Divine Comedy (character explores three levels of Christian afterlife, Hell, Purgatory, & Heaven) & La Vita Nuova (love sonnets about a women Dante was in love with though he only met her twice)59
9785689438Johann GutenbergGerman develops printing press; printing press allows for quick, cheap book production (new ideas spread fast about a variety of topics to all people not just rich & Church) First book printed with movable type, Gutenberg Bible (between 1450-55)60
9785689439Aurangzeb (ow-rang-ZEB)Mughal emperor (r. 1658-1707) who reversed his predecessors' policies of religious tolerance and attempted to impose Islamic supremacy61
9785689440AkbarThe most famous emperor of India's Mughal Empire (r. 1556-1605); his policies are noted for their efforts at religious tolerance & inclusion62
9785689441Martin LutherGerman priest & theologian (1483-1546) who inaugurated the Protestant Reformation movement in Europe, he posted 95 Theses, or debating points concerning the abuses of the Catholic Church, on the door of the church in Wittenberg, Germany (1517), the church's strong reaction forced Luther to separate from the Catholic Christianity63
9785689442Galileo GalileiItalian astronomer who further developed the ideas of Copernicus & whose work was eventually suppressed by the Catholic Church64
9785689443Nicolaus CopernicusPolish mathematician & astronomer (1473- 1563) who was the first to argue for the existence of a heliocentric cosmos65
9785689444Marquis de Condorcet (khan-dor-SAY)(1743-94) a French philosopher & political scientist66
9785689445Sigmund FreudAustrian doctor (1856-1939); father of psychoanalysis whose theories about the operation of the human mind & emotions remain influential today67
9785689446Karl MarxGerman philosopher (1818-1883), whose view of human history as a class struggle formed the basis of socialism68
9785689447Voltairepen name of French philosopher (1694-1778), who work is often taken as a model of Enlightenment questioning traditional values & attitudes; noted for his deism & critic of traditional religion69
9785689448Henry VIII1529 wanted divorce & eventually (along with England) leaves Church & form Church of England70
9785689449Peter (I) the Greatreigned from 1689 till 1725, who attempted a massive reform of Russian society in an effort to catch up with the states of Western Europe.71
9785689450Jesuits in ChinaSeries of missionaries in the late 16th & 17th centuries who, inspired by the work of Matteo Ricci , made extraordinary efforts to understand and become a part of Chinese culture in their efforts to convert the Chinese elite to Christianity thinking the rest of the population would follow, although w/ limited success72
9785689451Napoleon BonaparteFrench head of state from 1799 till is abdication in 1814 (and again briefly in 1815); he preserved much of the French Revolution under an autocratic system and was responsible for the spread of revolutionary ideals through his conquest of much of Europe73
9785689452Isaac NewtonEnglish natural scientist (1643-1727) whose formulation of the laws of motion & mechanics is regarded as the culmination of Scientific Revolution74
9785689461Thomas Hobbes- distrusts humans, favors strong government to keep order; promotes social contract - getting order by giving power to monarch75
9785689462John Lockethought government gets power from the people; stresses that people have a right to overthrow an unjust government76
9785689453Rousseaufavored individual freedom, direct democracy; views social contract as agreement by free people to form government; called for speedy trials, greater rights for criminal defendants77
9785689454Hernando Cortéslands in Mexico with 600 men reach Aztec capital of Tenochtitlán, by 1521, they conquer Aztec empire; aided by superior weapons, Native American allies78
9785689455Francisco PizarroSpanish conqueror leads force to Peru in 1532;79
9785689456Francisco Coronadoexplores Southwest, finds little gold; Catholic priests set up missions in Southwest; In 1610, Spanish establish capital of Santa Fe after most pueblos defeated or subdued80
9785689457Toussaint Louverturefirst leader of the Haitian Revolution, a former slave (1743-1803) who wrote the first constitution in Haiti and served as the first governor of the newly independent state81
9785689458Seneca Falls ConferenceThe first organized women's rights conference, which took place at Seneca Falls, NY in 1848; attended by Elizabeth Cady Stanton82
9785689463Oda Nobunaga- greatest soldier of his time, started a process through diplomacy and war that put an end to political fragmentation in Japan and paved the way for the unique feudal system that governed Japan during the Tokugawa period (1602-1867).83
9785689459Toyotomi Hideyoshi- feudal lord and chief Imperial minister (1585-98), who completed the 16th-century unification of Japan begun by Oda Nobunaga.84
9785689464Tokugawa Ieyasu- founder and first shogun of the Tokugawa Shogunate of Japan which ruled from 1600 until the Meiji Restoration in 1868. Early in his career he helped Oda Nobunaga and Toyotomi Hideyoshi unify Japan. In 1590 he received the area surrounding Edo (Tokyo) in fief, and made it his capital. After Hideyoshi's death (1598), he became the most powerful daimyo by defeating rival barons in battle & became shogun in 1603.85
9785689460Matthew PerryThe "opening" of Japan; as US commodore is depicted meeting with Japanese officials in 1853; launching a series of dramatic changes in Japan, focusing on industrialization and modernization.86
9802036713Hidalgo Morelos rebellion- socially radical peasant insurrection that began in Mexico in 1810 and that was led by two priests Miguel de Hidalgo & Jose Morelos87
9802048569Karl Marx (1818-1883)- the most influential proponent of socialism, a German expatriate in England who advocated workingclass revolution as the key to creating an ideal communist future. .88
9802058528Queen Victoriaused to be longest reigning monarch in British history; becoming queen at the age of 18 she ruled from 1837 till 1901 at the height of British imperial power.89
9802063386Elizabeth Cady Stantona leading figure of the early women's rights movement in the US; other notable attendees were Lucretia Mott, Frederick Douglass, & Martha Wright90
9817599854RochambeauGeorge Washington's sidekick91
9817606510Louis XVIKing during the french revolution92
9817613681Marie AntoinetteQueen during the french revolution93
9817640705Thomas Edisona businessman & more importantly an inventor with over 1,000 patents worldwide.94
9817646688Marie and Pierre Curienoted for their work on radioactivity, in their laboratory in France.95
9817659396Josef StalinRussian leader who succeeded Lenin as head of the Communist Party and created a totalitarian state by purging all opposition96
9817668918Vladimir (Lenin) Ulyanova Russian communist revolutionary, politician and political theorist. He served as head of government of Soviet Russia from 1917 to 1924 and of the Soviet Union from 1922 to 1924.97
9817675804Charles Dowman who invented the wall street journal98
9817703025Henry Fordman who mass produced cars99
9817707181Lucky Lucianoa US criminal, born in Sicily. He became the head of a powerful criminal organization in New York in the 1920s and probably ordered the murder of his rival, 'Dutch' Schultz in 1935.100
9817709523Al CaponeUnited States gangster who terrorized Chicago during prohibition until arrested for tax evasion (1899-1947) book made after him about alcatraz101
9817730859Lindberghflew across the atlantic102
9817737558Albert Einsteinphysicist born in Germany who formulated the special theory of relativity and the general theory of relativity103
9817745250Charlie Chaplinfirst international movie star104
9817752997Benito MussoliniItalian Fascist statesman, prime minister105
9817755860Adolf HitlerA German political leader of the twentieth century, born in Austria. His early program for Germany is contained in his book Mein Kampf. He dreamed of creating a master race of pure Aryans, who would rule for a thousand years as the third German Empire, or Third Reich.106
9817763644Winston ChurchillAn English political leader and author of the twentieth century; he became prime minister shortly after World War II began and served through the end of the war in Europe`107
9817775884Franklin Rooseveltthe only person to be Time's Man of the Year 3 times; 1932, 1934, & 1941. He was US President from 1933-45, seeing the nation through the Depression & WWII108
9817781673Juan Peronfascist dictator of Argentina109
9817786714Augusto Pinochetformer dictator of Chile110
9817789764Mao Zedongest. People's Republic of China in 1949 on the main gate of the Forbidden City in Beijing & led till his death in 1976. (R) His successor Deng Xiaoping led China till mid 90's & started the new era.111
9817803148Matahma Gandhipolitical and spiritual leader during India's struggle with Great Britain for home rule; an advocate of passive resistance112
9817814496Malcolm XAn African-American political leader of the twentieth century. A prominent Black Muslim113
9817819503Nelson MandelaSouth African statesman who was released from prison to become the nation's first democratically elected president in 1994114
9817826057Apollo 11lands on moon's sea of tranquility115

AP World History Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
5310758154Define Mese.main street thoroughfare of ancient Constantinople. This street was the main street for imperial processions.0
5310870917Define Blues and Greens.Blues and Greens, political factions in the Byzantine Empire in the 6th cent. They took their names from two of the four colors worn by the circus charioteers. Their clashes were intensified by religious differences. The Greens represented Monophysitism and the lower classes; the Blues, orthodoxy and the upper classes.1
5310881530Define Greek Fire.Greek fire was an incendiary weapon developed c. 672 and used by the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire. The Byzantines typically used it in naval battles to great effect, as it could continue burning while floating on water. ...2
5310900847Define Caesaropapism.It is a political system used in the Byzantine empire; it says the head of the state is also the head of the church.3
5310915208Define Hagia Sophia.It was built as a church and in 1453 it was turned into a mosque.4
5310929605Define theme.Was the main administrative divisions of the middle Byzantine Empire.5
5310937175Define Icons.An Icon is usually a piece of religious art.6
5310944765Define Bezant.It is the medieval term for a gold coin.7
5310956623Define Theodora.She was an empress of the Byzantine empire and wife of Emperor Justinian I.8
5310972040Define Justinian.Byzantine emperor (527-565) who held the eastern frontier of his empire against the Persians and reconquered former Roman territories in Africa, Italy, and Spain. He ruled jointly with his wife, Theodora.9
5310989455Define Diocletian.Emperor of Rome (284-305) who divided the empire into east and west (286) in an attempt to rule the territory more effectively. His desire to revive the old religion of Rome led to the last major persecution of the Christians (303).10
5311001789Define Belasarius.He was a general of the Byzantine Empire. He was instrumental to Emperor Justinian's ambitious project of reconquering much of the Mediterranean territory of the former Western Roman Empire, which had been lost less than a century previously.11
5311008190Define Schism.Was an event that precipitated the final separation between the Eastern Christian churches.12
5311019869Define Byzantium.Was known as the capitol.13
5311027697Define Boyar.A boyar was a member of the highest rank of the feudal Bulgarian, Moscovian, Wallachian and Romanian aristocracies, second only to the ruling princes (in Bulgaria, tsars), from the 10th century to the 17th century.14
5311036778Define Tribute.Something which you do or say to show that you respect and admire someone, especially in a formal situation.15
5311059217Define Mongols.16
5311068843Define Ivan the Great.He was a Grand Prince of Moscow and Grand Prince of all Rus'.17
5311078611Define Yaroslav.A mighty Russian that can wrestle a bear, buy a man a drink, and please a woman all at the same time.18
5311089237Define Cyril.Is a masculine given name. Meaning "Lordly, Masterful" which in turn derives from Greek κυριος (kyrios) "Lord".19
5311119507Define Methodius.20
5311125365Define Icons.An icon икона is a painting of a sacred person or event that bears religious meaning. In Greek, "icon" means "image" or "likeness." ... Russia inherited the tradition of icon painting from Byzantium when Vladimir adopted Christianity in the late tenth century.21
5311136657What did Japanese Feudalism develop?22
5311147640What was pledged in the example of the feudal contract?23
5311154200"The Way of the Samurai" placed the greatest stress on what?24
5311158280Why did agricultural production in feudal Europe increase?25
5311163794When did trade and urbanization resume in feudal Europe?26
5311168122Describe the guilds of the high middle ages.27
5311175002Which reform in Heian Japan caused the greatest resentment from the aristocracy?28
5311191363Describe intellectual activity of the early Middle Ages in Europe.29
5311198484The victory of the Minamoto marks the beginning of what period in Japanese history?30
5311211831From the video on Sub-Saharan Africa, early European settlers to Southern Africa what views about the ancient cultures of the areas?31
5311216935What was the focus of the trade routes of the city of Jenne's?32
5311219507Describe Mansa Musa's hajj?33
5311224701The primary entrepot for West Africa under Mansa Musa.34
5311228015Describe the trans-Saharan slave trade?35
5311228016Define Heian era.36
5311230520Define Homage.37
5311230558Define Daimyos.38
5311233508Define Seppuku.39
5311236476Define Vikings (everything).40
5311238724Define Gregory VII.41
5311246419Define The Tale of Genji.42
5311248796Define manor.43
5311248797Define guilds.44
5311251735Define Richard the Lionheart.45
5311251736Define haiku.46
5311255817Define Charlemagne.47
5311257852Define Hanseatic League trade goods.48
5311259369Define Urban II.49
5311260877Define Crusades.50
5311261033Define Bushido.51
5311264682Define 3 field system.52
5311266834Define Samurai.53
5311269085Define Bakufu.54
5311269086Define Marco Polo.55
5311271077Define Timbuktu.56
5311273329Define Cairo.57
5311273330Define Ghana.58
5311277311Define Mali.59
5311279457Define Mansa Musa.60
5311282727Define Salt (why?).61
5311289851The West African item of trade that most interested Europeans was what?62
5311297302What is the most likely reason for the slow decline of the slave trade out of West Africa from 1100-1500?63
5311302739Describe the city of Timbuktu e. 1100?64
5311306101Why did the African slave trade grow during the 12th century?65
5311311580What were the rules for the slaves held by Muslims?66
5311322819The arrival of what animal in North Africa quickened the pace of trade and communication?67
5311335982Describe Koumbi-Sahel, the capital of Ghana (Bently book).68
5311344833The word "Swahili" means?69
5311352050What was the role of Islam on the Swahili coast?70
5311354334Miners in Zimbabwe were paid in?71
5311360022Who was the founder of the Kingdom of Mali?72
5311363973The Crusaders began after Byzantine request for aid.73
5311368322Feudal governments were centralized or decentralized? Proof?74
5311372260Describe the relations between vassal and lord.75
5311375829Who brought Chinese influence to Japan?76
5311379367How did the Crusades affect commerce?77
5311383217What were the catholic and the Byzantine Empire's issues of concern?78
5311385477The results of the crusades were?79
5311390251A Major reason for the development of feudalism in Europe were?80
5311392462In comparing Japanese feudalism to European feudalism, what area is most complex?81
5311409419Describe the Hanseatic League.82
5311413513Describe the Heian era in Japan.83
5311416301What motivated the Crusaders?84
5311420014Describe the power of Buddhism in Feudal Japan.85
5311427058Why was salt such a valued commodity in the regions south of Ghana?86
5311430676The founder of the Kingdom of Mali.87
5311438330Which African Kingdom retained its Christian religion after the spread of Islam?88

AP World History 2 Chapter 19 Terms Flashcards

The terms and definitions for the vocabulary terms in Ways of the World: Chapter 19.

Terms : Hide Images
6528593583Abd al-Hamid IIOttoman Sultan (r. 1876-1909) who accepted a reform constitution at the start of his reign but suspended it shortly afterward, ruling as a reactionary autocrat for the next three decades.0
6528593584Boxer RebellionRebellion led by Chinese militia organizations (1898-1901) in which large numbers of Europeans and Chinese Christians were killed.1
6528593585Chinese Revolution, 1911-1912The collapse of China's imperial order, officially at the hands of organized revolutionaries but for the most part under the weight of the troubles that had overwhelmed the government for the previous half-century.2
6528593586DaimyoFeudal lords of Japan who retained substantial autonomy under the Tokugawa shogunate and only lost their social preeminence in the Meiji restoration3
6528593587Hong XiuquanChinese religious leader (1814-1864) who sparked the Taiping uprising and won millions due to his unique form of Christianity, according to which he himself was the younger brother of Jesus, sent to establish a "heavenly kingdom of great peace"on earth.4
6528593588Informal EmpireTerm commonly used to describe areas that were dominated by Western powers in the 19th century but that retained their own governments and a measure of independence, e.g., Latin America and China.5
6528593589Meiji RestorationThe overthrow of the Tokugawa shogunate of Japan in 1868, restoring power to the emperor Meiji.6
6528593590Matthew PerryU.S. navy commodore who in 1852 presented the ultimatum that led Japan to open itself to more normal relations with the outside world.7
6528593591Opium WarsTwo wars fought between Western powers and China (1839-1842 and 1856-1858) after China tried to restrict the importation of foreign goods, especially opium; China had lost both wars and was forced to make major concessions.8
6528593592Russo-Japanese War, 1904- 1905Ending in a Japanese victory, this war established Japan as a formidable military competitor in East Asia and precipitated the Russian Revolution of 1905.9
6528593593SamuraiArmed retainers of the Japanese feudal lords, famed for their martial skills and loyalty; in the Tokugawa shogunate, the samurai gradually became and administrative elite, but they did not lose their special privileges until the Meiji Restoration.10
6528593594Self-strengthening MovementChina's program of internal reform in the 1860s and 1870s, based on vigorous application of Confucian principles and limited borrowing from the West.11
6528593595Selim IIIOttoman sultan (r. 1789-1807) who attempted significant reform of his empire, including the implementation of new military and administrative structures.12
6528593596"the Sick Man of Europe"Western Europe's unkind nickname for the Ottoman Empire in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, a name based on the Ottoman sultans' inability to prevent Western takeover of many regions and to deal with internal problems; it fails to recognize serious reform efforts in the Ottoman state during this period.13
6528593597Social DarwinismAn application of Charles Darwin's evolutionary theories to an understanding of human history, exemplified by the concept of the "survival of the fittest."14
6528593598Taiping Uprisingmassive Chinese rebellion that devastated much of China between 1850 and 1864; it was based on the millennium teachings of Hong Xiquan.15
6528593599Tanzimat ReformsImportant reformist measures undertaken in the Ottoman Empire beginning in 1839; the term "Tanzimat" means "reorganization."16
6528593600Tokugawa ShogunateRulers of Japan from 1600 to 1868.17
6528593601Unequal TreatiesSeries of nineteenth-century treaties in which China made major concessions to Western powers.18
6528593602Young OttomansGroup of would-be reformers in the mid-19th-century Ottoman Empire that included lower-level officials, military officers, and writers; they urged the extension of Westernizing reforms to the political system.19
6528593603Young TurksMovement of Turkish military and civilian elites that developed around 1900 and eventually brought down the Ottoman Empire.20

AMSCO AP US History Chapter 26 Flashcards

AMSCO United States History 2015 Edition, Chapter 26 Truman and the Cold War 1945-1952

Terms : Hide Images
6209003280Servicemen's Readjustment Act of 1944 (GI Bill)Signed into law by President Franklin D. Roosevelt on June 22, 1944, it was also known as the GI Bill. It provided veterans of the Second World War with funds for college education, unemployment insurance, and housing. (p. 557)0
6209003281early marriagesOne sign of confidence in post World War II era was an explosion of marriages at a younger age and new births. (p. 558)1
6209003282baby boomBetween 1945 and 1960, 50 million babies were born. This generation would profoundly affect the nation's social institutions and economic life. (p. 558)2
6209003283suburban growthLow interest rates on mortgages that were government-insured and tax deductible made the move from the city to the suburb affordable for almost any family. In a single generation the majority of middle-class Americans became suburbanites. (p. 558)3
6209003284LevittownWilliam Levitt used mass production techniques to build 17,000 inexpensive homes on Long Island, New York. It became a symbol of the movement to the suburbs in the years after World War II. (p. 558)4
6209003285SunbeltAfter World War II, many Americans moved to southern states. They were attracted by a warmer climate, lower taxes, and defense-related industry jobs. (p. 558)5
6209003286Harry TrumanA moderate Democrat, he became president when Franklin Roosevelt died. He was a decisive, honest and unpretentious leader. (p. 558)6
6209003287Employment Act of 1946President Truman's act included progressive measures such as increased minimum wage and efforts to maintain full employment. (p. 559)7
6209003288Council of Economic AdvisersEstablished by Truman's Employment Act of 1946, they counseled the president and Congress on promoting national economic welfare. (p. 559)8
6209003289inflation and labor unionsRelaxed controls on the Office of Price Administration resulted in an inflation rate of about 25 percent during the first year and a half after World War II. Workers and unions wanted wages to increase after years of wage controls during World War II. (p. 559)9
6209003290Committee on Civil RightsIn 1946, President Truman used his executive powers to create this committee to challenge racial discrimination. (p. 559)10
6209003291racial integration of militaryIn 1948, President Truman ordered the end of racial discrimination throughout the federal government including the armed forces. The end of segregation changed life on military bases, many of which were in the South. (p. 559)11
620900329222nd AmendmentIn response to Franklin Roosevelt's four elections, Congress passed this constitutional amendment, which limited a president to a maximum of two full terms in office. (p. 560)12
6209003293Taft-Hartley ActIn 1947, President Truman called it a "slave labor" bill and vetoed it, but Congress overrode his veto. It established limits on unions by outlawing the closed shop, permitting states to pass "right to work" laws, outlawing secondary boycotts, and giving the president the power to invoke an 80-day cooling off period for some strikes. (p. 560)13
6209003294Progressive PartyIn 1948, liberal Democrats who thought President Truman's aggressive foreign policy threatened world peace, formed this new party. (p. 560)14
6209003295Henry WallaceIn 1948, this former vice president was nominated as the Progressive party's presidential candidate. (p. 560)15
6209003296States-Rights party (Dixiecrats)In 1948, Southern Democrats formed this new party in reaction the President Truman's support of civil rights. (p. 560)16
6209003297J. Strom ThurmondThe South Carolina Governor, who the States-Rights party (Dixiecrats) chose as their 1948 presidential nominee. (p. 560)17
6209003298Thomas DeweyThis Republican New York governor started the 1948 presidential election as the expected winner. He lost to Harry Truman after running a cautious and unexciting campaign. (p. 560)18
6209003299Fair DealPresident Truman's attempt at extending the New Deal with national health insurance, federal aid to education, civil rights legislation, public housing, and a new farm program. Most of the Fair Deal was defeated because of Truman's political conflicts with Congress and the pressing foreign policy concerns of the Cold War. (p. 561)19
6209003300Cold WarFrom the late 1940's to 1991, it dominated international relations. The Communist empire of the Soviet Union against the Western democracy of the United States. It was fought mainly through diplomacy rather than armed conflict, but brought the world dangerously close to a nuclear war. (p. 561)20
6209003301Soviet UnionA Communist nation, consisting of Russia and 14 other states, that existed from 1922 to 1991. (p. 561)21
6209003302Joseph StalinThe leader of the Soviet Union during World War II. In the Nonaggression Pact of 1939, he and Hitler agreed to divide up Eastern Europe. The Soviets later fought Hitler in World War II. They were unhappy when the British and Americans waited until 1944 to open a second battle front in France. (p. 562)22
6209003303United NationsIn the fall of 1945, this worldwide organization was founded and allowed membership of all countries. It had a 15-member Security Council that was to maintain international security and authorize peacekeeping missions. It is often referred to as the U.N. (p. 562)23
6209003304Security CouncilWithin the United Nations, this council consisted of 15 members. There were five permanent members that had veto power: United States, Great Britain, France, China, and the Soviet Union. (p. 562)24
6209003305World BankCreated at the Bretton Woods Conference in 1944. The bank's initial purpose was to fund rebuilding after World War II. Also know as International Bank for Reconstruction and Development. The Soviets declined to join because they saw the bank as an instrument of capitalism. (p. 562)25
6209003306Communist satellitesCentral and Eastern European nations ruled by Communist dictators, most of them loyal to the Soviet Union. They included: Poland, Romania, Bulgaria, Albania, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia, and others. (p. 562)26
6209003307Occupation zonesAt the end of World War II, Germany was divided into four regions controlled by the Soviets, United States, Britain, and France. These areas were supposed to be temporary but the Soviets maintained control of the eastern area. (p. 563)27
6209003308Iron CurtainThe term popularized by British Prime Minister Winston Churchill to describe the Soviet Union's policy of isolating and controlling the Soviet satellite states of Eastern Europe. (p. 563)28
6209003309Winston ChurchillAfter World War II he declared, "An iron curtain has been descended across the continent". He called for a partnership between Western democracies to halt the expansion of communism. (p. 563)29
6209003310historians: traditionalists vs. revisionistsTraditional historians believe the Cold War was started by the Soviet government subjugating the countries of Eastern Europe in the late 1940s. In the 1960s, revisionist historians began to argue that the United States contributed to starting the Cold War. (p. 572)30

AMSCO AP US History Chapter 20 Flashcards

AMSCO United States History 2015 Edition, Chapter 20 Becoming a World Power, 1898-1917

Terms : Hide Images
9061289684Monroe DoctrineIn 1823, a political policy of the United States by President James Monroe that stated the Western Hemisphere was closed to European interference. UPDATE0
9061289686Alaska PurchaseIn 1867, Secretary of State William Seward bought Alaska from Russia for $7.2 Million ("Seward's Folly"). (p. 410)1
9061289687Pan-American Conference (1889)In 1889, this conference was called by Secretary of State James G. Blaine. It created an organization of cooperation between the United States and Latin American countries. (p. 412)2
9061289691HawaiiIn 1893, American settlers aided in the overthrow of Queen Liliuokalani. President McKinley completed the annexation of Hawaii in 1898. (p. 415)3
9061289692Pearl HarborOn December 7, 1941, this United States military base on Hawaii was bombed by Japan, bringing the United States into World War II.4
9061289693Queen LiliuokalaniThe Hawaiian queen who was forced out of power by a revolution started by American business interests. (p. 414)5
9061289695international DarwinismDarwin's concept of the survival of the fittest was applied not only to competition in the business world but also to competition among nations. Therefore, in the international arena, the US had to demonstrate its strength by acquiring territories overseas, a sort of continuing of the manifest destiny6
9061289698Josiah StrongThis reverend believed that Protestant American had a religious duty to colonize other lands in order to spread Christianity and the benefits of their superior civilization . (p. 411)7
9061289701Alfred Thayer MahanHe was a U.S. Navy captain whose ideas on naval warfare and the importance of seapower changed how America viewed its navy. (p. 411)8
9061289705jingoismAn intense form of nationalism calling for an aggressive foreign policy. (p. 412)9
9061289706yellow journalismJournalism that exploits, distorts, or exaggerates the news to create sensations and attract readers. (p. 413)10
9061289707De Lome LetterSpanish Ambassador's letter that was leaked to the press and and published by American newspapers. It criticized President McKinley in insulting terms. Many considered it an official Spanish insult against U.S. national honor. (p. 413)11
9061289708sinking of the MaineOn February 15, 1898, the USS Maine battleship exploded in Havana Harbor. The yellow press accused Spain of blowing up the ship even though experts later concluded that the explosion was probably an accident. (p. 413)12
9061289709Teller AmendmentA resolution authorizing war, but it promised the U.S. would not annex Cuba after winning the Spanish-American war. (p. 414)13
9061289710a splendid little warThe ambassador to England wrote to his friend, Teddy Roosevelt, with these words because of low casualties in the war against Spain. (p. 414)14
9061289713Rough RidersVolunteer regiment of U.S. Cavalry led by Teddy Roosevelt during the Spanish American War. (p. 414)15
9061289714Theodore RooseveltHe became that 26th President in 1901. He as an expansionist who increased the size of Navy, "Great White Fleet". He added the Roosevelt Corollary to Monroe Doctrine. His motto was to "speak softly and carry a big stick". He received the Nobel Peace Prize for mediation of end of Russo-Japanese war. Later arbitrated split of Morocco between Germany and France. (p. 417)16
9061289717Emilio AguinaldoFilipino nationalist leader who led guerrilla fighters in a three year war against U.S. control of the Philippines. (p. 415)17
9061289718Anti-Imperialist LeagueLead by William Jennings Bryan, they opposed further expansion in the Pacific. (p. 415)18
9061289719Insular casesA series of Supreme Court cases from 1901 to 1903 which arose when the United States acquired the Philippines and Puerto Rico. The court ruled that constitutional rights were not automatically extended to territorial possessions and that the power to decide whether or not to grant such rights belonged to Congress. (p. 416)19
9061289720Platt AmendmentA 1901 amendment to an army appropriations bill that said Cuba would make no treaties that compromised its independence, permit the U.S. to maintain law and order in Cuba, and allow the U.S. to maintain naval bases in Cuba. (p 416)20
9061289721spheres of influenceThe term when countries came to dominate trade and investment within a particular region and shut out competitors. In the 1890s, Russia, Japan, Great Britain, France, and Germany were all establishing close ties with China that disturbed the United States. (p. 417)21
9061289723Open Door PolicyA policy proposed by the U.S. in 1899, under which all nations would have equal opportunities to trade in China. (p. 416)22
9061289724Boxer RebellionA 1900 rebellion in Beijing, China that was started by a secret society of Chinese who opposed the "foreign devils". An international force marched into Beijing and crushed the rebellion. (p. 417)23
9061289727big-stick policyTheodore Roosevelt's foreign policy motto was to "speak softly and carry a big stick". By acting boldly and decisively in a number of situation, Roosevelt attempt to build the reputation of the United States as a world power. (p. 417)24
9061289730building the Panama CanalThis canal was started in 1904 and completed 10 years later. The building of this large canal was important because it would benefit American commerce and military capability. (p. 418)25
9061289732William GorgasArmy physician who helped eradicate yellow fever and malaria from Panama, so work on the Panama Canal could proceed. (p. 418)26
9061289733Roosevelt CorollaryTheodore Roosevelt's 1904 extension of the Monroe Doctrine. It stated that the United States would intervene in the Americas, on the behalf of European interests. (p. 418)27
9061289735Russo-Japanese WarIn 1904, Russia and Japan went to war over imperial possessions in the region. In 1905, President Theodore Roosevelt arranged a successful treaty conference for the two foes at Portsmouth, New Hampshire. (p. 419)28
9061289736Treaty of Portsmouth (1905)In 1905, the United States mediated the end of the Russo-Japanese War. Negotiating the treaty in the U.S. increased U.S. prestige. Roosevelt received a Nobel Peace Prize for the mediation. (p. 419)29
9061289739gentlemen's agreementIn 1908, an informal agreement between the United States and Japan. President Roosevelt agreed that Japanese American students would be allowed to attend normal schools in San Francisco and Japan agreed to curb the number of workers coming to the U.S. (p. 420)30
9061289740Great White FleetSixteen American battleships, painted white were sent around the world to display American naval power. (p. 4 )31
9061289744William Howard TaftThe 27th President of the United States (1909-1913) and later chief justice of the United States Supreme Court.32
9061289749Henry Cabot LodgeA Republican senator, he was in favor of the U.S. expanding around the world. He introduced the Lodge Corollary. (p. 411, 420)33
9061289751Woodrow WilsonThe 28th president of the United States, known for World War I leadership, created Federal Reserve, Federal Trade Commission, Clayton Antitrust Act, progressive income tax, lower tariffs, women's suffrage (reluctantly), Treaty of Versailles, sought 14 points post-war plan, League of Nations (but failed to win U.S. ratification), won Nobel Peace Prize.34
9061289753William Jennings BryanUnited States lawyer and politician who advocated free silver and prosecuted John Scopes (1925) for teaching evolution in a Tennessee high school (1860-1925)35
9061289760Tampico incidentIn April 1914, some U.S. sailors were arrested in Tampico, Mexico. President Wilson used the incident to send U.S. troops into northern Mexico. His real intent was to unseat the Huerta government there. After the Niagara Falls Conference, Huerta abdicated and the confrontation ended.36
9061289761ABC powersThe South American countries of Argentina, Brazil, and Chile, which attempted to mediate a dispute between Mexico and the United States in 1914.37
9061289762Pancho VillaMexican revolutionary leader (1877-1923) who did many good things, but killed a lot of people. Wanted to take money from the rich and give it to the poor. (p. 423)38
9061289763expeditionary forceThe name given to the group set out to capture Pancho Villa in Mexico. (p. 423)39
9061289764John J. PershingThe U.S. general who chased Pancho Villa over 300 miles into Mexico but didn't capture him. (p. 423)40

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