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AP World History ch 6 Flashcards

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7396010227Olmecs"Rubber people" the first civilization in America area. They destroyed their own city.0
7396010228MayasA people who established a great civilization in Middle America. Had bloodletting rituals, and had warfare.1
7396010229KaminaljuyuThe most prominent Maya village, center ceremonial center of maya.2
7396010230MaizeNative American name for corn3
7396010231CacaoTropical tree whose seeds are used to make chocolate and cocoa and was used as currency4
7396010232TeotihhacanLarger city then Kaminaljuyu, located in central Mexico, lost much of its influence in maya society5
7396010233TikalMost important political center6
7396010234Chicken ItzaConstructed a loose empire that brought politely stability to the land.7
7396010235Popol VuhCreation story of the Maya8
7396010236Maya ball gameA sport the Mayans created, which losers could be sacrificed9
7396010237Chavin CultA new spiritual belief in central Andes. Had temples and carvings that showed they seized the imagination of agricultural people throughout central Andean region.10
7396010238MochiaAncient Peru civilization. Had states that had specific specialization for each valley/clan.11
7396010239Austronesian peopleMigrants that traveled the pacific and established settlements on islands12
7396010240Lapita peopleThe earliest austronesian migrants to sail the Pacific Ocean and establish settlements, had chiefly political organization13

AP World History Quiz 3 Flashcards

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7357081388Angkor WatA huge temple dedicated to the Hindu god Vishnu, and was the centerpiece of the Khmer Empire. (Founded 880)0
7357089433One Thousand and One Nights (Arabian Nights)A famous collection of folktales(Persian, Indian, Arabian). Name comes from the number of nights Scheherazade told a folktale to her husband, the sultan.1
7357091478Song Dynasty(960-1279) One of the most brilliant eras in imperial China. Under the Song dynasty, China reached extraordinary levels of agriculture and industrial productivity.2
7357094712Ming Dynasty(Mid-Fourteenth to Mid-Seventeenth) During early years, emperors adopted policies of expansionism by land and self-assertion by sea3
7357105450Tang Dynasty(618-907) Restored the Chinese imperial impulse. Extended control along the silk route. Considered to be at its high point during this time.4
7357117254Abbasid Empirea member of a dynasty of caliphs (750-1258) ruling the Islamic empire especially from their capital Baghdad and claiming descent from Abbas the uncle of Muhammad5
7357127113Emperor Yung-LoMing emperor from 1402-1424 who dispatched a series of seven spectacular ocean voyages under Admiral Zheng He..6
7357134737Admiral Zheng HeWas a court eunuch for the Ming dynasty. Was fleet admiral on 7 voyages to explore, and establish trade routes. Led China to Superpower of Indian Ocean.7
7357171055MongolsAn aggressive steppe nomad people, were one of the most powerful militaries of all time. Within thirty years expanded to the Chinese heartland and west to Kievan Russia.8
7357174355Marco PoloFamous European traveler who is known for his travels along the silk road last lasted 24 years.9
7357176840Kublai KhanA great Mongol emperor who reigned from 1260 to 1294, extended Mongol Empire even more.10
7357180744Diamond Sutraa Sanskrit tale transmitted along the silk routes and translated into chinese in the 5th century.11
7357191597TranshumanceA form of nomadism based off of the seasonal migration of livestock, practiced in areas unsuitable for winter grazing.12

AP World History Chapters 24 and 29 Flashcards

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6029907222StroganovsWanted access to Siberian furs, a major source of wealth that lured the tsarist state eastward.0
6028647047Martin LutherAttacked the sale of indulgences as an individual, but he soon attracted enthusiastic support from others who resented the policies of the Roman church.1
6028648998King Henry 8Came into conflict with the pope. Wanted to divorce his wife, but the pope refused to allow him to do so. His reaction was to make himself head of the Anglican church- and English pope, as it were.2
6029100035Peace of WestphaliaLaid the foundations for a system of independent, competing states. Regarded all as equal. Mutually recognized their rights to organize their own domestic affairs, including religious affairs. Replaced European religious unity with state sovereignty.3
6028651871John CalvinConverted to Protestant Christianity. Slipped across the border to French-speaking Geneva in Switzerland. Organized a Protestant community and worked with local officials to impose a strict code of morality and discipline on the city. He also composed an influential treatise, Institutes of the Christian Religion that codified Protestant teachings and presented them as a coherent and organized package.4
6028776926The Council of TrentAn assembly of bishops, cardinals, and other high church officials who met intermittently to address matters of doctrine and reform.5
6028798508St. Thomas AquinasA scholastic theologian that The Council of Trent took ideas from to define the elements of Roman Catholic theology in detail.6
6028823419The Society of JesusSought to extend the boundaries of the reformed Roman church.7
6028835761St. Ignatius LoyolaA Basque nobleman and soldier who suffered a devastating leg wound that ended his military career. He founded the society of Jesus. He required that members of the society, known as Jesuits, complete a rigorous and advanced education in order to out argue their opponents and then acquire a reputation for discipline and determination.8
6028872071King Phillip 2 of SpainAttempted to force England to return to the Roman Catholic Church by sending the Spanish Armada to dethrone the Protestan Queen Elizabeth.9
6028880952Spanish ArmadaA huge flotilla consisting of 130 ships and thirty men.10
6028911557Thirty Years' WarA mass of religious wars that opened when the Holy Roman emperor attempted to force his subjects to return to the Roman Catholic church.11
6028929509Emperor Charles 5Inherited authority over many territories. Had to devote much of his attention and energy to the Lutheran movement and to imperial princes who took advantage of religious controversy to assert their independence. Did not build an administrative structure for his empire, but instead ruled each of his lands according to its own laws and customs. He soon handed down his empire to his two sons.12
6028973862"New Monarchs"Rulers of England, France, and Spain who marshaled their resources, curbed the nobility, and built strong centralized regimes.13
6028985850The Spanish InquisitionWas the most distinctive institution that relied on religious justifications to advance state ends. Fernando and Isabel founded this in Spain and obtained papal license to operate the institution as a royal agency. Its original task was to ferret out those who secretly practiced Judaism or Islam, but Charles 5 charged it with the responsibility also for detecting Protestant heresy in Spain.14
6029045995Divine Right of KingsThis theory held that kings derived their authority from God and served as God's lieutenants upon earth.15
6029057377Cardinal RichelieuServed as chief minister to King Louis 13. He worked systematically to undermine the power of the nobility and enhance the authority of the king. He destroyed nobles' castles and ruthlessly crushed aristocratic conspiracies.16
6029079556King Louis 14Declared himself the Sun King. He built a magnificent residence at Versailles. Strongly encouraged the nobility to reside at Versailles so he could keep an eye on them.17
6029137113Adam SmithHeld that society would prosper when individuals pursued their own economic interests. A Scottish philosopher that turned his attention to economic affairs and held that laws of supply and demand determine what happens in the market place.18
6029142514The Ptolemaic UniverseWas composed of a work known as the Almagest that synthesizes theories about the universe. Put the Earth in the center of the universe.19
6029160210Nicolaus CopernicusA Polish astronomer who published a treatise On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres that broke with the Ptolemaic theory and pointed European science in a new direction. He argued that the sun rather than the earth stood at the center of the universe and that the planets, including the earth, revolved around the sun.20
6029182089KeplerDemonstrated that planetary orbits are elliptical, not circular.21
6029186436GalileoShowed that the heavens were not perfect, unblemished realm the Ptolemaic astronomers assumed, but rather a world of change, flux, and many previously unsuspected sights.22
6029197796Isaac NewtonDepended on accurate observation and mathematical reasoning to construct a powerful synthesis of astronomy and mechanics. He outline his views on the natural world in an epoch-making volume entitled Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy.23
6029215848John LockeSought to identify the principles of psychology and argued that all human knowledge comes from sense perceptions.24
6029240786Baron de MontesquieuA French nobleman who sought to establish a science of politics and discover principles that would foster political liberty in a prosperous and stable state.25
6029254947VoltaireWaged a long literary campaign against the Roman Catholic church, which he held responsible for intolerance and incalculable human suffering.26
6029269905DeismA way of thinking that held that a powerful god set the universe in motion and established natural laws that govern it, but did not take an interest in its development or intervene in its affairs.27
6029486899Ivan 3Considered the grand prince of Moscow, stopped paying tribute to the Mongol khan; declared Russian independence from Mongol rule. Continued the policy of "gathering the Russian land" and fashioned Moscow into a large an powerful state. He almost tripled the size of Moscow as he brought Russian-speaking peoples under his rule. Married Sophia Palaeologus and declared himself Tsar (Caesar). Claimed to derive his authority directly from God, like most absolutist rulers.28
6029566007NovgorodWas an autonomous city-state that governed its own affairs through a city council. The city's merchants had strong ties to Poland and Lithuania to the west, and Ivan wanted to make sure the wealth of this city did not strengthen neighboring states.29
6029586274CossacksPeasants that were offered freedom in request that they settle in recently conquered lands; "Free men." These peasants played a huge role in the expansion of the Russian empire.30
6029614814BoyarsThe elite military aristocracy comparable to knights in western Europe and samurai in Japan.31
6029625325Ivan 4Became known as the Terrible because of his severity and cruelty of his response. Inaugurated the practice of calling "assemblies of the land", meetings of representatives who informed him of local situations throughout Russia. Created a new aristocracy, the Oprichniki, which was his private army that hunted down treason.32
6029634192Chosen CouncilAn inner circle of advisors who owed their proximity to the tsar to their talent rather than their family33
6029696269Tsar Peter I and Tsarina Catherine IIUndertook a massive program of westernization. Their policies greatly strengthened the tsarist state. Provided Russia with territorial expansion that made Russia a multicultural empire.34
6029717956Tsar Peter IInstituted a policy of forced and rapid modernization. He fully appreciated modern science, and he considered it urgent for Russia to match western European achievements. Sent Russians abroad to study and embarked on his own tour of Germany, the Netherlands, and England to learn about western European military and industrial technology.35
6029750047Table of RanksPermitted officials to move along the fourteen steps according to merit. Old titles, such as boyar, disappeared along with the bearskin robes favored by the old nobility. Provided social mobility.36
6029765718TeremThe Russian equivalent of a harem, which kept upper-class women secluded from men outside their own families.37
6029779830St. Petersburg"Window on the West." Provided a haven for Russia's fledgling navy and offered access to western European lands through the Baltic Sea.38
6029828117Catherine 2Continued to pursue Peter's policy of westernization. Attempted to increase the effectiveness of the tsarist bureaucracy by appointing officials with a modern, western European- style education. Sought to devise policies that would improve her subjects lives without detracting from her own power an authority.39
6029857827Pugachev's RebellionWas motley a collection of disgruntled Cossacks, exiles, peasants, and serfs. They sought to end taxes... Killed thousands of noble landowners, government officials, and Orthodox priests.40
6029880974Bogdan KhmelnitskyA Ukrainian adventurer that sought revenge against Poland for the murder of his son.41
6029895261GeorgiansOrthodox Christians who feared the Ottoman Turks and sought a Russian protectorate in 1783.42
6029924503The Yakut peopleMounted a revolt against Russian oppression and experienced a brutal retribution that continued for forty years, forcing many out of their settlements and reducing their populations by an estimated 70 percent.43
6029939568Vitus BeringA Danish navigator who undertook two maritime expeditions in search of a northeast passage to Asian ports. Sailed through the icy Artic Ocean.44
6029954690The port of ArchangelBecame a flourishing trading city where merchants exchanged Russian furs, leather, and grain fir western European armaments, textiles, paper, and silver.45
6029966383AstrakhanWas home to a community of about two hundred foreign merchants from as far away as northern India, and one hundred or more additional Indian merchants made annual commercial trips to the Caspian Sea.46
6029981942NikonA monk who served as patriarch of Moscow. Established schools and academies that offered instruction in Latin and Greek as well as Church Slavonic.47
6029997222AvvakumHe and his followers feared that reformed rituals would compromise the community's eligibility to receive the grace of God and would thus threaten their eternal salvation. They blamed serfdom on outsiders. They regarded state tax collectors as agents of the Antichrist.48
6030021536IntelligentsiaA class that enjoyed recongnisiton as an unofficial social estate and worked strenuously to influence public opinion and state policy. "Thick journals."49
6040521621Law Code of 1649Placed serfs under strict control of landlords.50
6040536449RousseauThe Social Contract; influential work of political philosophy.51
6040547352PhilosopheWriters during the Enlightenment and who popularized the new ideas of the time.52
6051082397Capitalisman economic and political system in which a country's trade and industry are controlled by private owners for profit, rather than by the state.53
6051082398Mercantilismthe economic theory that trade generates wealth and is stimulated by the accumulation of profitable balances, which a government should encourage by means of protectionism.54
6051214833CalvinismPredestination.55
6051214834AnglicanismA church organization by King Henry to be free of the Pope in Rome.56
6051266921Social ContractAn agreement under which people gave up some of their rights in exchange for the benefits of living in a community under the protection of a government.57
6051293673ScholasticismConcerns the relationship of faith to reason.58
6057582006Niccolo Machiavelli59
6057589998Jean Jacques Rousseau60
6057598260Johannes GutenbergCreated and helped with the mass spread for the Protestant Reformation; The printing press61
6057609259invisible hand62
6057610857laissez faire63
6057610858capitalism64
6057618660mercantilism65

ap world history chapter 21 Flashcards

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5485328595tenochtilanthe city founded on the island in Lake Texcoco by the Mexica, spanish conquerors made it mexico city, originally the site was very inconvenient but it offered many advantages; the lake provided a wide variety of food supplies and the water served as a defense on all sides0
5485329534chinampasa system of agriculture developed by the Mexica, they dragged a rich and fertile muck from the bottom of the lake and put it on small plots of land, they were so productive that they could grow up to 7 crops each year, they used them to grow maize, beans, squash, tomatoes, peppers, and chiles1
5485329535toltecsthe first mesoamerican postclassical empire, preceded the mexica2
5485331243quetzalcoatla mesoamerican deity, translates to "feathered serpent", they god of wind and rain and the creator of the world and of mankind3
5485331244puebloa village4
5485331245incathe most dominant tribe of the andes mountains during the postclassical era, based out of their capital cuzco, the largest empire in southamerica before the spanish came5

AP World History Chapter 1 Flashcards

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7356470313Austronesian MigrationsThe last phase of the great human migration that established a human presence in every habitable region of the earth. Austronesian-speaking people settled the Pacific islands and Madagascar in a series of seaborne migrations that began around 3,500 years ago.0
7356478254IshiThe last surviving member of a gathering and hunting group known as the Yahi who lived in northern CA. His people were driven into extinction during the 2nd half of the 19th century by the intrusion of farming and herding "civilized" societies.1
7356489770ÇatalhüyükAn important Neolithic site in current Turkey.2
7356495494Göbekli TepeA ceremonial site comprising of 20 circles made up of carved limestone pillars located in southeastern Turkey. The site, which dates to 11,600 years ago, was built by gatherer hunters who lived at least part of the year in settled villages.3
7356505658Bantu MigrationThe spread of Bantu-speaking peoples from their homeland in what is now southern Nigeria or Cameroon to most of Africa, in a process that started ca. 3000 B.C.E. and continued for several millennia.4
7356518896ChiefdomA societal grouping governed by a chief who typically relies on generosity, ritual status, or charisma rather than force to win obedience from the people.5
7356524163Clovis CultureThe earliest widespread and distinctive culture of North America; named from the Clovis point, a particular kind of projectile point.6
7356531810DiffusionThe gradual spread of agricultural techniques without extensive population movement.7
7356536891DreamtimeA complex worldview of Australia's Aboriginal people that held that current humans live in a vibration or echo of ancestral happenings.8
7356541380Fertile CrescentRegion sometimes known as Southwest Asia that includes the modern states of Iraq, Syria, Israel/Palestine, and southern Turkey; the earliest home of agriculture.9
7356549379BanpoA Chinese archaeological site, where the remains of significant Neolithic village have been found.10
7356556277Megafaunal ExtinctionDying out of a number of large animal species, including the mammoth and several species of horses and camels, that occurred around 11,000-10,000 years ago, at the end of the Ice Age. The extinction may have been caused by excessive hunting or by the changing climate of the era.11
7356566360Paleolithic Settling DownThe process by which some Paleolithic peoples moved toward permanent settlement in the wake of the last Ice Age. Settlement was marked by increasing storage of food and accumulation of goods, as well as growing inequalities in society.12
7356575810"The Original Affluent Society"Term coined by the scholar Marshall Sahlins in 1972 to describe Paleolithic societies, which he regarded as affluent not because they had so much but because they wanted or needed so little.13
7356582456Pastoral SocietyA human society that relies on domesticated animals rather than plants as the main source of food; pastoral nomads lead their animals to seasonal grazing grounds rather than settling permanently in a single location.14
7356592052ShamanIn many early societies, a person believed to have the ability to act as a bridge between living humans and supernatural forces, often by means of trances induced by psychoactive drugs.15
7356600517"Secondary Products Revolution"A term used to describe the series of technological changes that began ca. 4000 B.C.E., as people began to develop new uses for their domesticated animals, exploiting a revolutionary new source of power.16
7356605662TeosinteThe wild ancestor of maize.17
7356610497"Stateless Societies"Village-based agricultural societies, usually organized by kinship groups, that functioned without a formal government apparatus.18
7356616134Trance DanceIn San culture, a nightlong ritual held to activate a human's being's inner spiritual potency (n/um) to counteract the evil influences of gods and ancestors. The practice was apparently common to the Khoisan people, of whom the Ju/'hoansi are a surviving remnant.19
7356636783Venus FigurinesPaleolithic carvings of the female form, often with exaggerated breasts, buttocks, hips, and stomachs, which may have had religious significance.20

AP World history chapter 8 multiple choice Flashcards

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5158026235In 99 B.C.E the great historian of China , Sima Qian, suffered from castration becauseC.) his view contradicted the emperor's judgement0
5158026236Confucius left an enduring mark on Chinese society asA.) an educator and political advisor1
5158026237by junzi or "superior individuals," Confucius meantD.) Superior individuals with a broad view of public affairs2
5158026238Confucius never composed formal writings, but his disciples collected his remarks into a work called theD.) Analects3
5158026239Mencius, the principal spokesman for the Confucian school, advocated thatB.) Government should be organized through benevolence and humane action4
5158026240The concept dao meansB.) the original force of the cosmos, an eternal and unchanging principle that governs all the workings of the world.5
5158026241An individual who practiced the Daoist virtue of wuwei wouldD.) Go with the flow of the cosmos and liv in harmony with nature6
5158026242Individuals in traditional China could live as "Confucians by day . . . and Daoists by night." This refers to the notion thatB.)Confucianism and Daoism were not mutually exclusive but, in many people's eyes, complemented each other.7
5158026243To make a strong and powerful state, Legalist ministersD.)encouraged agricultural cultivation and military service.8
5158026244The First Emperor Qin ShihuangdiE.)All these answers are correct9
5158026245The excavation site of the First Emperor's tomb near modern Xi'an is a great tourist attraction. When you visit the tomb, you can seeA.)a great terra-cotta army of Qin soldiers and cavalry.10
5158026246The great Qin empire only lasted a few years. It was ended byB.) waves of revolt11
5158026247Liu BangC.)constructed the most highly decentralized state in China's history up to that point.12
5158026248Han Wudi, the greatest and most energetic emperor of the Han dynasty, was remembered by later generationsB.)as the "Martial Emperor."13
5158026249In preparing government officials, the imperial university of the Later Han enrolled more than three thousand students, with its curriculum primarily based onD.) Confucianism.14
5158026250Han Wudi decided to go on the offensive against the Xiongnu primarily becauseA.)he wanted to pacify them and create a central Asian corridor to trade.15
5158026251Which of the following is NOT true with regard to Chinese silk?A.)Sericulture was first discovered by the Chinese during the Han dynasty.16
5158026252After 100 C.E. most Chinese writing was onC.) Paper17
5158026253After Wang Mang usurped the throne of the Han, he attempted toA.)restore land that had been taken from the royal family.18
5158026254An event leading to the collapse of the Han dynasty wasA.)the Yellow Turban uprising.19

AP World History verbs #3 Flashcards

Terms from 600 C.E. to 1450 C.E. in the AP World History book by the Princeton Review (most terms repeated from the previous chapter are not included)

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6204320610Aristocracya government in which power is in the hands of a hereditary ruling class or nobility0
6204320611BureaucratOne who works for a department or agency of the federal government - civil servant, not elected, appointed by a leader and approved by the senate1
6204320612Caliphthe civil and religious leader of a Muslim state considered to be a representative of Allah on earth2
6204320613Caliphatethe territorial jurisdiction of a caliph3
6204320614Chivalrythe medieval knight's code of ideal behavior, including bravery, loyalty, and respect for women4
6204320615Civil Servicegovernment workers5
6204320616CreditAn arrangement to receive cash, goods, or services now and pay for them in the future.6
6204320617Cultural Diffusionthe spread of cultural elements from one society to another7
6204320618Decentralizedthe process of dispersing decision-making governance closer to the people and/or citizen8
6204320619Dowrymoney or property brought by a woman to her husband at marriage9
6204320620Eastern OrthodoxThe Christian religion of the Byzantine Empire in the middle east that formed from Christianity's schism between the remains of the western and eastern Roman Empire. The Christian church ruled by the Byzantine emperor and the patriarchs of various historically significant Christian centers/cities.10
6204320621Fiefspieces of land given to vassals by their lord11
6204320622GarrisonsA place where a group of soldiers is stationed for defensive purposes (e.g. along the Silk Roads)12
6204320623Gothica style of architecture developed in northern France that spread throughout Europe between the 12th and 16th centuries13
6204320624Hajjthe fifth pillar of Islam is a pilgrimage to Mecca during the month of Dhu al-Qadah14
6204320625Heresythe crime of holding a belief that goes against established doctrine15
6204320626Heretica person who holds unorthodox opinions in any field (not merely religion)16
6204320627Hijabthe custom in some Islamic societies of women dressing modestly outside the home (e.g. veils and head scarfs)17
6204320628Illegitimateborn of parents who are not married to each other; illegal18
6204320629Infrastructurethe stock of basic facilities and capital equipment needed for the functioning of a country or area19
6204320630Interactiona mutual or reciprocal action20
6204320631Inquisitionan official investigation; a severe interrogation (often violating the rights or privacy of individuals)21
6204320632Interrogationan instance of questioning22
6204320633Islamthe religion of Muslims collectively which governs their civilization and way of life23
6204320634Literateable to read and write24
6204320635Matriarcha female head of a family or tribe25
6204320636Matrilinealbased on or tracing descent through the female line26
6204320637Medievalrelating to or belonging to the Middle Ages27
6204320638Meritocracythe belief that rulers should be chosen for their superior abilities and not because of their wealth or birth28
6204320639Middle AgesThe historical period from around 500 A.D. up to around 1450 A.D. between the fall of Rome and the birth of the Renaissance29
6204320640Migrationthe movement of persons from one country or locality to another30
6204320641Monetary Systemanything that is generally accepted as a standard of value and a measure of wealth in a particular country or region31
6204320642MosqueMuslim house of worship32
6204320643Muslima believer or follower of Islam33
6204320644Nation-StateA country who's population share a common identity.34
6204320645Orthodoxtraditional; (of someone) conservative in belief; adhering to an established doctrine35
6204320646Patriarchthe male head of family or tribe36
6204320647Patriarchalmale led society and household37
6204320648Persecutionthe act of persecuting (especially on the basis of race or religion)38
6204320649Pilgrimssomeone who journeys to another place39
6204320650Pilgrimagea journey to a sacred place40
6204320651Primogenitureright of inheritance belongs exclusively to the eldest son41
6204320652Roman CatholicThe Christian religion of Europe that formed from Christianity's schism between the remains of the western and eastern Roman Empire; based in the Vatican and presided over by a pope and an episcopal hierarchy42
6204320653Schismdivision of a group into opposing factions (e.g. a schism in a religious group)43
6204320654Secludedproviding privacy or seclusion; isolated44
6204320655Serfsa person who lived on and farmed a lords land in feudal times45
6204320656Submissivewilling to submit without resistance to authority46
6204320657Subordinatelower in rank or importance; subservient47
6204320658Trans-Continentalspanning or crossing a continent48
6204320659Tribute Systempayment made by one nation to another in acknowledgment of submission49
6204320660Baghdad, IraqCapital city of Iraq. As heart of the Arab Empire, it was second only to Constantinople in terms of size and grandeur in 1000 C.E.- Capitol of the Abbasid Dynasty50
6204320661Black Deaththe epidemic form of bubonic plague experienced during the Middle Ages when it killed nearly half the people of western Europe51
6204320662Bubonic PlagueA bacterial disease of fleas that can be transmitted by flea bites to rodents and humans; humans in late stages of the illness can spread the bacteria by coughing. High mortality rate and hard to contain. Disastrous.52
6204320663Chang'anXi'an, China: a city of central China; capital of ancient Chinese empire 221-206 BC, location of Terra Cotta Soldiers; means "perpetual peace"53
6204320664ConstantinoplePreviously known as Byzantium, Constantine changed the name of the city and moved the capital of the Roman Empire here from Rome; capital of the Byzantine empire; now called Istanbul54
6204320665Crusades(1095-1291), Christian Europe aim to reclaim Jerusalem and aid they Byzantines; 1st success and the rest a failure; weakens the Byzantines; opens up trade55
6204320666Empress WuShe led the T'ang Dynasty (625-705 AD); Only women emperor of China; powerful and cruel, along with talented and intelligent56
6204320667Foot-Bindingpractice in Chinese society to mutilate women's feet in order to make them smaller; produced pain and restricted women's movement; made it easier to confine women to the household57
6204320668FranksGermanic people who lived and held power in Gaul. Their leader was Clovis and he would later bring Christianity to the region. By 511 the Franks had united into one kingdom and they controlled the largest and strongest parts of Europe.58
6204320669CharlemangeKing of the Franks (768-814); founder of first empire in western Europe after the fall of Rome; crowned Holy Roman Emperor in 800 C.E.59
6204320670Ghengis KhanHe united the Mongols and built the largest empire the world has ever known60
6204320671Hanseatic Leaguea group of Northern German cities and towns that worked together to promote and protect trade61
6204320672Hundred Years War(1337-1453), conflict between French and English over English ownership of French lands62
6204320673Code of Justiniana digest of Roman and church law, and it laid the foundation for modern, western law63
6204320674Magna CartaSigned by King John in 1215; the first document in England that limited the power of the government64
6204320675Mansa Musathis Mali king brought Mali to its peak of power and wealth from 1312 the 1337; he was the most powerful king in West Africa65
6204320676Neo-Confucianismterm that describes the resurgence of Confucianism and the influence of Confucian scholars during the T'ang Dynasty; a unification of Daoist or Buddhist metaphysics with Confucian pragmatism66
6204320677Sacking of ConstantinopleDuring the Fourth Crusade (1202-1204), in April 1204, the Crusaders of Western Europe invaded and conquered the Eastern Orthodox city of Constantinople, capital of the Byzantine Empire. This is seen as one of the final acts in the Great Schism between the Eastern Orthodox Church and Roman Catholic Church.67
6204320678St. Cyrilcreated the Cyrillic alphabet which was based off the Greek alphabet; used for writing Slavic languages68
6204320679Schism in Christianity(1054) Event that precipitated the final separation between the Eastern Christian churches (led by the patriarch of Constantinople, Michael Cerularius) and the Western Church (led by Pope Leo IX)69
6204320680Schism in Islam(650s) The Shia / Sunni split which occurred in the decades immediately following the death of the Prophet Mohammed in 63270
6204320681ShintoismReligion located in Japan and related to Buddhism. Shintoism focuses particularly on nature and ancestor worship.71
6204320682TimbuktuCity on the Niger River in the modern country of Mali. It was founded by the Tuareg as a seasonal camp sometime after 1000. As part of the Mali empire, Timbuktu became a major major terminus of the trans-Saharan trade and a center of Islamic learning72
6204320683TenochtitlanCapital of the Aztec Empire, located on an island in Lake Texcoco. Its population was about 150,000 on the eve of Spanish conquest. Mexico City was constructed on its ruins.73
6204320684William the Conquerorduke of Normandy who led the Norman invasion of England and became the first Norman to be King of England74

AP World history ch3 Flashcards

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7306676603Ahura MazdaIn Zoroastrianism, the good god who rules the world. (pron. ah-HOOR- a MAZ-dah)0
7306676604Alexander the Great: Alexander III of Macedon (356-323 B.C.E.)conqueror of the Persian Empire and part of northwest India.1
7306677010AryansIndo-European pastoralists who moved into India about the time of the collapse of the Indus Valley civilization; their role in causing this collapse is still debated by historians.2
7306677011AshokaThe most famous ruler of the Mauryan empire (r. 268-232 B.C.E.), who converted to Buddhism and tried to rule peacefully and with tolerance. (pron. ah-SHOKE- uh)3
7306677187Athenian democracyA radical form of direct democracy in which much of the free male population of Athens had the franchise and officeholders were chosen by lot.4
7306677188Caesar AugustusThe great-nephew and adopted son of Julius Caesar who emerged as sole ruler of the Roman state at the end of an extended period of civil war (r. 31 B.C.E.-14 C.E.).5
7306677884Cyrus (the Great)Founder of the Persian Empire (r. 557-530 B.C.E.); a ruler noted for his conquests, religious tolerance, and political moderation.6
7306677885Darius IGreat king of Persia (r. 522-486 B.C.E) following the upheavals after Cyrus's death; completed the establishment of the Persian Empire. (pron. most commonly in American English DAHR-ee- us)7
7306679144Greco-Persian WarsTwo major Persian invasions of Greece, in 490 B.C.E and 480 B.C.E, in which the Persians were defeated on both land and sea.8
7306679145Gupta EmpireAn empire of India (320-550 C.E.). (pron. GHOOP-tuh)9
7306679361Han dynastyDynasty that ruled China from 206 B.C.E to 220 C.E., creating a durable state based on Shihuangdi's state-building achievement. (pron. hahn)10
7306679362Hellenistic eraThe period from 323 to 30 B.C.E in which Greek culture spread widely in Eurasia in the kingdoms ruled by Alexander's political successors.11
7306679611HerodotusGreek historian known as the "father of history" (ca. 484-ca. 425 B.C.E). His Histories enunciated the Greek view of a fundamental divide between East and West, culminating in the Greco-Persian Wars of 490-480 B.C.E (pron. hair- ODD-uh- tus)12
7306679644hopliteA heavily armed Greek infantryman. Over time, the ability to afford a hoplite panoply and to fight for the city came to define Greek citizenship.13
7306680026IoniaThe territory of Greek settlements on the coast of Anatolia; the main bone of contention between the Greeks and the Persian Empire.14
7306680348Mandate of HeavenThe ideological underpinning of Chinese emperors, this was the belief that a ruler held authority by command of divine force as long as he ruled morally and benevolently.15
7306680349Marathon, Battle ofAthenian victory over a Persian invasion in 490 B.C.E16
7306680500Mauryan EmpireA major empire (322-185 B.C.E.) that encompassed most of India.17
7306680686Olympic GamesGreek religious festival and athletic competition in honor of Zeus; founded in 776 B.C.E and celebrated every four years.18
7306680687patriciansWealthy, privileged Romans who dominated early Roman society.19
7306681204pax RomanaThe "Roman peace," a term typically used to denote the stability and prosperity of the early Roman Empire, especially in the first and second centuries C.E. (pron. pox roh-MAHN- uh)20
7306681205Peloponnesian WarGreat war between Athens (and allies) and Sparta (and allies), lasting from 431 to 404 B.C.E. The conflict ended in the defeat of Athens and the closing of Athens's Golden Age.21
7306681576PersepolisThe capital and greatest palace-city of the Persian Empire, destroyed by Alexander the Great. (pron. per-SEP- oh-lis)22
7306681577Persian EmpireA major empire that expanded from the Iranian plateau to incorporate the Middle East from Egypt to India; flourished from around 550 to 330 B.C.E23
7306681870plebeiansPoorer, less-privileged Romans who gradually won a role in Roman politics.24
7306681871Punic WarsThree major wars between Rome and Carthage in North Africa, fought between 264 and 146 B.C.E, that culminated in Roman victory and control of the western Mediterranean.25
7306681896Qin dynastyA short-lived (221-206 B.C.E.) but highly influential Chinese dynasty that succeeded in reuniting China at the end of the Warring States period. (pron. chin)26
7306682116Qin ShihuangdiLiterally "first emperor from the Qin"; Shihuangdi (r. 221-210 B.C.E.) forcibly reunited China and established a strong and repressive state. (pron. chin shee-hwang- dee)27
7306682117SolonAthenian statesman and lawmaker (fl. 594-560 B.C.E.) whose reforms led the Athenians toward democracy.28
7306682548WudiHan emperor (r. 141-86 B.C.E.) who began the Chinese civil service system by establishing an academy to train imperial bureaucrats. (pron. woo-dee)29
7306682549XiongnuNomadic peoples to the north of the Great Wall of China who were a frequent threat to the stability of the Chinese state. (pron. shong-noo)30
7306682815Yellow Turban RebellionA major Chinese peasant revolt that began in 184 C.E. and helped cause the fall of the Han dynasty.31

AP World History Unit 3 600-1450 Flashcards

Silk Road An ancient caravan route that linked Xian in central China with the eastern Mediterranean. It was established during the period of Roman rule in Europe and took its name from the silk that was brought to the west from China. The Mongols reopened the route in the 13th c.

Terms : Hide Images
8498275738HijabHead covering worn in public by some Muslim women.0
8498275739MuslimFollower of the religion of Islam.1
8498275740SassanidThe name of the last pre-Islamic Iranian empire. It was one of the two main powers in Western Asia for a period of more than 400 years. Was founded by Ardashir I after defeating the last Parthian (Arsacid) king, in Persia, also involving a revival of a revival of the Persian religion Zoroastrianism. Fought the Byzantines, which weakened them both.2
8498275741ArabA member of a Semitic people, originally from the Arabian peninsula and neighboring territories, inhabiting much of the Middle East and North Africa.3
8498275742IslamA monotheistic religion founded by Muhammad as the Prophet of Allah in the Arabian Peninsula in the 7th Century C.E. Its followers, called Muslims, believe Allah is the only God and that he spoke to the people through Muhammad, whose teachings are recorded in the Qu'ran (Koran). Muslims believe that following the Five-Pillars (Confession of faith to one god, prayer 5 times a day, charity to the needy, fasting during Ramadan, pilgrimage to Mecca) will result in salvation.4
8498275743QuranThe Islamic sacred book, believed to be the word of God as dictated to Muhammad by the archangel Gabriel and written down in Arabic.5
8498275744UmmaThe whole community of Muslims bound together by ties of religion. The community of believers6
8498275745InquisitionA formalized interrogation and persecution of heretics. Punishment for so-called nonbelievers ranged from excommunication and exile to torture and execution7
8498275746MatrilinealWhere power in a family is passed down through the mother or the female line, rather than the male/father's line.8
8498275747Code of BushidoThe code of honor and morals developed by the Japanese samurai. It stressed loyalty, courage and honor; if a samurai failed to observe the code; he was expected to commit suicide.9
8498275748Justinian(483-565) Byzantine emperor from 527-565.10
8498275749Sui DynastyA dynasty that ruled in China ad 581-618 and reunified the country.11
8498275750Shi'iteBranch of Islam that only supports the descendants of Muhammad as his rightful successors.12
8498275751Holy Roman EmpireDifferent from the original Roman Empire, was begun by Charlemagne in 800, but was not called the Holy Roman Empire until 962. It consisted on Northern Italy, Germany, Belgium and France. The empire marked the beginning of imperialism, especially be religious leaders. The church held a strong influence over most aspects of society. It was feudalistic, with local lords answering to the emperor. It was created by the medieval papacy in an attempt to unite Christendom under one rule.13
8498275752Roman Catholic ChurchThe part of the Christian Church that acknowledges the pope as its head. Main cultural unifying force in Western Europe during the Middle Ages.14
8498275753Inca EmpireThese people arrived in the Cuzco Valley in Peru around 1200 C.E. When the Spanish invaded in the early 1530s, the empire covered most of modern Ecuador and Peru, much of Bolivia, and parts of Argentina and Chile. Their technology and architecture were highly developed. Their descendants, speaking Quechua, still make up about half of Peru's population.15
8498275754MalawiNon-Arab converts to Islam16
8498275755CharlemagneCharlemagne, or also known as Charles the Great or Charles I was the King of the Franks from 768-774. He was also the first emperor since the collapse of the Western Roman Empire.17
8498275756Prince Vladimir of KievPrince Vladimir was the grand prince of Kiev and all of Russia. He assembled a Varangian army and reconquered Novgorod from Yaropolk.18
8498275757Saint Cyril(826-869). Greek missionary from the Byzantine Empire. The invention of the Russian Cyrillic alphabet is ascribed to him.19
8498275758Yuan DynastyEstablished when the Mongols conquered the Song dynasty in 1279. The Mongol reign was short-lived, ending when the Mongols were driven out of China in the 1300s.20
8498275759House of WisdomLocated in Baghdad, and was a place of learning for scholars who came from all over the Islamic world.21
8498275760TurksA member of any of the ancient central Asian peoples who spoke Turkic languages, including the Seljuk and Ottomans. Also a member of the ruling Muslim population of the Ottoman Empire.22
8498275761Hundred Years WarA war between France and England, conventionally dated 1337-1453. The war consisted of a series of conflicts in which successive English kings attempted to dominate France and included an early string of English military successes, most notably Crécy and Poitiers. In 1415 England, under Henry V, delivered a crushing victory at Agincourt and occupied much of northern France, but, with the exception of Calais, all English conquests had been lost by 1453.23
8498275762Song Dynasty(960-1279 C.E.) Reunified China after the collapse of the Tang dynasty. This dynasty experience a long stretch of peace and prosperity, but eventually fell to Jurchin and then the Mongols in 1279. Under this dynasty, China developed printing processes and gunpowder.24
8498275763Mansa MusaOne of the greatest Mali rulers, built a capital city at Timbuktu and added lands to his kingdom well beyond the bounds of Ghana. In 1307 he made a pilgrimage to Mecca with so many gold-carrying servants and camels that he became a sort of international Islamic celebrity.25
8498275764Marco Polo( 1254- 1324) Italian traveler. With his father and uncle he traveled to China and the court of Kublai Khan via central Asia (1271-75). He eventually returned home (1292-95) via Sumatra, India, and Persia. His account of his travels spurred the European quest for the riches of the East.26
8498275765Mita SystemMandatory labor performed by male citizens over the age of 15 in the Inca civilization.27
8498275766Indian Ocean Trading NetworkNetwork of trade that extended throughout the Indian Ocean and connected to East Africa, Islamic World, Mediterranean, East Asian and Southeast Asian trading zones.28
8498275767Tang Dynasty(618-907 C.E.) The era is known for its poetry, development of a transportation and communication network, and its tribute system (where independent countries sent ambassadors to China with gifts to acknowledge the supremacy of the emperor.29
8498275768Ghana, Mali, and SonghayMali - a landlocked republic in Northwestern Africa Ghana - a republic of West Africa on the Gulf of Guinea Songhai - a Nilo - Saharan language spoken by the Songhai people in Mali and Niger30
8498275769Foot BindingPractice in Chinese society to mutilate women's feet in order to make them smaller; produced pain and restricted women's movement; made it easier to confine women to the household31
8498275770MeritocracyA government where the people who hold power are selected on the basis of their ability.32
8498275771MosqueA Muslim place of worship. They consist of an area reserved for communal prayers, frequently in a domed building with a minaret, and with a niche (mihrab) or other structure indicating the direction of Mecca. There may also be a platform for preaching (minbar), and an adjacent courtyard in which water is provided for the obligatory ablutions before prayer.33
8498275772SufismThe hippy version of Islamic that stresses the spiritual path to mystical union with God. Effective missionaries of Islam. They boast a personal relationship with Allah, and their teachings made Islam highly adaptable to different circumstances, allowing individuals to mold their relationship with Allah to meet their needs and beliefs. Because of this, they converted many people to Islam during the Abbasid Dynasty. It is influenced by other faiths, such as Buddhism, and reached its peak in the 13th century. There are many Sufi orders, the best known being the dervishes.34
8498275773TimbuktuA major trading center for gold and salt on the trans-Saharan trade routes, it reached the height of its prosperity in the 16th century but fell into decline after its capture by the Moroccans in 1591.35
8498275774MalaccaKey trading port in the Indian Ocean trading network. All trade between East Asia and the Indian Ocean passed through it.36
8498275775ChivalryAn honor system in Western Europe that strongly condemned betrayal and promoted mutual respect and the belief that women were to be protected. Most of the lords and knights followed this code37
8498275776Abbasid CaliphateA dynasty of Muslim caliphs who ruled the Islamic world from their capital in Baghdad from 750 to 1258.38
8498275777MedievalEuropean history period prior to Renaissance. 500/1500 BC39
8498275778Japanese FeudalismUnder this system in Japan, the shogun was the 'chief general,' appointed by the emperor. The shogun held the real power, and the emperor became a figurehead. The daimyo (landowners and powerful samurai warriors) were below the shogun. Daimyo divided up their land among lesser samurai, who split their land up again. Peasants worked the land, and artisans ran shops to support the samurai class.40
8498275779Aztec empireAztec Empire began as an alliance of three Nahua city-states or "altepetl": Tenochtitlan, Texcoco, and Tlacopan. These city-states ruled the area in and around the Valley of Mexico from 1428 until they were defeated by the Spanish conquistadores and their native allies under Hernán Cortés in 1521.41
8498275780Eastern Orthodox Christianitya Christian church or federation of churches originating in the Greek-speaking church of the Byzantine Empire, not accepting the authority of the pope, and using elaborate and ancient forms of service.42
8498275781IconsA painting of Jesus Christ or another holy figure, typically in a traditional style on wood, venerated and used as an aid to devotion in the Byzantine and other Eastern Churches.43
8498275782Umayyad Caliphate(661-750) A Muslim dynasty that ruled the Islamic world from 660 to 750 and Moorish Spain from 756 to 1031. Enlarged the Islamic Empire significantly. Capital moved from Mecca to Damascus in Syria.44
8498275783Primogenturethe statement that the oldest son received land from his father and younger sons seeked fortunes elsewhere45
8498275784Theocracya form of government in which a deity is officially recognized as the civil Ruler and official policy is governed by officials regarded as divinely guided, or is pursuant to the doctrine of a particular religion or religious group.46
8498275785TenochtitlanThe ancient capital of the Aztec empire, founded c. 1320. In 1521, the Spanish conquistador Cortés destroyed it and established Mexico City on its site.47
8498275786Yamato clanThe first important ruling family in Japan. They came to power in the 5th c and have been the only dynasty to rule Japan since then. In fact, the current Emperor (Akihito) is a descendent of the Yamato.48
8498275787Gothicof or relating to the Goths or their extinct East Germanic language, which provides the earliest manuscript evidence of any Germanic language (4th-6th centuries AD).49
8498275788Heretica person believing in or practicing religious heresy.50
8498275789Mongol EmpireIn the 13th century C.E., the empire under Genghis Khan extended across central Asia from Manchuria in the east to European Russia in the west. It was one of the largest continuous empire in the world. It was divided into smaller territories called hordes. Under Kublai Khan, China was conquered and the Mongol capital moved to Khanbaliq (modern Beijing). The Mongol empire collapsed after a series of defeats culminating in the destruction of the Golden Horde by the Muscovites in 1380.51
8498275790AristocracyA government system in which positions are inherited based on being a member of a small, privileged class or family.52
8498275791Byzantine EmpireCoexisted with and was situated between the Roman and Islamic empires. Greek was spoken here, and it's culture had more in common with Eastern (i.e. Persian); its brand of Christianity became entirely separate branch known as Orthodox Christianity. It ended with the loss of Constantinople to the Ottoman Turks in 145353
8498275792Silk RoadAn ancient caravan route that linked Xian in central China with the eastern Mediterranean. It was established during the period of Roman rule in Europe and took its name from the silk that was brought to the west from China. The Mongols reopened the route in the 13th c.54
8498275793FeudalismA political system in which nobles are granted the use of lands that legally belong to a king in return for loyalty and military service55
8498275794Temujin/Chinggis Khan(1162-1227). Founder of the Mongol empire; born Temujin. He took the name Genghis Khan ("ruler of all") in 1206 after uniting the nomadic Mongol tribes. When he died, his empire extended from China to the Black Sea. His grandson Kublai Khan completed the conquest of China.56
8498275795Khubilai Khan(1216-94). Mongol emperor of China; grandson of Genghis Khan. With his brother Mangu (then Mongol Khan), he conquered southern China (1252-59). After Mangu's death in 1259, he completed the conquest of China, founded the Yuan dynasty, and established his capital on the site of modern Beijing.57
8498275796CrusadesMedieval military expedition made by Europeans to recover the Holy Land from the Muslims in the 11th, 12th, and 13th centuries.58
8498275797Ottoman EmpireThe Turkish empire, established in northern Anatolia by Osman I at the end of the 13th century and expanded by his successors to include all of Asia Minor and much of southeastern Europe. After setbacks caused by the invasion of the Mongol ruler Tamerlane in 1402, the Ottomans captured Constantinople in 1453, and the empire reached its zenith under Suleiman in the mid 16th century. It had greatly declined by the 19th century and collapsed after World War I.59
8498275798Safavid EmpireThe Shia dynasty that ruled Persia from 1502-1736.60
8498275799Muhammad( c. 570-632) Arab prophet and founder of Islam. In c. 610, in Mecca, he received the first of a series of revelations that, as the Koran, became the doctrinal and legislative basis of Islam. In the face of opposition to his preaching, he and his small group of supporters were forced to flee to Medina in 622 (the Hegira). He then led his followers into a series of battles against the Meccans. In 630, Mecca capitulated and by his death he had united most of Arabia.61
8498275800Black DeathThe great epidemic of bubonic plague that killed a large part of the population of Europe in the mid 14th century. Began in Asia and spread through merchants. It killed about 1/3 of the population of Europe. It sped the decline of the feudal system in western Europe, because many manors were closed because their lords or serfs died. It was carried by the fleas of black rats, reaching England in 1348 and killing between one third and one half of the population in a matter of months.62
8498275801Li Po/ Li Bo701-762 - One of the most famous Chinese poet who supposedly drowned while trying to reach the reflection of the moon in a lake.63
8498275802Hanseatic LeagueAn economic and defensive alliance of the free towns in northern Germany, founded about 1241 and most powerful in the fourteenth century.64
8498275803Caliph/CaliphatesThe emperor and religion leader in early Islam. They would serve as a head of state, military commander, chief judge, and religious leader. The theocratic Islamic Empire was referred to as a caliphate. They ruled in Baghdad until 1258 and then in Egypt until the Ottoman conquest of 1517; the title was then held by the Ottoman sultans until it was abolished in 1924 by Atatürk.65
8498275804Civil Service ExamExam taken in order to gain entrance to the Chinese bureaucracy. Primarily focused on Confucian concepts.66
8498275805Cultural DiffusionThe things and ideas from one culture that are 'borrowed' from another culture.67
8498275806VassalsA person in the Medieval European feudal system who entered into a mutual obligation to a lord or monarch.68
8498275807Chang'an (Xi'an, China)Capital of the Tang dynasty and eastern most city on the Silk Road.69
8498275808Sunni IslamMembers do not believe Ali, son of Muhammad, is the rightful heir to the Islamic empire. They hold Ali in high esteem, but believe that their leaders should arise from a broad base of Islamic people.70
8498275809Tang Empress WuTang Empress Wu, born Wu Zetian, was a Chinese sovereign, who ruled officially from 690 to 705; however, she had previous imperial positions under both Emperor Taizong of Tang and his son Emperor Gaozong of Tang, of the Tang Dynasty of China. Wu Zetian ruled as effective sovereign until 705. She is the only woman to rule China in her own right71
8498275810WesternizationAn adoption of the social, political, or economic institutions of Western—especially European or American—countries.72

CH.13 AP World History Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
5816446754Durbarelaborate display of political power and wealth in British Indian the nineteenth century, ostensibly in imitation of the pageantry of the Mughal Empire0
5816446755Dona Marinaoriginally called Malintzin: born about 1500 in central Mexica with Nahuatl as her native language; became fluent in Maya during her travels....helped Hernan Cortes communicate with the Nahuatl-speaking peoples of central Mexico; in 1522, she gave birth to a son fathered by Cortes and in 1526, she had a daughter to a Spanish captain that she married and learned Spanish; she died in 1527 during labor1
5816446756Hernan Cortes(1485-1547) Spanish conquistador who defeated the Aztecs and conquered Mexico2
5816446757Atahualpa (page 621)last emperor of the Inca Empire, spent majority of life in captivity....the Inca empire raised large ransom for his return, after it was paid he was executed3
5816446758Huascar (page 621)After Huayna Capac died; there was a civil war between his two sons. He was older brother and was heir to the throne// fought brother in civil war for leader of Inca, killed shortly before Pizarro's arrival4
5816446759Great Dying (page 622)explorers and conquistadors from New World brought diseases with them that the Native Americans had no immunity to. 60-80 million Native Americans died from these diseases.........caused social breakdown of Native American societies5
5816446760Small Pox (page 622)infectious disease that began in Europe and spread to the Americas through conquest AKA: "Cotton Pox", "Cow Pox", "Milk Pox", "White Pox", "Cuban Itch"6
5816446761American stimulants7
5816446762Colombian Exchange (page 624)exchange of plants, animals, diseases, and technologies between the Americas and the rest of the world following Columbus's voyages8
5816446763Mercantilism (page 626)economic system to increase a nation's wealth by government regulation of all of the nation's commercial interests9
5816446764Encomienda (page 627)institution where recruitment of labor came through; gave Spanish settlers (encomenderos) right to work in their mines/fields but also the responsibility of looking after worker's health and welfare and encourage conversion to Christianity10
5816446765Repartimiento (page 627)colonial forced labor system imposed upon indigenous population of Spanish America and the Philippines11
5816446766Hacienda (page 627)Rural estates in Spanish colonies in New World; produced agricultural products for consumers in America=basis of wealth and power for local aristocracy12
5816446767Peonsemployed native workers and owned large estates. . .these people worked the estates enjoyed little control over their lives13
5816446768PeninsularesPeople who are born in Spain; mercantile groups who had less prestigious occupations14
5816446769CreolesSpaniards that owned land and were born in the Americas; resented the pretensions to superiority of Peninsulares15
5816446770MestizoIt was a mixed-race population, mix of Spanish men and Native American women16
5816446771Castesseparate groups that mixed race people were divided into17
5816446772IndiansIndigenous people that were at the bottom of Mexican and Peruvian colonial societies; traumatized by "the great dying" and were subject to abuse and exploitation as primary labor source for the mines and estates of the Spanish Empire and were required to render tribute payments to their Spanish overlords18
5816446773MulattoesPeople of mixed white and black ancestry, especially a person with one white and one black parent19
5816446774Siberiavast territory that is now central and eastern Russia. It is unsuited for agriculture but rich in minerals and fur-bearing animals20
5816446775"Soft Gold". . . of furbearing animals (pelts were in great demand on the world market) drew the Russians across Siberia21
5816446776Yasak"tribute," paid in cash or in kind. In Siberia, this meant enormous quantities of furs, especially the extremely valuable sable, which Siberian peoples were compelled to produce.22
5816446777Cossacksgroup of predominantly East Slavic-speaking people who became known as members of democratic, self-governing, semi-military communities, predominantly located in Ukraine and in Russia23
5816446778RussifiedMade Russian in character24
5816446779"Window on the West"St. Petersburg, Russia25
5816446780QingRuling dynasty of China from 1644-1912. The Qing rulers were from Manchuria who had conquered China26
5816446781Mughal EmpireOne of the most successful empires of India. Founded by Muslim Turks that were noted for trying to connect Hindus and Muslims27
5816446782AkbarThe most famous Mughal emperor. Noted for being religiously tolerant28
5816446783Satithe former Hindu practice of a widow throwing herself onto her husband's funeral pyre29
5816446784Nur Jahanthe twentieth but most beloved, and therefore most important consort of the Mughal Emperor Jahangir30
5816446785House of WorshipThe Bahá'í House of Worship for North America. A Symbol of the Oneness of Humanity31
5816446786AurangzebAbu'l Muzaffar Muhi-ud-Din Muhammad Aurangzeb Alamgir, commonly known as Aurangzeb, was the sixth, and widely considered the last effective Mughal Emperor32
5816446787Ottoman EmpireMajor Islamic state that centered on Anatolia. Took over the Balkans, the Near East, and much of North Africa33
5816446788SultanA Muslim sovereign34
58164467891453Fall of Constantinople was the capture of the capital of the Byzantine Empire by an invading army of the Ottoman Empire on 29 May 145335
5816446790Devshirmetribute of boys levied by the Ottoman Empire from the Christians in the Balkans. Boys were raised in the infantry or civil administration36
5816446791Terror of the TurkEuropeans' fear of an Islamic takeover of all Europe37
5816446792Siege of ViennaBattle of Khe Sanh was conducted in Republic of Vietnam, between 21 January and 9 July 1968 during the Vietnam War38

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