Demographic and environmental changes
600 C.E.–1450
- Demographic and environmental changes
- Impact of nomadic migrations on Afro-Eurasia and the Americas
- Aztecs
- Established tribute empire
- Military seized prisoners of war for sacrifices
- Established tribute empire
- Mongols
- Effects on Afro-Eurasia
- Facilitation of trade
- Exchange of products
- Brought wealth to merchants
- Enriched exchange of ideas from east to west
- Developed uniform economic and trade policies
- Paper money (Chinese invention) used in parts
- New trading posts
- Men on horseback – station to station
- Encouraged Europeans to pursue voyages of exploration
- Exchange of products
- Pax Mongolica
- For about a century, two continents united
- Adapted legal conventions from some of conquered people
- Mongols convert to/adopt local religions
- Spread of bubonic plague
- Flea/plague infested rats eating off Mongol grain feedsacks
- Followed trade routes
- 25 million in China, 1/3 of Europe
- Dealt final blow to manorialism
- Plague devastated areas took 100 years to return population/economic vigor
- Facilitation of trade
- Effects on Afro-Eurasia
- Turks
- Vikings
- Nordic peoples from Scandinavia
- Skilled invaders, explorers, traders, colonists
- Small, maneuverable boats
- Raided/terrorized coastal communities
- Maritime skill took them to the new world – briefly colonized N. America
- Newfoundland – Leif Ericsson
- Favorite targets – monasteries – burned/plundered
- Eventually evolved from plunderers to traders
- Established communities in Scotland, France, Eastern Europe
- Settlements known as Norman “Northmen”
- ***1066 Norman lord – William invaded England
- Defeated Saxons – established Norman power/Britain
- Over time Christianized and absorbed into larger European feudal order
- Culture
- Warrior-centered worldview – afterlife for fighters
- Polytheistic religion – anthropomorphic nature gods – Thor thunder god
- Economy based on plunder/agriculture
- Legal assemblies – “tings” – doubled as councils and courts
- “runic” written language with magical attributes
- skilled metal castings and well-made knitwear
- Effects on Europe
- Raided/conquered most of coastal Europe – down to Mediterranean
- expert sailors/fierce warriors – didn’t need coast to navigate
- Settled Iceland, Greenland, England, Scotland, Ireland, France
- Established trade routes
- By forcing nations to defend from attacks
- Eventually led to the centralizing of authority
- Normans on England
- Henry II – greatest early Norman king
- Jury trials
- Royal circuit judges to settle disputes
- Married Eleanor of Aquitaine – previous queen of France
- Parts of France absorbed by England
- Era of expansion
- Handled nobles
- Successors drained royal coffers while protecting lands
- Last of sons King John forced to sign Magna Carta
- British tradition of shared powers
- Centuries later – nobles become parliament
- Golden Age of Pericles reestablished in Medieval Times
- Last of sons King John forced to sign Magna Carta
- Henry II – greatest early Norman king
- Raided/conquered most of coastal Europe – down to Mediterranean
- Nordic peoples from Scandinavia
- Arabs
- Effects on Africa
- Trade contacts
- Swahili Coast
- Part of Indian Ocean Trade network
- Already had ties from Roman times
- African goods could reach China
- Chinese vessels even made African coast
- Slavery – capturing Africans, forcing into bondage
- Brought religion to sub-Saharan and east coast
- In comparison to North Africa, effect not nearly as extensive
- Leaders adopted to validate rule
- Traders adopted to secure trade contacts
- Majority of lower classes didn’t adopt, maintained old views
- Trade contacts
- Effects on Africa
- Aztecs
- Migration of agricultural peoples
- Bantu migrations
- Overview
- Few common threads shared by many peoples of sub-Saharan Africa
- 1000 BCE began to move from homeland of west central Africa
- by 1000 CE had settled in almost all parts of continent South of Africa
- played greatest roll in shaping cultural, ethnic and linguistic character
- Changed population – increased from hunter-gatherer to agricultural based
- Culture
- Religion
- Religion animistic – belief in spirits of the natural world
- Language
- Over time, each group developed own language/cultural tradition
- mixed with Arabic to form Swahili
- did not have written language
- i. oral tradition preserved by griots
- Religion
- Social
- Women
- omen respected
- i. child bearers ii. shared agricultural work
- omen respected
- Class
- centered around age grade
- cohort group
- people of same age shared responsibilities, experiences
- cohort group
- centered around age grade
- Women
- Economics
- Farming/pastoralism
- Spread knowledge of agricultural techniques
- Followed course of Congo river, farming fertile land
- Taught foragers techniques of cattle-raising
- Required additional source of nutrition with banana from Malay sailors
- Spread through reverse pattern of Bantu migration
- Spread knowledge of iron-working
- Not sure if they got iron-working from Kush or independently
- Facilitated crop cultivation
- property held communally
- wealth determined by number of slaves, not quantity of land
- Farming/pastoralism
- Politics
- Stateless societies – primary political organization
- Organized around family/kinship groups
- Led by respected family member
- Stateless societies – primary political organization
- Overview
- European peoples to east/central Europe
- Great Migration of Germanic and Asiatic
- Some settled permanently
- Kingdoms tended to be unsophisticated/short-lived
- As Barbarian tribes became less nomadic, played key roles
- 200 to 1000 CE – Great Age of Migrations
- Goths, Angles, Saxons, Franks, Lombards, and Vikings
- Initially seen as a threat
- Eventually settled
- Played key role in developing ethnicities/cultures
- Goths, Angles, Saxons, Franks, Lombards, and Vikings
- Great Migration of Germanic and Asiatic
- Bantu migrations
- Consequences of plague pandemics in the fourteenth century
- Black Death – Bubunic Plague
- Carried from Asia on ships
- Effects
- Loss in faith
- Localized mob violence against lepers/Jews
- Wages skyrocketed – supply and demand
- Preoccupation with death art
- Medieval doctors lost prestige
- Certain saints venerated as able to stop plague
- Landowners raised rents to make up for cost
- Led to peasant revolts
- Widespread fear/social upheaval
- If plague didn’t kill you, irrational choices would
- Black Death – Bubunic Plague
- Growth and role of cities
- Growth of cities
- As populations grew, people needed to spread out
- Made more crowded conditions on manor/in cities
- Creation of guilds – labor groups that maintain monopoly
- Restricted membership, established prices/quality standards
- Cities become larger, more opportunities
- Pulled more from the countryside
- Cities also grew because they were established as centers of civilization
- Constantinople – built to be city center
- Capitals created to create aura of rising empire
- Islamic Empire moves to Baghdad
- Japan moves to Heian
- Mongols built Smarkand
- Location of universities
- Leads to more cultural diffusion
- People who would have never interacted, now interact
- Encouraged specialization of labor
- shopkeepers, artisans, tradespeople, laborers
- Pilgrimages – constantly on move
- Rome/Constantinople attracted to huge cathedrals
- Islamic trip to Mecca most significant
- From vast reaches of Islamic empire to Mecca
- Think of Mansa Musa
- Growth of cities due to increased trade
- Towns located near rivers/waterways
- Became marketplaces where goods could be sold
- But…overcrowded, polluted, people lived in abject poverty
- Benefit – immunity from feudal obligations
- Year and a day rule
- Urbanization in high Middle Ages
- service providers/craftspeople set up businesses in towns – stimulates growth
- barbers, blacksmiths, coopers (barrels), jewelers, tanners, innkeepers, wine/beer merchants
- Cities had to plan growth, regulate business, collect taxes
- Wealthy towns in Italy invested in new buildings/statuary for beautification
- service providers/craftspeople set up businesses in towns – stimulates growth
- As populations grew, people needed to spread out
- Growth of cities
- Impact of nomadic migrations on Afro-Eurasia and the Americas
Subject:
US History [1]
Subject X2:
US History [1]