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Arab world

A World without Walls: Globalization and the West

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Kinberg, Nicholas Michael Chakmakian AP European History 9 June 2015 Chapter 19 Outline Globalization/West Internet, protests against World Trade Organization, outsourcing ofjobs/services, Walmart in Mexico, dismantling of Berlin wall Attack on World Trade Center in 2001 gaveglobalizationnew meaning Shattered Americans? sense of isolation/security Globalization is integration Process of creating networks; new tech, econ., laws made it faster Globalization=/=internationalization Internat?l relations are est. between nation-states; global exchange is indep. Of nat?l ctrl.: trade, politics, cultural exchange happen outside ctrl. Of nation-state Asia emerged as industrial giant/West became dep. On nrg drawn from former colonies

Crash Course 4

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CRASH COURSE HISTORY RESPONSE FORM #___W2_______ TOPIC/TITLE: Ancient Egypt NAME: Casey Murphy LIST TWO NEW FACTS YOU LEARNED: a) In the first 3-4 minutes * Lasted from 3000 B.C.E. to 32 B.C.E., which is unusually long. *The Nile River flooded at exactly the right time every year, which made planting seeds in the very easy because it was so soft and the ground was very fertile. b) In the middle * 3 Kingdoms: The Old Kingdom, The Middle Kingdom, and The New Kingdom * Pyramids were and other monuments were built for kings. c) In the last 3-4 minutes *2 Forms of writing: Hieroglyphics and Demotic Script * King Tut was about 17 when he died and could have died from an infected broken leg and or malaria.

Prentice Hall World Geography Chapter 23 Review

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World Geography Chapter 23 The Countries of Southwest Asia Copyright ? 2003 by Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. World Geography Copyright ? 2003 by Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. Section 1: Creating the Modern Middle East Section 2: Israel Section 3: Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, and Iraq Section 4: Arabian Peninsula Chapter 23: The Countries of Southwest Asia Section 5: Turkey, Iran, and Cyprus Creating the Modern Middle East How successful were the Ottoman Turks in uniting the diverse peoples of the Middle East? Why did several European powers take control of the nations of Southwest Asia after World War I?

World History Notes

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The Nile RVC Egypt centered on the Nile - Longest river in the world at 4,180 miles. Food grown on its banks-wheat, barley, flax, cotton. July-Oct flooded. Left silt-fertile mud, irrigation used. Winds blow from the Mediterranean. Can use the current down stream, use winds to go upstream. 3800BC- emergence of Egyptians. Jewelry, pottery, used metals. Papyrus ? basis for word ?paper?. From the papyrus reed plant. Cut stem, spread, placed crossways then pounded, dried. 3000BC- Hieroglyphics ? Greek for ?sacred writing?. Some 600 signs. 1798-French invaded Egypt under Napoleon with scholars, surveyors, scientists. 1799-French officer finds the Rosetta Stone (named for part of the Nile delta)

Earth and its People 3rd edition Timeline Chapter 24

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Timeline Chapter 24 Africa, India, and the New British Empire, 1750?1870 1691 British EIC established Calcutta port 1765 Black Hole of Calcutta & EIC takes over Bengal 1769-1778 Cook?s New Zealand & Australia exploration 1788 1st British settlers in Australia (becomes penal colony) 1795 Dutch East India company is dissolved & British obtain Dutch colonial possessions 1798 Napoleon invades Egypt 1801 Napoleon withdraws from Egypt 1805 Muhammad Ali?s rule of Egypt begins 1808 British take over Sierra Leone 1809 Sokoto Caliphate 1818 Zulu Kingdom Bombay presidency 1821 Republic of Liberia Egypt takes Sudan 1824 British establish port on Singapore 1827 Algeria & France severe diplomatic tie 1828 Brahmo Samaj 1829 Sati outlawed 1831
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