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Inca [Inca-credible mountains]
A large Andean empire in South America known for its sophisticated road system and centralized government before Spanish conquest.
Igbo [Igbo go independent]
A society in present-day Nigeria that was notable for its lack of centralized statehood and its village-based organization.
Songhai [Songhai sings trade]
A West African empire that controlled key trade routes across the Sahara, flourishing on gold and salt trade.
Ming [Ming mends China]
A Chinese dynasty that restored Han Chinese rule after the Yuan (Mongol) dynasty, known for its naval expeditions and porcelain.
Mughal [Mughal meets India]
An Islamic Turkic empire that conquered much of India, known for its syncretic culture and architectural achievements like the Taj Mahal.
Iroquois [Iroquois is together]
A confederacy of Native American tribes in North America, known for its political and social organization before European arrival.
Aztec [Aztec eats hearts]
A Mesoamerican empire centered around Tenochtitlan, known for its elaborate religious practices and tribute system.
Safavid [Safavid is Shia]
An Iranian kingdom that established Shia Islam as the state religion, often in conflict with the neighboring Ottoman Empire.
Zheng He [Zheng He's huge boats]
A Chinese Muslim admiral who led massive naval expeditions sponsored by the Ming dynasty across the Indian Ocean.
Timur [Timur the Terror]
A Turco-Mongol conqueror who created a vast empire across Central Asia, known for his brutal campaigns.
Mansa Musa [Mansa Musa's gold parade]
The ruler of the Mali Empire known for his immense wealth and famous pilgrimage to Mecca which highlighted the wealth of West Africa.
Ibn Battuta [Ibn Battuta travelled a lot-a]
A Moroccan Muslim scholar and traveler who journeyed across Afro-Eurasia, documenting his extensive travels.
Marco Polo [Marco Polo's Venetian travels]
A Venetian merchant and traveler whose account of his time in Yuan Dynasty China inspired European interest in Asian trade.
Indian Ocean Trade Network [Indian Ocean connects coasts]
A vast sea-based trade network linking East Africa, the Middle East, India, Southeast Asia, and China through maritime routes.
Sand Road [Sand Road crosses desert]
Another name for the Trans-Saharan trade routes across North Africa, primarily for gold, salt, and slaves.
Trans-Saharan Slave Trade [Slaves across the Sahara]
The movement of enslaved people from Sub-Saharan Africa across the Sahara desert to North Africa and the Middle East.
Srivijaya (in relation to the Indian Ocean Trade) [Srivijaya rules waves]
A maritime empire based in Sumatra that controlled key chokepoints in the Indian Ocean trade, benefiting from taxing passing ships.
Borobudur [Borobudur's big stupa]
A massive Buddhist temple complex in Java, Indonesia, reflecting Buddhist influence spread via trade routes.
Angkor Wat [Angkor Wat's big temple]
A vast temple complex in Cambodia, initially Hindu and later Buddhist, representing the power of the Khmer Empire.
Great Zimbabwe [Great Zimbabwe's stone walls]
A powerful kingdom in Southern Africa known for its impressive stone architecture and control of regional gold trade.
Swahili [Swahili mixes cultures]
A language and culture that emerged along the East African coast, blending Bantu languages with Arabic influences due to trade.
Caesaropapism [Caesar is Pope too]
A political system in which the head of the state is also the head of the church, notably practiced in the Byzantine Empire.
Iconoclasm [Iconoclasm smashes statues]
A religious controversy in the Byzantine Empire regarding the veneration of religious images (icons), leading to their destruction by some.
Kievan Rus [Kievan Rus starts Russia]
A loose federation of East Slavic tribes centered around Kiev, credited as the precursor state to modern Russia and Ukraine.
Charlemagne [Charlemagne is Holy Roman]
A Frankish king who built a large empire in Western Europe and was crowned Holy Roman Emperor by the Pope.
Crusades [Crusades fight holy wars]
A series of religious wars sanctioned by the Catholic Church, primarily aimed at reclaiming the Holy Land from Muslim rule.
Nestorian Christianity [Nestorians went East]
A branch of Christianity that emphasized the disunion of Christ's human and divine natures, spreading widely into Asia via trade routes.
Coptic Christianity [Copts in Egypt]
A branch of Christianity centered in Egypt, distinct from both Eastern Orthodox and Catholicism.
Eastern Orthodox Christianity [Orthodox split East]
The branch of Christianity that developed in the Byzantine Empire, formally splitting from the Roman Catholic Church in 1054.
Emperor Justinian [Justinian's law and Hagia Sophia]
A Byzantine emperor known for his legal reforms (Justinian's Code) and building projects, including the Hagia Sophia.
Serfdom [Serfs are tied down]
A labor system in which peasants were tied to the land and worked for a lord in exchange for protection, common in medieval Europe.
Song Dynasty [Song's smart inventions]
A Chinese dynasty known for its economic prosperity, technological innovations (like gunpowder and compass), and cultural achievements.
Neo-Confucianism [Neo-Confucianism's new thinking]
A blend of Confucianism with Buddhist and Daoist elements that became the dominant ideology in China during the Song dynasty and beyond.
Footbinding [Footbinding breaks feet]
A painful practice in China, primarily for women, involving the tight wrapping of feet to prevent growth, seen as a sign of beauty and status.
Silk Road [Silk Road trades goods]
An ancient network of trade routes connecting East Asia and Europe, primarily for luxury goods like silk.
Chinese Tribute System [China makes you bow]
A system where neighboring states acknowledged China's superiority by offering tribute in exchange for trading privileges and protection.
Uighurs [Uighurs are in the West]
A Turkic ethnic group primarily living in the Xinjiang region of China, historically significant along the Silk Road.
Silla Dynasty [Silla unites Korea]
A kingdom that eventually unified much of the Korean peninsula.
Trung Sisters [Trung Sisters fight Han]
Vietnamese heroines who led a rebellion against Chinese (Han Dynasty) rule.
Samurai [Samurai serves lord]
The military nobility and officer caste of medieval and early-modern Japan, known for their code of honor (Bushido).
Moveable Type [Moveable Type moves letters]
A printing technology that uses individual characters that can be rearranged, significantly increasing the speed of printing.
Muhammad [Muhammad is prophet]
The founder of Islam, believed by Muslims to be the last prophet of God.
Polytheistic [Polytheistic has many gods]
The belief in or worship of more than one god.
Daoism [Daoism follows the Way]
A philosophical and religious tradition originating in China emphasizing harmony with the Dao ("the Way"), nature, and simplicity.
Legalism [Legalism is strict law]
A philosophical system in ancient China advocating strict laws and harsh punishments to maintain order and control.
Confucius [Confucius teaches respect]
A Chinese philosopher and teacher whose ideas about social harmony, ethics, and good governance became the basis of Confucianism.
Monotheism [Monotheism has one god]
The belief in the existence of only one god.
Reincarnation [Reincarnation comes back]
The religious concept that a soul, after death, can begin life in a new body.
Upanishads [Upanishads are Hindu texts]
A collection of philosophical texts considered to be the foundational scriptures of Hinduism.
Buddha [Buddha finds enlightenment]
Siddhartha Gautama, the founder of Buddhism, who achieved enlightenment and taught the path to liberation from suffering.
Analects [Analects is Confucius' words]
A collection of sayings and ideas attributed to the Chinese philosopher Confucius and his contemporaries.
Cyrus the Great [Cyrus is Persian founder]
The founder of the Achaemenid Persian Empire, known for his benevolent rule and respect for local customs.
King Philip II [Philip II of Macedon plans]
The king of Macedon and father of Alexander the Great, who built up the Macedonian army and planned to invade Persia.
Ashoka [Ashoka turns Buddhist]
An emperor of the Mauryan Dynasty in India who converted to Buddhism after a brutal war and promoted peace and dhamma.
Socrates [Socrates asks questions]
A classical Greek philosopher known for his Socratic method of questioning; a foundational figure in Western philosophy.
Shi Huangdi [Shi Huangdi unifies China]
The founder of the Qin Dynasty and the first emperor of unified China, known for legalism and massive projects like the Great Wall.
Persian War (significance) [Persian War saves Greece]
A series of conflicts between the Greek city-states and the Persian Empire that preserved Greek independence and culture.
Democracy – what is it, when and where did it begin [Democracy lets people rule]
A system of government where power is vested in the people and exercised directly or through elected representatives; originated in ancient Athens, Greece, around the 5th century BCE.
Patricians [Patricians are rich Romans]
The aristocratic upper class in ancient Rome.
Plebeians [Plebeians are common Romans]
The common people of ancient Rome, including farmers, artisans, and merchants.
Scholar Gentry (China) [Gentry studies and rules]
A social class in China composed of individuals who passed civil service exams and held government positions, often combining intellectual pursuits with landowning.
Dynasty [Dynasty is ruling family]
A sequence of rulers from the same family, typically in the context of a country or empire.
Bantu [Bantu moves around Africa]
A large group of ethnic groups in sub-Saharan Africa united by related languages; their migrations spread agriculture, language, and ironworking techniques across the continent.