APWH UNIT 1
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What years do the Land-Based Empires unit cover? | 1450–1750. |
What two major events helped European monarchs consolidate power after 1450? | The Plague (weakened feudal lords) and the Renaissance (strengthened central states). |
Which empire’s decline created room for new land empires? | The Mongol Empire. |
Which peoples migrated and formed new states after the Mongols? | Turkic peoples. |
What are the main Gunpowder Empires? | Ottoman, Safavid, Mughal, and Qing (China). |
What technology gave land-based empires an advantage? | Gunpowder weapons such as cannons and guns. |
Give an example of gunpowder changing warfare. | The Ottoman siege of Constantinople in 1453 using cannons to break walls. |
List three methods empires used to expand and control trade. | 1) Gunpowder weapons, 2) Using conquered peoples, 3) Controlling trade routes. |
How did empires use monumental architecture to show power? | They built palaces, mosques, tombs, and cities (e.g., Taj Mahal, Versailles, Forbidden City). |
How did empires use religion to legitimize power? | They supported state religions, built religious sites, and claimed divine support. |
What years did the Ottoman Empire last (in this unit)? | 1453–1917. |
Who held absolute power in the Ottoman Empire? | The Sultan. |
What was the Grand Vizier’s role? | Second in power, oversaw administration and bureaucracy. |
What was the Devshirme system? | Taking Christian boys from the Balkans, converting them, and training them as administrators or Janissaries. |
Who were the Janissaries? | Elite Ottoman soldiers loyal to the Sultan, trained with firearms. |
What was the Ottoman Warrior Aristocracy? | Landholding cavalry who collected taxes and served militarily. |
What role did the Ottoman Navy play? | Protected trade and territory, but later fell behind European navies. |
What religion was the Ottoman majority? | Sunni Islam. |
Who were the Dhimmi? | Jews and Christians (People of the Book) who paid jizya but had religious toleration. |
What was the Millet System? | Allowed religious communities to govern their own courts and affairs. |
What famous church did the Ottomans turn into a mosque? | The Hagia Sophia. |
Name a major Ottoman mosque built in Istanbul. | The Suleymaniye Mosque. |
How was Ottoman trade regulated? | The state set standards, taxed trade, and supported guilds. |
What were key Ottoman industries? | Carpet manufacturing, textiles, ceramics. |
Name three major Ottoman cities. | Istanbul, Damascus, Aleppo, Cairo (others: Izmir, Edirne, Thessaloniki). |
What social features defined Ottoman cities? | Cosmopolitan centers, merchant/artisan middle class, dhimmi autonomy. |
What were two major social/economic institutions in Ottoman cities? | Bazaars (markets) and coffee houses. |
When did the Safavid Empire exist? | 1501–1722. |
What religion defined the Safavid Empire? | Shi’a Islam, creating a unique Persian identity. |
What title did Safavid rulers hold? | Shah (absolute ruler). |
Who supervised mosques under Safavid rule? | Mullahs, controlled by the state. |
Who was Shah Abbas I? | Ruler from 1587–1629, expanded trade, strengthened military, promoted culture. |
What were Safavid architectural achievements? | Mosques with colorful domes and minarets symbolizing 'heaven on earth.' |
What goods drove Safavid economy? | Silk, textiles, ceramics, Persian carpets. |
Who did the Safavids trade with? | China, Portuguese, Dutch, English through Indian Ocean networks. |
When did the Mughal Empire exist? | 1526–1858. |
Who founded the Mughal Empire? | Babur (1483–1530). |
Name four major Mughal rulers after Babur. | Akbar, Jahangir, Shah Jahan, Aurangzeb. |
What did Akbar do to strengthen the Mughal state? | Centralized administration, allied with Hindu princes, mixed Hindu-Muslim bureaucracy. |
What tax did Akbar abolish to promote tolerance? | The jizya (head tax on non-Muslims). |
What was Din-i Ilahi? | Akbar’s attempt at a new syncretic religion combining Hindu, Muslim, and other beliefs. |
What new religion appeared in India in the 1500s? | Sikhism (founded in Northern India). |
Name two Mughal monuments. | The Taj Mahal (Shah Jahan) and the Red Fort (Akbar/Shah Jahan). |
What styles did Mughal architecture blend? | Persian and Indian (Hindu) styles. |
What was the Mughal economy’s strength? | Indian cotton textiles (cottage industry) traded across the Indian Ocean. |
Which European company later dominated Indian trade? | The British East India Company. |
Why was governing Mughal India challenging? | It was multi-ethnic, multi-religious, and culturally diverse. |
Why was the Battle of Lepanto (1571) important? | First major Ottoman naval defeat by Christian Europe; limited Ottoman expansion in the Mediterranean. |
List reasons for Ottoman decline. | Corruption, sultans became secluded, failure to reform, peasant revolts, weakening Janissaries. |
List reasons for Safavid decline. | Influx of silver causing inflation, Afghan invasion of Isfahan (1722), succession problems (Abbas blinded/killed sons). |
What happened to the Mughal Empire after Aurangzeb? | It fragmented from succession wars, rebellions, invasions, and European influence. |
How did gunpowder weapons change empire power? | They allowed rulers to capture walled cities and dominate rivals. |
Why did empires incorporate conquered peoples? | To gain loyal soldiers/administrators and reduce resistance. |
Give an example of incorporating local elites. | Akbar allying with Hindu princes and promoting them in the Mughal court. |
What role did trade routes play in empires? | They brought wealth, tax revenue, and control over commerce. |
How did monumental art/architecture serve rulers? | It displayed wealth, legitimacy, and cultural dominance. |
Name examples of monumental architecture mentioned. | Taj Mahal, Versailles Palace, Forbidden City, Hagia Sophia mosque. |
What were common causes of empire decline? | Inflation, succession crises, corruption, military stagnation, rebellions, foreign invasions, European competition. |