AP World History - Unit 3: Land-Based Empires (copy)
Major European Developments
- After 300 years of development, Europe become the dominant world power
- Revolutions in European Thought and Expression:
- 1300s: Europe had been Christian for over a thousand years
- As countries began to unify and connect more, especially with countries who had preserved their history, Europe expanded its worldview and explored its past and 4 cultural movements happened
The Renaissance
- As trade increased, people moved to the cities and an influx of money was experienced - a lot of money went to studying the past
- Humanism: focus on personal accomplishment, happiness, and life on earth instead of living for the goal of salvation
- Afterlife remained dominant in the Catholic Church
- Arts have a comeback
- People could afford art again - Medici family patrons of Michelangelo and Brunelleschi
- Artists focused on realism - Leonardo da Vinci and Donatello
- Western writers have an audience
- mid-1400s: Johannes Gutenberg invents the printing press - made books easy to produce and affordable, and accessible to everyone
- led to more literate people
- Catholic Church was one of the most powerful organizations in the Middle Ages - power in politics and society - undisputed authority
- Church capitalized off its many followers with indulgences: paper faithful could purchase to reduce time in purgatory
- Nobles and peasants began getting increasingly frustrated by the church’s exploitation and noticed its corrupt nature
- Martin Luther: German monk who published his list of complaints against the church - most significantly proposed salvation was given directly through God, not through the church, which significantly reduced the church’s influence
- Pope Leo X: excommunicated Luther when he refused to recount his idea
- Christianity split - Luther’s ideas led to many others to come forward
- Lutherans: Luther’s followers - separated from Catholic Church
- Calvinism - John Calvin: predestination - only a few people would be saved by God, great influence in Scotland and France
- When the pope refused to annul King Henry VIII’s marriage to Catherine of Aragon because a heir wasn’t produced, he declared himself the head of religious affairs - presided over Church of England/Anglican Church
- Jesuits - Ignatius Loyola: prayer and good works leads to salvation
- Catholic Reformation (16th century)
- Catholic church attempts to remedy some of their controversies and regains some of its credibility - still wanted authority and control
- Council of Trent: reinstated pope authority, punished heretics, reestablished Latin as only language in worship
- Caused wars
Scientific Revolution
- Expanded education led to world discoveries
- Copernican Revolution: Nicolaus Copernicus - discovered earth and other celestial bodies revolved around the sun and the earth rotated on its axis
- Galileo: built off Copernicus’s theories and proved them - forced to recant by the Catholic Church and put under house arrest
- Scientific Method: shift from reasoning being most reliable means of scientific meaning to scientific method (theory, documentation, repetition, others experimenting)
- Tycho Brahe, Francis Bacon, Johannes Kepler, Sir Isaac Newton
- Led to Industrial Revolution, and many rejecting the church - atheists (believe no god exists), deists (believe God exists, but is passive)
- Deism: became popular in 1700s - God created the earth but doesn’t interfere in its workings
European Rivals
Spain and Portugal
- Spain became very powerful, supporting exploration, expansion of Spanish language and culture, and having a large naval fleet
- Under Charles V, Spain controlled parts of France, the Netherlands, Austria, Germany, Spain, America
- Under Charles’s son Philip, the Spanish Inquisition to oust heretics was continued, the Dutch Protestants under Spain revolted to form independent the Netherlands - lost a lot of money in mid-17th century and was poised to be defeated by England and France
- Portugal focused on dominating costal Africa, Indian Ocean, Spice Islands - lost control to Dutch and British
England
- Henry VIII never succeeded in having a male heir - his daughter Elizabeth I became Queen
- Elizabethan Age (1558-1603): expansion, exploration, colonization in New World - golden age
- Muscovy Company: first joint-stock company - British East India Company
- James I: succeeded Elizabeth in 1607 - England and Scotland under one rulership, reforms to accommodate Catholics and Puritans failed
- Charles I: succeeded James in 1625 - signed Petition of Rights (limiting taxes and forbidding unlawful imprisonment) - ignored it for the next 11 years
- Scottish invaded England out of resentment for Charles in 1640 - called the Long Parliament into session (sat for 20 years), which limited the powers of the monarchy
- Parliament raised an army, under Oliver Cromwell, to fight the King after he tried to arrest the
- Parliament defeats the king and executes him - began the English Commonwealth (Oliver Cromwell known as the first Lord Protector)
- Oliver Cromwell: intolerant of religion, violent against Catholics and Irish - highly resented
- Charles II: exiled son of Charles I invited by Parliament to reclaim the throne as a limited monarchy after Cromwell died (Stuart Restoration)
- Agreed to Habeas Corpus Act: prevents people from arrests without due process
- James II: succeeded Charles II after his death - highly disliked, fear he would make England a Catholic county - driven from power by Parliament (Glorious Revolution)
- Succeeded by his daughter Mary and her husband William - signed English Bill of Rights (1689)
France
- Unified and centralized under strong monarchy after Hundred Years’ War (1337-1453)
- Largely Catholic, but French Protestants started to emerge (Huguenots) and fought with the Catholics
- Henry IV: issued Edict of Nantes (1598) (environment of tolerance between religions) - first of Bourbon kings who ruled until 1792
- Cardinal Richelieu: chief advisor to the Bourbons who compromised with Protestants instead of fighting with them
- Created the bureaucratic class noblesse de la robe, succeeded by Cardinal Mazarin
- Louis XIV: reigned from 1642-1715 - highly self-important and grandiose, condemned many Huguenots, never summoned the French lawmakers, appointed Jean Baptiste Colbert to manage royal funds - France almost constantly at war to increase empire
- War of Spanish Succession (1701-1714): Louis’s grandson was to inherit the Spanish throne, so England, Roman Empire, and German princes united to prevent France and Spain from combining
German Areas (Holy Roman Empire?)
- Holy Empire was in present day Austria/Germany - weak due to the mixed dynamics, rulership, and religion of the surrounding area
- Lost parts of Hungary to Ottoman Turks in early 16th century
- Devastated by Thirty Years’ War (1618-1648)
- German states were gaining power by 18th century
- Peace of Augsburg (1555): intended to bring end to conflicts between Catholics and Protestants
- Thirty Years’ War: began when protestants in Bohemia challenged Catholics - violent and destructive
- Peace of Westphalia (1648): German states affirmed to keep the peace
Russia
- Russian leaders were overthrowing reigning Mongols in late 15th century
- Moscow became centre of Orthodox Christianity
- Ivan III refused to pay tribute to Mongols and declared them free from their rule - lead Russians, later Ivan IV did too
- Recruited peasants freedom from boyars (their feudal lords) if they conquered their own land themselves
- Ivan IV (Ivan the Terrible): strong leader feared by many - executing people who were threats to his power
- Battle for throne after Ivan IV died without an heir - Time of Troubles (1604 to 1613): killing those who tried to rise to the throne
- Michael Romanov was elected by feudal lords until 1917 - Romanovs consolidated power and ruled ruthlessly
- Peter the Great: ruled from 1682-1725 - redesigned and adapted Russia in to westernized fashion
- Catherine the Great: ruled from 1762-1796 - education and Western culture - serf conditions were of no importance to her
Islamic Gunpowder Empires
- Ottoman Empire precedes 1450 - founded by Osman Bey as the Mongol Empire fell
- Eventually invaded Constantinople in 1453 and ended Byzantine Empire (Constantinople now named Istanbul)
- Ottomans were Islamic and solidified rule over territory from Greece to Persia to around Mediterranean into Egypt and northern Africa by giving land (timars) to Ottoman aristocrats to control
- Employed practice called devshirme: enslaved Christian children and turned them into warriors called Janissaries
- Selim I: came into power in 1512, led much of the empire growth, made Istanbul centre of Islamic civilization
- Suleiman I: succeeded Selim I in 1520, build Ottoman military and arts - golden age from 1520-1566
- Took over parts of Hungary, but could not successfully take over Vienna
- Babur: Mongol leader who invaded northern India in 1526 - Mughal Empire (dominated for next 300 years)
- United entire subcontinent
- Akbar: succeeded Babur from 1556 to 1605 - united India further with religious toleration, did give Muslim landowners (zamindars) power to tax
- Hindus and Muslims lived side by side in a golden age of art and thought - under Shah Jahan, the Taj Mahal was built
- Aurangzeb: emperor who ended religious toleration and waged wars to conquer rest of India - Hindus were persecuted
- Europeans arrived in early 17th century to trade and spread ideas - after 1750 is when Britain turned into an imperial superpower
Africa
- Starting in 10th century, wealth accumulated from trade - Songhai, Kongo, and Angola became powerful kingdoms
- Songhai:
- Islamic state
- Sunni Ali: ruler 1464-1493 - navy, central administration, financed Timbuktu - fell to Moroccans
- Asanti Empire: arose in 1670 - avoided invasion and expanded its territory
- Kongo:
- King Alfonso I: Catholic, and converted his people
- Mostly destroyed by previous allies Portugal
- Angola:
- Established by Portuguese around 1575 for the slave trade
- Queen Nzinga resisted Portuguese attempts to further their control for 40 years
Isolated Asia
China
- Ming Dynasty was restored until 1644 after kicking out Mongols in 1368
- Built huge fleets in early 15th century to explore Asia and Indian ocean - Zheng He: famous Chinese navigator
- Economy started failing due to silver currency inflation, famines in 17th century, peasant revolts
- Qing warriors were invited to help Ming emperor but instead ousted him in 1644
- Qing/Manchus ruled China until 1911
- Not ethnically Chinese so had to affirm legitimacy - displayed imperial portraits with Chinese historical items
- Kangxi: ruled from 1661 to 1722 and conquered Taiwan, Mongolia, central Asia, Tibet
- Qianlong: ruled from 1735 to 1796 and conquered Vietnam, Burma, Nepal
- were both Confucian scholars
- Did not interact a lot with surrounding nations, protected their culture
Japan
- Shoguns ruled Japan in 16th century, but Christian missionaries came in and Jesuits took control of Nagasaki - westernization
- Tokugawa Ieyasu: established Tokugawa Shogunate (Edo period) from 1600 to 1868 - strict government that instituted a rigid social class model
- Moved capital of Japan to Edo (modern-day Tokyo)
- National Seclusion Policy (1635): prohibited Japanese from traveling abroad and prohibited most foreigners
- Japanese culture thrived - Kabuki theatre and haiku poetry became popular
Resistance