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AP World Exam 2023

Section 1: 1200-1450

Chapter 1

Governance 1200-1450

  • Classical regimes collapsed

  • Nations-states: countries as formally defined political entities, in the modern sense of the world

  • Cultural spheres: defined less by political boundaries and more by ethnic similarities, shared traditions, or government by larger imperial power

  • Roman Law: especially the Justinian code, compiled in Byzantium during the 500s remained a keystone in Western legal thought

  • Latin was the common language in Europe’s educated classes

  • Christianity was legalized and adopted by Rome in the 300s and became a cultural, intellectual, and political force because it provided unity in unstable times

  • Black Death: bubonic plague epidemic from 1346-1353 which made Europe lose 20-30% of its population

  • Noble Class/Aristocracy: evolved from people who got the largest pieces of land in feudalism

  • Knights: elite armored cavalry, a style of combat that required wealth and lifelong training

  • Chivalry: was supposed to make sure that knights acted as virtuous Christian warriors by treating the lower classes and women with delicacy and respect

  • Manorial System: political, economic, and social system by which the peasants of medieval Europe were rendered dependent on their land and on their lord

  • Serfs: peasants who were not technically slaves but were tied to a feudal lord’s land without the right to change profession or residence without permission

  • Catholic Papacy: they had lots of political power during the Middle Ages

  • Magna Carta: allowed for nobility to get various rights and ensured monarchy was not above the law

  • Parliament: which made laws in conjunction with the king and gradually became more representative

  • Common Law: system in England that allowed for jury trials and observing basic public liberties

  • Hundred Year’s War: occurred during 1337-1453 between France and England over French territory, in which France won

  • Joan of Arc: warrior maid who helped France win the Hundred Year’s War

  • Habsburg Family: gained permanent control over the imperial throne of the Holy Roman Empire in 1438

  • City-states: an independent sovereign city that serves as the center of political, economic, and cultural life over its contiguous territory

  • Renaissance: occurred in 1200s-1300s and started in Florence, Italy

  • Reconquista: a series of campaigns by Christian states to recapture territory from the Moors or Muslims

  • Byzantium: also known as the Eastern Roman Empire and it was the strongest and most advanced state in medical Europe

  • Constantinople: capital of Byzantium and was home to around 1 million people

  • Eastern Orthodoxy: a religion that is a part of the Christian branch

  • Captured Constantinople: in 1453 by Ottoman Turks due to gunpowder weaponry

  • Caesaropapism: a political system in which the head of the state is also the head of the church and supreme judge in religious matters

  • Ideal of Christendom: the concept of Europe as a single civilization, joined by a common allegiance to the Christian church

  • Heresy: belief or opinion that contradicts the church or a religion

  • Excommunication: kicked out of the Church

  • Holy Inquisition: a set of special courts that punished nonconformity

  • Crusades: holy wars

  • First Crusade: occurred from 1096-1099 and was against the Byzantine requests for aid against the Seljuk Turks who wanted to capture Jerusalem

  • Saladin: skilled Kurdish general who held back the Third Crusade and recaptured Jerusalem

  • Fourth Crusade: occurred during 1202-1204 and turned into a war against Christian Constantinople

  • Islam: a religion that originated in the Middle East and played a heavy political and social role in daily life

  • Dar al-Islam: one of the two spheres in the Islamic world where Sharia Law was dominant

  • Sharia Law: allowed Muslims to worship freely

  • Dar al-Harb: one of two spheres in the Islamic world where Islam was not established

  • Caliph: combined political and religious power to one person who governed the Muslim world

  • Circle of Justice: predated the rise of Islam but guided the caliphates and the Ottoman Empire that followed them

  • Sunni-Shiite Split: occurred after the Islam civil war

  • Arabic: the official language of the Muslim world

  • Abbasid Caliphate: occurred during 750-1258 and presided over the golden age of Islamic culture and built many centers of learning

  • Baghdad: capital of Abbasid Caliphate

  • Madrasas: religious centers of learning

  • Mongols: captured Baghdad in 1258 and killed the last Abbasid caliph

  • Mamluk: elite cavalry

  • Black Death: came from China and was a bubonic plague epidemic

  • Ottoman Turks: Middle Eastern dominant power that arouse during the 1300s

  • Devshirme: also known as the blood tax which forcibly recruited boys from non-Muslim families and placed them in positions of privileged servitude

  • Janissary: a member of an elite corps in the standing army of the Ottoman Empir

  • Fall of Constantinople: occurred in 1453 due to gunpowder weaponry by the Ottomans

  • Mamluk Sultanate: a breakaway state that was founded by elite soldiers who served the Abbasids

  • Berbers: nomadic camel herders

  • Ghana: important in trans-Sharan trade due to large deposits of gold

  • Sundiata Keita: founded Mali’s empire

  • Timbuktu: capital of Mali

  • Mansa Musa: Mali’s most powerful ruler who was a devout Muslim

  • Swahili city-states: self-ruling urban centers that flourished during 1000-1500 that was off of the East African Coast

  • Grand Canal: a vital artery that connected the Yellow and Yangzi rivers

  • Song Empire: one of the longest dynasties, 960-1279. They created gunpowder, magnetic compass, moveable typewriting, and paper money

  • Neo-Confucianism: the idea that commoners owed obedience to their superiors who in turn owed them just treatment

  • Civil-Service Exams: how Song China would choose scholar-officials

  • Genghis Khan: founder of the Mongol empire

  • Red Turban Revolts: broke out in the 1340s leading to the final rebellion that overthrew the Yuan happened because of government’s unwillingness to aid serfs after floods and sharp rise in taxes

  • Forbidden City: center of Beijing

  • Tributary System: how nearby states to China avoided being captured by allowing China to dictate policy

  • Zheng He: expanded trade and learned about the outside world

  • Sinosphere: zone of Chinese influence

  • Heian Period: Japan’s classical period

  • Shogun: Japanese military leaders

  • Daimyo: Japanese noble warlords who worked with the shogun

  • Samurai: Japanese warrior elite

  • Bushido: samurai code of loyalty and honor

  • Pax Mongolica: a brief period of semi-unification in Eurasia

  • Arabic Numerals: 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9

  • Caste System: how society was ranked

  • Sati: a ritual where women of certain castes were burned alive after their husbands died

  • Jizya: the nonbeliever’s tax that occurred in Muslim-ruled areas

  • Pre-Columbian Era: years before 1492 in the Americas

  • Pueblos: complex dwellings where people lived

  • Maize: corn

  • Maya: Mexican classical period was full of city-states and kingdoms, they created the concept of zero and the long-count calendar

  • Aztecs: ruled much of Mexico and had a huge population, they practiced human sacrifice and pyramid building

  • Quipu: a knot-tying system of writing

  • Feudalism: system in which monarchs awarded land to loyal followers, or vassals, and in return vassals guaranteed that the land would be governed and protected

Chapter 2

Cultural Developments and Interactions From 1200-1450

  • Cross-cultural Exchange: the sharing of ideas, art, literature, and traditions from different cultures

  • Marco Polo: a European merchant who traveled from Venice to Asia on the Silk Road

  • Ibn Battuta: a great Islam explorer who traveled for 30 years around the world

  • Margery Kempe: she was one of the most traveled women of her era and she came from England

  • Zheng He: he was a Chinese captain who took ships of the Ming navy in the Pacific and Indian Oceans

  • Renaissance: a cultural revival era in Europe, prominent in Italy during the 1300s-1500s and occurred in Europe 1400s-1600s

  • Medieval Period: used to be known as a period lacking culture, but is now known as a period of increase in culture

  • Scholasticism: philosophy in the Middle Ages and it was an attempt to reconcile Greco-Roman teachings with Christian teachings

  • Universities: centers of religious learning and places to learn about law and medicine

  • Johannes Gutenberg: created the movable-type printing press

  • Humanism: the conviction that to be human is something to rejoice in

  • Islamic Golden Age: a period when the Middle East was under the Abbasid Caliphate and there were advancements in artistic and intellectual life

  • Avicenna: a Persian physician who was the most authoritative medical text in the Middle East until the 1600s

  • Averroes: a doctor from Muslim Spain who translated Aristotle’s works

  • Maimonides: a Jewish thinker who wrote a book called The Guide to the Perplexed and which attempted to reconcile the rationality of Greco-Roman thought with Jewish theology

  • Sufism: a mystical strain of Islam that emphasizes union with Allah by means of spiritual exercises such as chanting or dancing

  • Oral Tradition: traditions, practices, and stories were passed on through word of mouth

  • Griots: professional African storytellers

  • Zen: emphasized self-discipline which caught the attention of the Samurai class and it also promised a heavenly afterlife which also appealed to lower classes

  • Bhakti Movement: a significant religious movement in medieval Hinduism that sought to bring religious reforms to all strata of society by adopting the method of devotion to achieve salvation

  • Polynesian Migrations: people who occupied much of Oceania during the 1200s

  • Taboos: Polynesian word for ritually forbidden behaviors

Chapter 3

Technology and Innovation 1200-1450

  • Scientific Method: created during the 1500s-1600s which is when scientists would start to experiment with their ideas rather than just using thoughts or ideas from philosophers

  • Geocentric Theory: the idea that the sun revolves around the earth

  • Galen: an ancient Greek scientist who had some correct ideas but some also turned out to be wrong

  • Water Clocks: an 80-foot tall structure that was able to tell what time of day it was, the month, positions of the sun and moon, and major stars and was powered by water

  • Overland Transport: it was a way for people to reach places that were far from rivers and coastlines; took a long time but was cheaper

  • Caravans: large processions of pack animals and/or vehicles

  • Water Transport: it was a way for people to travel by using oceans, seas, and rivers to get to other places

  • Maritime Technology: advances that made traveling in water easier and more efficient

  • Galley: the principal vessel that was powered by oars and a small square sail

  • Astrolabe: measured the sun’s position in the sky to calculate latitude

Chapter 4

Economic Systems 1200-1450

  • Transregional Trade Routes: consisted of the Silk Road, Trans-Saharan Caravan, Mediterranean Sea, and Indian Ocean

  • Silk Road: a route that linked the Middle East with Asia, and the Middle East with Europe and Africa and it flourished in the 1400s

  • Caravanserais: roadside settlements providing safety and shelter

  • Missionary Efforts: people who would try to spread their religion and faith to people from different countries

  • Mediterranean Sea Lanes: water-based trade route that connected and supported trade between Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East

  • Venice: the most powerful and advanced Italian city-state

  • Hanseatic League: an organization founded by north German towns and German merchant communities abroad to protect their mutual trading interests

  • Trans-Saharan Caravan Routes: land-based trade route that connected parts of Africa together

  • Oases: sources of water; especially in a desert

  • Arab/Berber Traders: they played an economic role by trading but they also spread Islam throughout Trans-Saharan Africa

  • Indian Ocean Trade Network: one of the most vibrant and culturally diverse trade routes and it connected Africa, Europe, and Asia

Chapter 5

Social Interactions and Organization 1200-1450

  • Urbanization: movement of populations from rural to urban areas

  • Social Mobility: the ability to move from different classes

  • Patriarchy: is a social system in which positions of dominance and privilege are primarily held by men

  • Diasporic Communities: a large group of people who share a cultural and regional origin but are living away from their traditional homeland

  • Elite Classes: consists of clergy and aristocrats and makeup around 10-15% of the population

  • Commoners: people who worked as scribes, lawyers, and physicians

  • Middle Class: commoners would eventually make up this class and consist of merchants and bankers

  • Peasant Class: unskilled laborers, farmers, and peasants

  • Untouchables: people at the bottom of the social class and consisting of enslaved people and unfree laborers

  • Arab Slave Trade: started in Africa and would later grow into the Atlantic Slave Trade

  • Furusiyya: involved military and cultured behavior; equitation

  • Corvee Labor Projects: when serfs had to do work such as building roads and cutting down forests

  • Mit’a: the Americas form of coerced labor

  • Dowry: provided women with slight economic security where she got money on her wedding day

  • Harem: started in Ottoman Turkey and it was women’s quarters

  • Foot Binding: a women’s beauty practice where their feet would be tightly bound and w

Chapter 6

Humans and the Environment 1200-1450

  • Vikings: Germanic and Asiatic peoples who came from the east and north and invades European states and were the most influential

  • Polynesian Migrations: populated a 20,000-mile expanse in the Pacific

  • Outrigger Canoes: allowed the Polynesians to travel long distances over water

  • Horse Collar: used to distribute the load around a horse's neck and shoulders when pulling a wagon or plow and allowed for improved agricultural production

  • Chinampa: a Mesoamerican technique for growing crops on the floating islands in lakes

  • Medieval Climate Optimum: a harsh warming trend between 800-1300

  • Little Ice Age: after 1300 there was global cooling

Section 2: 1450-1750

Chapter 7

Governance 1450-1700

  • Nation-states: multiethnic land empires

  • State-building Techniques: massive displays of art and architecture

  • Bureaucratic Elites: a governing class that controls the organizational functioning of the state through a hierarchical structure, procedures, personnel recruitment, and behavioral compliance with the superiority of a legal-rational order

  • Trading-Post Empires: a strategy where nations would take over large ports rather than entire nations

  • Cape of Good Hope:

Heimler’s Histories

Unit 1

State Buiding in Song China

  • The Song Dynasty remained in China from 960-1279

  • Song emperors built a state structure that would last for over 1000

  • Confucianism’s main ideology was that the world was naturally structured

    • Everyone had their own place in society and behaves accordingly to where they are ranked

  • People were subject to rulers, women were subject to men, and children were subject to fathers

  • The major achievement of the Song Dynasty was the revival of the civil service exam

AP World Exam 2023

Section 1: 1200-1450

Chapter 1

Governance 1200-1450

  • Classical regimes collapsed

  • Nations-states: countries as formally defined political entities, in the modern sense of the world

  • Cultural spheres: defined less by political boundaries and more by ethnic similarities, shared traditions, or government by larger imperial power

  • Roman Law: especially the Justinian code, compiled in Byzantium during the 500s remained a keystone in Western legal thought

  • Latin was the common language in Europe’s educated classes

  • Christianity was legalized and adopted by Rome in the 300s and became a cultural, intellectual, and political force because it provided unity in unstable times

  • Black Death: bubonic plague epidemic from 1346-1353 which made Europe lose 20-30% of its population

  • Noble Class/Aristocracy: evolved from people who got the largest pieces of land in feudalism

  • Knights: elite armored cavalry, a style of combat that required wealth and lifelong training

  • Chivalry: was supposed to make sure that knights acted as virtuous Christian warriors by treating the lower classes and women with delicacy and respect

  • Manorial System: political, economic, and social system by which the peasants of medieval Europe were rendered dependent on their land and on their lord

  • Serfs: peasants who were not technically slaves but were tied to a feudal lord’s land without the right to change profession or residence without permission

  • Catholic Papacy: they had lots of political power during the Middle Ages

  • Magna Carta: allowed for nobility to get various rights and ensured monarchy was not above the law

  • Parliament: which made laws in conjunction with the king and gradually became more representative

  • Common Law: system in England that allowed for jury trials and observing basic public liberties

  • Hundred Year’s War: occurred during 1337-1453 between France and England over French territory, in which France won

  • Joan of Arc: warrior maid who helped France win the Hundred Year’s War

  • Habsburg Family: gained permanent control over the imperial throne of the Holy Roman Empire in 1438

  • City-states: an independent sovereign city that serves as the center of political, economic, and cultural life over its contiguous territory

  • Renaissance: occurred in 1200s-1300s and started in Florence, Italy

  • Reconquista: a series of campaigns by Christian states to recapture territory from the Moors or Muslims

  • Byzantium: also known as the Eastern Roman Empire and it was the strongest and most advanced state in medical Europe

  • Constantinople: capital of Byzantium and was home to around 1 million people

  • Eastern Orthodoxy: a religion that is a part of the Christian branch

  • Captured Constantinople: in 1453 by Ottoman Turks due to gunpowder weaponry

  • Caesaropapism: a political system in which the head of the state is also the head of the church and supreme judge in religious matters

  • Ideal of Christendom: the concept of Europe as a single civilization, joined by a common allegiance to the Christian church

  • Heresy: belief or opinion that contradicts the church or a religion

  • Excommunication: kicked out of the Church

  • Holy Inquisition: a set of special courts that punished nonconformity

  • Crusades: holy wars

  • First Crusade: occurred from 1096-1099 and was against the Byzantine requests for aid against the Seljuk Turks who wanted to capture Jerusalem

  • Saladin: skilled Kurdish general who held back the Third Crusade and recaptured Jerusalem

  • Fourth Crusade: occurred during 1202-1204 and turned into a war against Christian Constantinople

  • Islam: a religion that originated in the Middle East and played a heavy political and social role in daily life

  • Dar al-Islam: one of the two spheres in the Islamic world where Sharia Law was dominant

  • Sharia Law: allowed Muslims to worship freely

  • Dar al-Harb: one of two spheres in the Islamic world where Islam was not established

  • Caliph: combined political and religious power to one person who governed the Muslim world

  • Circle of Justice: predated the rise of Islam but guided the caliphates and the Ottoman Empire that followed them

  • Sunni-Shiite Split: occurred after the Islam civil war

  • Arabic: the official language of the Muslim world

  • Abbasid Caliphate: occurred during 750-1258 and presided over the golden age of Islamic culture and built many centers of learning

  • Baghdad: capital of Abbasid Caliphate

  • Madrasas: religious centers of learning

  • Mongols: captured Baghdad in 1258 and killed the last Abbasid caliph

  • Mamluk: elite cavalry

  • Black Death: came from China and was a bubonic plague epidemic

  • Ottoman Turks: Middle Eastern dominant power that arouse during the 1300s

  • Devshirme: also known as the blood tax which forcibly recruited boys from non-Muslim families and placed them in positions of privileged servitude

  • Janissary: a member of an elite corps in the standing army of the Ottoman Empir

  • Fall of Constantinople: occurred in 1453 due to gunpowder weaponry by the Ottomans

  • Mamluk Sultanate: a breakaway state that was founded by elite soldiers who served the Abbasids

  • Berbers: nomadic camel herders

  • Ghana: important in trans-Sharan trade due to large deposits of gold

  • Sundiata Keita: founded Mali’s empire

  • Timbuktu: capital of Mali

  • Mansa Musa: Mali’s most powerful ruler who was a devout Muslim

  • Swahili city-states: self-ruling urban centers that flourished during 1000-1500 that was off of the East African Coast

  • Grand Canal: a vital artery that connected the Yellow and Yangzi rivers

  • Song Empire: one of the longest dynasties, 960-1279. They created gunpowder, magnetic compass, moveable typewriting, and paper money

  • Neo-Confucianism: the idea that commoners owed obedience to their superiors who in turn owed them just treatment

  • Civil-Service Exams: how Song China would choose scholar-officials

  • Genghis Khan: founder of the Mongol empire

  • Red Turban Revolts: broke out in the 1340s leading to the final rebellion that overthrew the Yuan happened because of government’s unwillingness to aid serfs after floods and sharp rise in taxes

  • Forbidden City: center of Beijing

  • Tributary System: how nearby states to China avoided being captured by allowing China to dictate policy

  • Zheng He: expanded trade and learned about the outside world

  • Sinosphere: zone of Chinese influence

  • Heian Period: Japan’s classical period

  • Shogun: Japanese military leaders

  • Daimyo: Japanese noble warlords who worked with the shogun

  • Samurai: Japanese warrior elite

  • Bushido: samurai code of loyalty and honor

  • Pax Mongolica: a brief period of semi-unification in Eurasia

  • Arabic Numerals: 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9

  • Caste System: how society was ranked

  • Sati: a ritual where women of certain castes were burned alive after their husbands died

  • Jizya: the nonbeliever’s tax that occurred in Muslim-ruled areas

  • Pre-Columbian Era: years before 1492 in the Americas

  • Pueblos: complex dwellings where people lived

  • Maize: corn

  • Maya: Mexican classical period was full of city-states and kingdoms, they created the concept of zero and the long-count calendar

  • Aztecs: ruled much of Mexico and had a huge population, they practiced human sacrifice and pyramid building

  • Quipu: a knot-tying system of writing

  • Feudalism: system in which monarchs awarded land to loyal followers, or vassals, and in return vassals guaranteed that the land would be governed and protected

Chapter 2

Cultural Developments and Interactions From 1200-1450

  • Cross-cultural Exchange: the sharing of ideas, art, literature, and traditions from different cultures

  • Marco Polo: a European merchant who traveled from Venice to Asia on the Silk Road

  • Ibn Battuta: a great Islam explorer who traveled for 30 years around the world

  • Margery Kempe: she was one of the most traveled women of her era and she came from England

  • Zheng He: he was a Chinese captain who took ships of the Ming navy in the Pacific and Indian Oceans

  • Renaissance: a cultural revival era in Europe, prominent in Italy during the 1300s-1500s and occurred in Europe 1400s-1600s

  • Medieval Period: used to be known as a period lacking culture, but is now known as a period of increase in culture

  • Scholasticism: philosophy in the Middle Ages and it was an attempt to reconcile Greco-Roman teachings with Christian teachings

  • Universities: centers of religious learning and places to learn about law and medicine

  • Johannes Gutenberg: created the movable-type printing press

  • Humanism: the conviction that to be human is something to rejoice in

  • Islamic Golden Age: a period when the Middle East was under the Abbasid Caliphate and there were advancements in artistic and intellectual life

  • Avicenna: a Persian physician who was the most authoritative medical text in the Middle East until the 1600s

  • Averroes: a doctor from Muslim Spain who translated Aristotle’s works

  • Maimonides: a Jewish thinker who wrote a book called The Guide to the Perplexed and which attempted to reconcile the rationality of Greco-Roman thought with Jewish theology

  • Sufism: a mystical strain of Islam that emphasizes union with Allah by means of spiritual exercises such as chanting or dancing

  • Oral Tradition: traditions, practices, and stories were passed on through word of mouth

  • Griots: professional African storytellers

  • Zen: emphasized self-discipline which caught the attention of the Samurai class and it also promised a heavenly afterlife which also appealed to lower classes

  • Bhakti Movement: a significant religious movement in medieval Hinduism that sought to bring religious reforms to all strata of society by adopting the method of devotion to achieve salvation

  • Polynesian Migrations: people who occupied much of Oceania during the 1200s

  • Taboos: Polynesian word for ritually forbidden behaviors

Chapter 3

Technology and Innovation 1200-1450

  • Scientific Method: created during the 1500s-1600s which is when scientists would start to experiment with their ideas rather than just using thoughts or ideas from philosophers

  • Geocentric Theory: the idea that the sun revolves around the earth

  • Galen: an ancient Greek scientist who had some correct ideas but some also turned out to be wrong

  • Water Clocks: an 80-foot tall structure that was able to tell what time of day it was, the month, positions of the sun and moon, and major stars and was powered by water

  • Overland Transport: it was a way for people to reach places that were far from rivers and coastlines; took a long time but was cheaper

  • Caravans: large processions of pack animals and/or vehicles

  • Water Transport: it was a way for people to travel by using oceans, seas, and rivers to get to other places

  • Maritime Technology: advances that made traveling in water easier and more efficient

  • Galley: the principal vessel that was powered by oars and a small square sail

  • Astrolabe: measured the sun’s position in the sky to calculate latitude

Chapter 4

Economic Systems 1200-1450

  • Transregional Trade Routes: consisted of the Silk Road, Trans-Saharan Caravan, Mediterranean Sea, and Indian Ocean

  • Silk Road: a route that linked the Middle East with Asia, and the Middle East with Europe and Africa and it flourished in the 1400s

  • Caravanserais: roadside settlements providing safety and shelter

  • Missionary Efforts: people who would try to spread their religion and faith to people from different countries

  • Mediterranean Sea Lanes: water-based trade route that connected and supported trade between Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East

  • Venice: the most powerful and advanced Italian city-state

  • Hanseatic League: an organization founded by north German towns and German merchant communities abroad to protect their mutual trading interests

  • Trans-Saharan Caravan Routes: land-based trade route that connected parts of Africa together

  • Oases: sources of water; especially in a desert

  • Arab/Berber Traders: they played an economic role by trading but they also spread Islam throughout Trans-Saharan Africa

  • Indian Ocean Trade Network: one of the most vibrant and culturally diverse trade routes and it connected Africa, Europe, and Asia

Chapter 5

Social Interactions and Organization 1200-1450

  • Urbanization: movement of populations from rural to urban areas

  • Social Mobility: the ability to move from different classes

  • Patriarchy: is a social system in which positions of dominance and privilege are primarily held by men

  • Diasporic Communities: a large group of people who share a cultural and regional origin but are living away from their traditional homeland

  • Elite Classes: consists of clergy and aristocrats and makeup around 10-15% of the population

  • Commoners: people who worked as scribes, lawyers, and physicians

  • Middle Class: commoners would eventually make up this class and consist of merchants and bankers

  • Peasant Class: unskilled laborers, farmers, and peasants

  • Untouchables: people at the bottom of the social class and consisting of enslaved people and unfree laborers

  • Arab Slave Trade: started in Africa and would later grow into the Atlantic Slave Trade

  • Furusiyya: involved military and cultured behavior; equitation

  • Corvee Labor Projects: when serfs had to do work such as building roads and cutting down forests

  • Mit’a: the Americas form of coerced labor

  • Dowry: provided women with slight economic security where she got money on her wedding day

  • Harem: started in Ottoman Turkey and it was women’s quarters

  • Foot Binding: a women’s beauty practice where their feet would be tightly bound and w

Chapter 6

Humans and the Environment 1200-1450

  • Vikings: Germanic and Asiatic peoples who came from the east and north and invades European states and were the most influential

  • Polynesian Migrations: populated a 20,000-mile expanse in the Pacific

  • Outrigger Canoes: allowed the Polynesians to travel long distances over water

  • Horse Collar: used to distribute the load around a horse's neck and shoulders when pulling a wagon or plow and allowed for improved agricultural production

  • Chinampa: a Mesoamerican technique for growing crops on the floating islands in lakes

  • Medieval Climate Optimum: a harsh warming trend between 800-1300

  • Little Ice Age: after 1300 there was global cooling

Section 2: 1450-1750

Chapter 7

Governance 1450-1700

  • Nation-states: multiethnic land empires

  • State-building Techniques: massive displays of art and architecture

  • Bureaucratic Elites: a governing class that controls the organizational functioning of the state through a hierarchical structure, procedures, personnel recruitment, and behavioral compliance with the superiority of a legal-rational order

  • Trading-Post Empires: a strategy where nations would take over large ports rather than entire nations

  • Cape of Good Hope:

Heimler’s Histories

Unit 1

State Buiding in Song China

  • The Song Dynasty remained in China from 960-1279

  • Song emperors built a state structure that would last for over 1000

  • Confucianism’s main ideology was that the world was naturally structured

    • Everyone had their own place in society and behaves accordingly to where they are ranked

  • People were subject to rulers, women were subject to men, and children were subject to fathers

  • The major achievement of the Song Dynasty was the revival of the civil service exam

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