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Class Plan (Apr-28)

Class Plan (Apr-28). Develop Quiz 5 to answer Essay #5 Read through (together) the Final Exam Study Guide Intro how to write a short identification Brainstorm ideas for Essays #2 & #4 (If time is allowed) Next Class: Review the remaining historical IDs + Essays #1 & 3.

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Class Plan (Apr-28)

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  1. Class Plan (Apr-28) • Develop Quiz 5 to answer Essay #5 • Read through (together) the Final Exam Study Guide • Intro how to write a short identification • Brainstorm ideas for Essays #2 & #4 (If time is allowed) • Next Class: Review the remaining historical IDs + Essays #1 & 3

  2. Format of the Final Exam • @ Spalding 155 on Monday May-12, 4:30-6:30 • Total Grade of the Final: 200 out of 400 • Compare to the midterm, the final includes:

  3. GRADE • The accumulated grade before the Final: 200 • The Final: 200 out of 400 points • How to convert to lettered grades? A+ 387-400 A 374-386 A- 360-373 B+ 347-359 B 334-346 B- 320-333 C+ 307-319 C 294-306 C- 280-293 D+ 267-279 D 254-266 D- 240-253 F 239 points and below To pass the course, you need at least a D (not a D-) in general

  4. Quiz 5 ===> Essay 5 • Read Essay Question #5 • What information from the Reading Quiz 5 can you use to answer Essay #5? • The Black Death (disease) is a case study/example through which we can describe how “backward” the medieval period in EU was. • How to develop the essay beyond this case study?

  5. How to develop the essay beyond the case study of the Black Death?(Ch.16 & 19 + lectures) • The historical context • The “dark/backward” facet of EU societies • Balance the judgments: “medieval tried the best they could” • Notes: • Don’t forget the Intro and the Conclusion • Use linking words to link one paragraph to another (Firstly, Secondly…, In addition to, Moreover, Next…) • Start every body paragraph with a general statement • Then provide specific examples, details, analysis to support THE (only one) general statement

  6. How to develop the essay beyond the case study of the Black Death?(Ch.16 & 19 + lectures) • Describe the historical context: in European history • the time frame: the Dark Ages (400-900) & the medieval period (900-1400) • After the decline of the Roman empire during the 5th century CE => 2 halves: the Western part included various regional powers while the Eastern part remained as the Byzantium Empire.[Don’t go into too detail in this point] • Main characteristics that historians used to apply to the “dark/backward” facet of EU during the periods in question: • The Church controlled cultural/spiritual life. • Warfare and Feudalism (i.e. lands belonged to powerful landlords) or the lack of centralized powers drove EU into chaos. • Inability to cope with epidemic like the Black Death

  7. How to develop the essay beyond the case study of the Black Death?(Ch.16 & 19 + lectures) • Describe the historical context: in European history • Main characteristics that historians used to apply to the “dark/backward” facet of EU during the periods in question: • Balance the judgments: • The Church, w. its hierarchical organizational structure , would provide community • During the Black Death, people tried hard to explain the causes of the disease and to cure people within their limited knowledge. • From 1000, European societies started to expand through economic activities and the spread of Christianity.

  8. Overview of the Essays Three out of Six questions from the Study Guide will appear on the Final Exam. What are the topics of the Essay Questions? • Various kinds of Contacts and Exchanges in Eurasia 1st-14th centuries CE • Early history of Christianity: How did the religion emerge and develop over the course of its early history? Its impact on the Roman and post-Roman world? • Same questions to Islam. 7th-14th centuries • Classical China (500 BCE-207 BCE) vs. Classical Greece (500 BCE-300 BCE) • Dark Ages and medieval era in EU history • Sporting events in the Mediterranean world (Greece + Rome)

  9. Categorize 64 historical IDs

  10. Categorize 64 historical IDs (since the 4th century CE)

  11. Alexander the Great

  12. 300 Alexander the Great (356-323 BCE) Antigone Augustus (27 BCE-14 CE) bread and circuses Caligula (37-41 CE.) Cleopatra Gladiator Hannibal (early 3rd C BCE) Marcus Aurelius (2nd century CE) Oedipus the King Olympics (started in 776 BCE) PaxRomana(from the 1stto mid-3rd CCE) Peloponnesian War (431-404 BCE) Pericles (461-492 BCE) Polis Punic Wars (264-146 BCE) Roman republic Socrates (470-399 BCE) Sophocles (the 5th C BCE) Spartacus (in 73-71 BCE) 300 Alexander the Great (356-323 BCE) Antigone Augustus (27 BCE-14 CE) bread and circuses Caligula (37-41 CE.) Cleopatra Gladiator Hannibal (early 3rd C BCE) Marcus Aurelius (2nd century CE) Oedipus the King Olympics (started in 776 BCE) PaxRomana(from the 1stto mid-3rd CCE) Peloponnesian War (431-404 BCE) Pericles (461-492 BCE) Polis Punic Wars (264-146 BCE) Roman republic Socrates (470-399 BCE) Sophocles (the 5th C BCE) Spartacus (in 73-71 BCE) 1 philosopher 1 tragedian + 2 plays (change from a focus on the natural world to a focus on the human affairs) 4 political IDs *polis – democracy – Pericles *Roman republic *bread and circuses – Augustus *PaxRomana - Augustus Terms relating to 3 wars *The Greco-Persian Wars: 300 *The Peloponnesian War *The Punic Wars: Hannibal, Gladiator Rulers Alexander Cleopatra Augustus Caligula Marcus Aurelius 1 Rebel: Spartacus 1 Reformer: Pericles

  13. IV.A. The Byzantium Empire (4th-12th centuries) (4 terms) ½ Roman Empire 1 Church 1 King + 1 Queen • Byzantine Empire • Hagia Sophia (Church, Eastern Roman Empire) • Justinian • Theodora (c. 500–548) • IV. B. The western Europe (4th-11th centuries) • Battle of Tours • Charlemagne (r. 768-814) • Vikings V. The rise of Christianity and the Roman world (since 1st century BCE) (5 terms) • VI. The expansion of Islam (since the 7th century CE) • Muhammad • Five Pillars of Islam • haji • caliph • Jesus • Saul/Paul • St. Augustine • Crucifixion • Constantine

  14. VII. The Transformation of Societies in AsiaThe world in Indian Ocean to East Asia (since 4th CCE) VII.A. India • Gupta Empire (320-550 CE, patronage of Hinduism) VII.B. China: Sui-Tang (589-907), Song (960-1279), &Ming (1368-1644) dynasties • Grand Canal • examination system • Buddhism • ZhengHe VII.C. Early Japan • Yamato • Heian culture (794-1185 CE) • Tale of Genji • Shogun • samurai culture • bushido • kamikaze (“divine wind”)

  15. VIII. Towards the Interconnected World(s) 1000-1500 VIII.A. Global Trade • Silk Road(s) • Marco Polo • Open-sea voyaging VIII.B. TransregionalNomadic Empire (12th-14th C CE) • Yuan Dynasty • Genghis Khan • Kublai Khan • PaxMongolica • Horsemen from Hell VIII.C. People outside Eurasia • Peopling of the Pacific Islands • Austronesian peoples VIII.D. Medieval Europe (1000-1500) • stigmata • Scholasticism (13th C CE) • Black Death • Doomsday Book • Joan of Arc

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