1 / 35

Period 4 Review

Period 4 Review. Period 4: Global integrations. 1450-1750. Overall Changes. The world became truly global Maritime trade dominated the world European kingdoms gained world power Nomads began to become a thing of the past Labor systems were transformed Gunpowder Empires.

tosca
Download Presentation

Period 4 Review

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Period 4 Review

  2. Period 4: Global integrations • 1450-1750

  3. Overall Changes • The world became truly global • Maritime trade dominated the world • European kingdoms gained world power • Nomads began to become a thing of the past • Labor systems were transformed • Gunpowder Empires

  4. Major Gunpowder Empires • Ottoman • Mughal • Tokugawa Japan • Qing Dynasty

  5. Major Empires: Ottoman • Founded by Osman • 1453 conquered Constantinople and ended the Byzantine Empire • From Istanbul (Constantinople) they launched raids to the Balkans of Europe • Controlled land on three continents

  6. Major GP Empires: Ottoman • Used civil service and bureaucracy systems • Sultan absolutely ruler but allowed for petition from the people • Great army of mounted foot solders made up of Janissaries • Slaves used as labor • Mostly Sunni but allowed religious freedom • Important Merchant class • Women had more equality than other areas

  7. Major GP Empires: Mughal • Decedents of Mongol invaders • Ruled over modern day India, Pakistan, and Afghanistan • Strong military required high taxes • Rewarded military service with land grants • Muslim authority over Hindus • Sikhism emerged in some areas- combined Islam and Hinduism • Limited Trade • TajMahal Built

  8. Major GP Empires: Tokugawa Japan • Daimyos operated independently from shoguns • Empire still honored as ceremonial leader • Did not like Europeans or Christians • Closed trade network

  9. Major GP Empires: Ming China • Factors that weakened Ming China • Climate change • Nomadic invasion • Pirates • Declining Silk Road trade • Inept Rulers

  10. Major GP Empires: Early Qing dynasty • Manchus overthrew Ming Dynasty • Saw themselves as restoring China to glory • Copied many Chinese traditions, including Mandate of Heaven • Forbid intermarriage between Manchus and Chinese • Required Chinese's men to shave their heads and grow long queues at the back of their heads as a sign of submission

  11. Major GP Empires: Early Qing dynasty • Had contact with European missionaries: Jesuits • Cultural and Intellectual Life: • Based on Chinese traditions • Neo-Confucianism • Civil Service Exams • Printing press increased the number of books

  12. African Empires • Kongo/Congo • Benin • Soghai

  13. African Empires: Congo • West Africa • African merchant princes connected to Atlantic trade network economy • Women traders used marriage to European merchants to ensure power • Set up trade with Portuguese • Converted to Christianity • Became a major center of slave trade.

  14. African Empires: Benin • West Africa • Trade economy • Palace in walled city • Skilled in bronze work

  15. African Empires: Songhai • Sudanic • Trade city controlled salt, gold, and copper • Once controlled by Mali • Sunni Ali was the leader who brought Timbuktu and other trading cities under his control • Lacked gunpowder and was defeated by Moroccan forces in 1591

  16. European Empires • Portugal • Spain • England • France

  17. European Empires: Portugal • Power came from exploration and colonization • Important in early slave trade; first to set up trading centers along Africa’s cost • First to trade directly with Indian and China

  18. European Empires: Spain • Unified by the marriage of Isabella and Ferdinand • Wealth came from exploration and colonization • Expelled Muslims and Jews • Inquisition • Controlled Latin America • Decimated Native Americans • Beginning of American slave trade

  19. European Empires: England • Power came from trade and colonization • Mercantilism • Long history of Constitutionalism • Important rulers: Henry VIII and Queen Elizabeth

  20. European Empires: France • Power from trade and colonization • Louis XIV- absolutism • Controlled nobles by having them life at Versailles

  21. European patterns of social and gender changes • Major Cities included Paris, London, and Amsterdam • Rise of bourgeoisie • Rising gap between poor and everyone else • Marriages took place later in life, less likely to be arranged • More freedom for women • More women become education • Renaissance brings new age or art and literature • Reformation brings end to unified European Catholicism

  22. Russia • Converted to Orthodox Christianity • Peter the Great tried to westernize Russia

  23. Exploration and Colonization: Columbian Exchange • Diseases • Animals • Crops

  24. Exploration and Colonization: Columbian Slave Trade

  25. Types of forced labor • Slave trade • Plantation slavery • Mamluks/Janissaries • Serfs • East Africa • Caribbean, North and south America • Abbasid and Ottoman Empire • East Europe/Russia

  26. Major Population shifts • Rise in Europe’s population • A decrease in American population • No overall change in Africa • Major rise in Asia and Middle East

  27. Major environmental changes in New world Soil Exhaustion Deforestation

  28. Major environmental changes: Little Ice age

  29. Cultural and intellectual developments • Scientific Revolution • Enlightenment • Neoconfucianism • Major Developments and Exchanges in the Arts

  30. Cultural and intellectual developments: Scientific Revolution • Famous People or Events • Copernicus • Galileo • Francis Bacon • William Harvey • Content or Idea or Movement • World could be explained through natural laws • Sun center of the Universe • Scientific Method • Diffusion • Europe and American Colonies

  31. Cultural and intellectual developments: The Enlightenment • Famous People or Events • John Lock • Jean-Jacque Rousseau • Thomas Hobbes • Voltaire • Content or Idea or Movement • Natural Rights: Life, Liberty, and Property • Right of people to revolt and overthrow a government • Freedom of speech, press, and religion • Diffusion • Europe and American Colonies

  32. Cultural and intellectual developments: Neoconfucianism • Famous People or Events • Zhu Xi • Content or Idea or Movement • Combined elements of Buddhism and Daoism • Diffusion • China, Korea, and Japan

  33. Cultural and intellectual developments: Exchanges in Arts • Famous People or Events • Italian Renaissance Paintings • Mughal miniature paintings • TajMahal • Content or Idea or Movement • Celebration of beauty • Focus on individual achievement • Diffusion • Europe and its colonies • South Asia

  34. Quiz Time!

More Related