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600CE- 1450CE

600CE- 1450CE. Rise of Islam. Followers called Muslims Believe that Allah (God) transmitted his words to the faithful through Mohammad Mohammad’s followers recorded teachings in Qu’ran Believe that salvation comes from submission to God: Five Pillars of Islam: Confession of faith

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600CE- 1450CE

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  1. 600CE- 1450CE

  2. Rise of Islam • Followers called Muslims • Believe that Allah (God) transmitted his words to the faithful through Mohammad • Mohammad’s followers recorded teachings in Qu’ran • Believe that salvation comes from submission to God: • Five Pillars of Islam: • Confession of faith • Prayer 5 times per day • Charity to needy • Fasting during Ramadan • Pilgrimage to Mecca • Jihad: to struggle

  3. Islam • 2 Sects: Sunni and Shia (Disagree over who succeed Mohammad) • Mecca and Medina; Ka’ba • Dar al Islam: House of Islam

  4. After Mohammad • After Mohammad dies, Abu Bakr becomes caliph (head of the state, military commander, chief judge, and religious leader) • Later on there would be lack of clear succession in terms of leaders • Theocracy: government ruled by immediate divine guidance or by officials who are divinely guided • Caliphate: empire ruled by caliph

  5. Umayyad Dynasty • Son of Ali, Hasan, relinquishes throne. Gives way to Umayyad Dynasty • Increased size of Islamic Empire (led to increased conflicts) • Capital at Damascus, spiritual center at Mecca • Official language was Arabic • Tax on religions other than Islam • Much success during Umayyad, they built the Dome of the Rock during its reign.

  6. Umayyad cont. • Muslims split into two sects: Shiite and Sunni • Shiite: Shia Islam holds the Mohammad’s son in law, Ali, was heir to empire • Sunnis: They hold Ali in high esteem, but did not believe he was the successor • Thought empires should be derived from base of people. • Battle for control between forces of Abu al-Abbas (Shia) and reigning power led to decline of Umayyad • Replaced by the Abbasid Dynasty

  7. Abbasid Dynasty • Eventually destroyed by Mongols • Golden age where arts and sciences flourished • Capital at Baghdad (became cultural center) • Islamic empire based on trade • Introduced idea of credit • Advancements in math and medical • Expanded with knowledge learned from India

  8. Abbasid Cont. • Defeat Tang at Battle of Talus River • Fight over control of Silk Road • Diffusion of paper money from China to Middle East • Muslims monopolized trade routes • Protected heritage of western Europe • Translated teachings from Ancient Rome and Greece to Arabic • Abbasid were tolerant of local conquered religions • Sufis were most successful Islamic missionaries • Allowed conquered to blend Islam and other faiths

  9. Women in Islam • Women viewed as property. • No rights to own property or inherit it. • Low status of women gave way to female infanticide • After Qu’ran written status of women increased. • Women treated with more dignity, considered equal before Allah • Women still treated unequally in some ways • Example: Testimony in court • Overtime Islamic society became more patriarchal and more structured

  10. Decline of Islamic Caliphate • Internal rivalries between groups weakened empire • Final blow when Turkish slaves (mamluks) revolted and established new capital in central Iraq. • Mongols invade and destroy the empire.

  11. Europe and Byzantine • Enter Middle Ages, period after fall of Rome and before Renaissance • The Roman Empire split in to two sides • East v. West, practiced different forms of Christianity • Eastern Roman Empire: AKA Byzantine Empire • Centered in Constantinople • Highly centralized • Western Roman Empire • Complete collapse • Religion still strong

  12. Byzantine Empire • Used Greek Language, had domes on buildings, culture similar to Persia • Religion: Orthodox Chrsitianity • Leaders had absolute authority with monopolies over economy • Used coined money • Justinian restored glory of Roman Empire in Constantinople • Trade and arts, Justinian Code (law), Hagia Sophia (enormous cathedral)

  13. Byzantine Continued • No Pope, they had secular leaders • Disagreement with Western Empire over sacrament of communion, rules about priests, and use of languages in church. • Orthodoxy in East, Roman Catholicism in West

  14. Orthodoxy in Russia • St. Cyril converted Slavics of southeastern Europe and Russia to Orthodox Christianity • Vladimir (a prince) converted to Christian Orthodoxy • Russia aligned with Byzantine in terms of beliefs and traditions • Russia became culturally different than other powers of Europe

  15. Franks versus Muslims • After collapse of Western Roman Empire, small kingdoms were formed. • Most significant was the Franks • Franks were a Germanic tribe under leadership of King Clovis • Roman Catholicism • Empire divided among King’s sons=decline • Muslims attack, Charles Martel leads the Franks and defeats the Muslims at the Battle of Tours. • Martel declares Carolingian Dynasty

  16. Charlemagne • Crowned by Pope, kn0wn as Charles the Great • Built the Holy Roman Empire (relatively small, compared to the Roman Empire) • Strong focus on arts and education • Feudalistic society, meaning Charlemagne shared power with local lords • Charlemagne did not levy taxes (did not build strong empire) • After death, empire divided among sons in Treat of Verdun

  17. Vikings (AKA Normans) • Used multi oared boats to invade • Notorious for raiding Roman Catholic Monasteries • Developed some of the earliest commercial fisheries in Northern Europe • Vikings converted to Christianity

  18. European Feudalism • The social, economic, and political system of the middle ages King Nobles Vassals Peasants

  19. How it Works • Kings holds power of kingdom • Nobles give king military service and loyalty to the kingdom and king gives them power over sections of the kingdom • Nobles divide land into smaller sections under the control of vassals • Land given to vassals called fiefs • Vassals could then split the land again and allow peasants to work on it • Peasants (serfs) eventually tied to land

  20. Three Field System • Rotation of fields • One for fall harvest, spring harvest, and one replenishing it’s nutrients • “Great Clearing” used by lords to create more farmland

  21. Chivalry • Code of etiquette, an honor system that strongly condemned betrayal and promoted mutual respect • Followed by lords and knights

  22. Serf Specialization • Serfs specializing in specific skills gave way to a middle class of merchants (burghers)

  23. Hanseatic League • One of the most significant alliances between towns • Established in 1385, had an economic basis and controlled trade throughout much of northern Europe

  24. Gothic Cathedrals and Crusades • Cathedrals designed to bring worshippers closer to God • Flying buttresses, gave support to windows and vaulted ceilings. • Crusades- military campaigns undertaken by European Christians of 11th through 14th C. to take over the Holy Land • Gave way to heresies (religious practices or beliefs that do not conform to traditional doctrine • Good things came from the Crusades, in the form of diffusion of culture and ideas between ethnic groups

  25. Pope Innocent III • Issued strict decrees on church doctrine • Heretics and Jews were frequently persecuted • Fourth and final unsuccessful Crusade was ordered by Innocent III • Pope Gregory IX started Inquisition, formalized interrogation and persecution process of heretics Pope Innocent III

  26. Crusades (4 of them) • 1st Crusade, initiated by Pope Urban • Response to Seljuk Turks who controlled Holy Land • Christians wanted Jerusalem • 2nd and 3rd Crusades • Not significant • 4th Crusade • Catholic Church sacked Constantinople and est. Latin Empire • Made Holy Land violent and uncertain

  27. Thomas Aquinas • Famous Christian realist • He wrote Summa Theologica • Outlined his view that faith and reason are not in conflict, but that both are gifts from God and each can be used to enhance the other

  28. Power Solidifies • Interregnum- time between kings • Germany and Italy became decentralized in a group of strong, independent townships and kingdoms • England • Magna Carta- reinstated feudal rights of the lords, and extended the rule of law to other people in the country • Parliament established: two branches- House of Lords and House of Commons

  29. Joan of Arc • Claimed to have heard voices telling her to liberate France from England • Eventually claimed all French territory • Said she was divinely inspired to lead men into battle • Joan of Arc was eventually burned at the stake by the French • Hundred Years War- btwn France and England, England eventually withdrew from France

  30. More about power and government • After 100 Years War, power in France became more centralized • Under Bourbons (series of monarchs) France was unified and became major power • Spain was united by Queen Isabella, who married Ferdinand, making a single monarchy • Spanish Inquisition: non-Christians forced to leave the country

  31. Russia!!! • 1242 Russia succumbs to invading Tatars (Mongols) ruled by Genghis Khan • By late 14th C that Russian Princes gained back power • Ivan III expanded Muscovy territory (area around Moscow) and declared himself Czar • Moscow declared third Rome • Ivan the Terrible centralized power and ruled with Secret Police IVAN THE TERRIBLE!!!!

  32. Asia • 3 powerful Chinese dynasties (600 to 1450): Tang, Song, and Ming • Golden Ages • Tang Dynasty • Ruled by Xuanzong, empire expanded to Manchuria, Mongolia, Tibet and Korea • Local warlords gained more and more power and Tang collapses • Song Dynasty • Unified by Taizu • Fell to Mongols, who established Yuan Dynasty • Ming Dynasty rose after Yuan fell

  33. China • Nearly every aspect of life and culture advanced during the Tang and Song dynasties • Art, architecture, science, porcelain, silk, transportation, • Tang=poetry • Song= printing processes, gun powder, compasses, • Both used Civil Service Examinations, focus on Confucian Principles • Both had paper money and letters of credit • Tang built military garrisons on major trade routes

  34. Empress of China • Wu Zhao became first and only empress of China, ever, during the Tang Dynasty • Impressive, right? • China was very patriarchal at this time (foot binding)

  35. Religion in China • Most influential religion was Buddhism • Two forms: Mahayana and Chan • Mahayana: emphasis on peaceful and quite existence, life apart from worldly values • Chan: emphasis on meditation and appreciation of beauty. Had converts from educated classes • Neo Confucianism • Borrowed Buddhist ideas about the soul and individual • Filial Piety (maintenance of proper roles and loyalty to superiors)

  36. Japan • First important ruling family was the Yamamoto Clan • First and only dynasty to rule Japan • Current ruler is descendant of this clan • Shinto religion “the way of the gods” • Japanese worshipped the kami, referring to nature and all forces of it • Goal of Shinto is to become part of kami by following certain rituals and customs • Taika reforms to make Japan more similar to China

  37. More Japan • YoritomoMinamoto given title of shogun, given “real power” • Power not in hands of emperor • Beneath shogun were daimyo’s (owners of large tracts of land, and powerful samurai • Code of Bushido (followed by Samurai), like code of chivalry in Europe

  38. India • When Islam conquered India, they set up Delhi Sultanate • Made non-Muslims pay a tax • Hindu temples were destroyed • Good things did come from Delhi Sultanate though: • Colleges founded, irrigation improved, Mosques built,

  39. Mongols • Great horsemen and archers • Genghis Khan unified Mongol tribes and set them on a path of expansion • He invaded China in 1234, Mongol Empire eventually spanned from Pacific Ocean to eastern Europe • Split into Hordes, or small independent empires • Golden Horde: Russia; treated as vassal state • Kublai Khan ruled China • Called PaxMongolica

  40. Mongols • Did not have organized religion, so they didn’t enforce one on conquered • Invaded India under Timur Lang (AKA Tamerlane), ruthless and cruel leader • Destroyed everything and massacred thousands • Mongols were great diffusers of culture (i.e. Buddhism) • World trade grew and cultural diffusion grew

  41. Africa: Kush and Axum • Developed to the south of Egypt • Kush developed at same time as Ancient Egypt • Axum rose after Kush declined • Christianity in the 4th C. and converted to Islam in the 7th C • Swahili Coast: settled by Bantu • Major trade and merchantry

  42. Ghana, Mali, and Songhai • West Africa south of Sahara • Began trade with Muslim Empire in 7th C. • Trade increased across the Sahara as time progressed • Gold became major trade and symbol of wealth and power • Islam led to decline of Ghana (holy war) • Mali: • Greatest ruler was Mansa Musa (built capital and expanded) • Gold pilgrimage to Mecca

  43. Songhai • Sonnia Ali made the largest empire in West Africa • Conquered entire region • Became major cultural center • Used oral literature • Bronze sculpting

  44. The Americas • Mayans • City states ruled by single king • Largely agricultural • Lowlands of Central America • Wars for capturing slaves and sacrifices • Decline of Mayan unknown

  45. Aztecs • AKA the Mexica • Capital at Tenochtitlan • Expansionist policy with professional army • Extensive road system for trade and transportation • Warriors were elite class • Tribute from conquered peoples

  46. Inca • Andes Mtns in Peru • Expansionist policy with professional army, established bureaucracy • Primary labor source was humans • Capital at Cuzco • Mummification of rulers • No private property • Temple of the Sun and Machu Picchu • Quipu for record keeping

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