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Barrons Vocabulary

Quiz yourself by thinking what should be in each of the black spaces below before clicking on it to display the answer.
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Question
Answer
Pangaea   ancient supercontinent with Africa at the center  
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Laurasia   split from Pangaea to form the northern continents about 200 million years ago  
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Gondwanaland   split from Pangaea to form the southern continents about 200 million years ago  
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plate tectonics   theory that a layer molten rock, or magma, pushes the overlying plates of the earth's surface to drift apart or collide  
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prehistory   a time before written history  
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paleontologists   scientists who study fossils  
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archaeologists   scientists who study fossils and artifacts of ancient people  
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artifacts   man-made objects  
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anthropologists   scientists who study pysical and cultural characteristics of people  
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carbon 14 dating   measures the amount of radioactive carbon left in an object to determine its age  
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accelerator mass spectrometry   counts carbon 14 atoms  
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DNA   hereditary material used to trace the evolution of humans  
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hominid   the "great ape" family, including humans, chimpanzees, gorillas, and orangutans  
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chronology   the keeping of time  
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B.C.E.   before the common era  
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C.E.   common era  
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Australopithecines afarensis   3.9 million years old, first upright walking human ancestor, was dimorphic  
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Donald Johanson   found Lucy, a 3 million year old A. afarensis  
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Hadar   the site in Ethiopia where Lucy was found  
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dimorphic   a species with two types of individuals  
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Homo habilis   2.5 million years old, the first tool maker  
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Homo erectus   1.8 million years old, migrated throuout Africa and Eurasia  
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Homo sapiens   400,000 years old  
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Neanderthal   a group of H. sapiens that had capacity for emotion and a sense of death  
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Cro-Magnon   the present species of H. sapiens, had a capacity for art and was taller and smarter than Neanderthal  
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culture   learned behavior and social organization, behavior patterns, arts, beliefs, and institutions  
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bipedal   walking upright, which enables the use of hands  
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Olduvai Gorge   a site rich in fossil evidence of human origins  
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Louis and Mary Leaky   found H. habilis and evidence of improvement of tools in Olduvai Gorge  
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Ice Age   a period 2 million to 11,000 years ago when much of the Northern Hemisphere was covered in ice  
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Pleistocene   the Ice Age, when Neanderthal and other hominids coexisted  
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Multiregional model   H. sapiens evolved from H. erectus in different places separately  
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Out of Africa model   the current consensus view that H. sapiens evolved from H. erectus in Africa and migrated out  
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Paleolithic   2 million years ago to 10,000 years ago, from the appearance of H. habilis to when tools were made by chipping  
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Old Stone Age   Paleolithic  
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Neolithic   from 8000 B.C.E. when stone tools were made by polishing and animals and plants were domesticated  
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New Stone Age   Neolithic  
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hunter-gatherers   lived by hunting animals and gathering useful plants, migrated to populate most of the globe, crossing to North America 50,000 to 20,000 years ago  
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Amurians   oldest hunter-gatherers  
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Mongoloids   most recent hunter-gatherers  
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Amerindians   American Indians, descended from Amurians and Mongoloids  
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Lascaux   site in France where cave paintings to appease natural spirits were found  
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Agriculture   selective growing of plants  
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slash-and-burn   first successful type of agriculture where land was cleared for crops  
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Girding   bark around trees was cut to kill them to let in let in sunlight and keep out weeds  
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Huang Ho   the Yellow River where millet was formed ca. 7000 B.C.E.  
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Maize   cultivated in the Tehuacan Valley of Mexico 4500 to 4700 years ago  
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root crops   grown from live shoots in tropical areas of Southeast Asia by 5000 B.C.E., probably grown by fishermen  
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rice paddy farming   rice is planted in standing water, used in monsoon areas  
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Pastoralism   domestication of animals, coincided with the development of agriculture  
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Hallan Cemi   site where pigs were found to be the first domesticated animals  
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civilization   characterized by political order, job and class differentiation, building projects, religious centers, writing systems, and agricultural surplus  
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cultural diffusion   culture is exchanged between societies  
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ideograms   symbols used to represent abstract ideas  
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phonograms   symbols based on sounds  
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scibes   a class of recordkeepers  
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Mesopotamia   between the Tigris and Euphrates Rives  
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alluvial   rich soil with deposited silt  
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Fertile Crescent   from Mesopotamia to Palestine  
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ziggurat   center of worship with a temple atop a terraced pyramid  
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Sumerians   in the south of the Fertile Crescent  
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Sargon   Akkadian warrior who established an empire in Mesopotamia in 2334 B.C.D. with a large standing army  
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Ur   dominating Sumerian city  
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Hammurabi   Amorite king who established Babylonia in 1792 B.C.E.  
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Babylonia   Mesopotamian empire that fell to the Hittites ca. 1600 B.C.E.  
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Hammurabi's Code   first standardized law code, based on an eye for an eye# and lower classes receiving harsher punishment  
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cuneiform   syllable based writing system written on clay tablets  
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calendar   system of time measurement  
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polytheistic   religion with multiple gods  
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anthropomorphic   gods oversaw human tasks, took on human form and characteristics  
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The Epic of Gilgamesh   shows the Sumerians reflecting on life, death, mankind and deity, and immortality  
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Nile   worlds longest river, floods regularly  
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pharaoh   absolute Egyptian kings worshipped as gods  
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theocracy   government based on religion  
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pyramid   a structure that required social organization and architectural skill to build  
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Giza   location of the largest pyramid  
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Cheops   pharaoh who built the largest pyramid at Giza  
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hieroplyphics   priestly Egyptian writings that were originally pictograms that showed the link between politics and religion  
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Jean Champollion   decoded hieroglyphics with the Rosetta Stone  
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Rosetta Stone   bore parallel inscriptions in Greek, Egyptian, and vernacular  
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vernacular   common language  
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papyrus   Egyptian paper-like material  
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King Menes   united Lower and Upper Egypt around 3100 B.C.E., starting the unified political history of Egypt  
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Lower Egypt   northern part of Egypt on the Nile Delta  
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Upper Egypt   southern part of Egypt, reaches to the First Cataract at Aswan  
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Old Kingdom   first period in Egyptian history, consists of King Menes's dynasty, until 2200 B.C.E.  
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Middle Kingdom   established by the prince of Thebes in 2100 B.C.E., noted for its arts  
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Hyksos   destroyed the Middle kingdom in 1700 B.C.E.  
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New Kingdom   established by an Egyptian rebellion in about 1580 B.C.E.  
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Thutmose III   during his reign, Egyptians became efficient warriors and extended Egypt through Syria, Palestine, and Nubia  
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Ikhnaton or Akhenaton   introduced a monotheistic religion based on Aton  
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monotheistic   religion with one all-powerful god  
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Aton   Egyptian sun god  
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Howard Carter   discovered Tutankhamen's tomb  
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Ramses II   last great New Kingdom pharaoh  
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Karnak   colonnaded temple built with post and lintel construction  
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post and lintel   an architectural style employed in Karnak and later used by the Greeks  
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bartering   swapping one item for another  
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Etesian winds   seasonal winds that powered ships upstream in the Nile, allowing for two-way river traffic  
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matriarchal   traced through the woman's family  
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Hatshepsut   only woman pharaoh  
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Indus River Valley   protected by the Himalaya Mountains, the Hindu Kush Mountains, and the Great Indian Desert  
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Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro   Indus River Valley cities  
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Mesoamerica   Central America  
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Archaic   period in which villages and pottery were found  
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Olmec   "mother civilization" of Mesoamerica  
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San Lorenzo   major Olmec site in eastern Mexico, 1200-900 B.C.E.  
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La Venta   major Olmec site in eastern Mexico, 900-500 B.C.E.  
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altiplano   highlands between the two major chains of the Andes  
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Norte Chico   central coastline of Peru where a complex society developed between 3100 and 1600 B.C.E. with an estimated population of 20,000  
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Caral   America's first known city with an estimated population of 3000  
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quipu   knotted textiles used for recording, developed by the Caral peoples and also used by the Inca  
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Chavin   an urban society that emerged in the altiplano around 1200 B.C.E.  
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bronze   copper mixed with tin, invented around 4000 B.C.E.  
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Minoans   society on Crete that traded widely and absorbed the Mycenaeans  
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Crete   Greek island  
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Knossos   Minoan palace demonstrating Minoan art  
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Mycenaeans   Indo-European invaders who entered Greece from the north about 1900 B.C.E.  
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Troy   besieged by the Mycenaeans to advance Greece  
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Homer   wrote The Iliad and The Odessey, epic poems describing the Trojan wars and their aftermath that feature wisdom as the source of power  
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Heinrich Schliemann   proved Homer's epics to be based in fact  
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chariot   give nomadic conquerors the power to rule the civilized world in about 1700 B.C.E., limited to the aristocracy by their expense  
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Kazakhstan   where earliest known chariots were found in burial mounds  
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aristocracy   rule by an elite upper class  
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Dorians   Greek-speaking Indo-European nomadic peoples who conquered the Mycenaeans in 1200 and 1100 B.C.E.  
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Xia (Hsia) Dynasty   ca. 2000 to ca. 1600 B.C.E. in China  
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Yu   founder of the Xia Dynasty that became a leader by controlling the Huang Ho  
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Shang Dynasty   invaded China using chariots 1752 B.C.E. to 1122 B.C.E., around the time of the rule of Hammurabi and the collapse of Harappa  
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loess   a layer deposited by rivers like that at the Ordos bulge by the Huang Ho  
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bureaucracy   government officials  
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vassal   served the king and governed peasants and artisans during the Shang Dynasty  
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nuclear family   husband, wife, children, and sometimes grandparents or cousins  
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extended families   constist of several generations  
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patriarch   oldest male of a family, also leader of the Eastern Roman church with no authority, regulated by the Byzantine emperors  
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shaman   oracular priests  
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oracle bones   readings inscribed on bones and shells used as oracles by the Shang  
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pictographic   pictures are used to represent things  
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Pinyin   newer system of transliterating Chinese into English  
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Wade-Giles   older system of transliterating Chinese into English  
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Non Nok Tha   culture in Thailand that worked bronze by 2500 B.C.E.  
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Dong Son   people in Vietnam that made bronze drums, height was around 500 B.C.E.  
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Iron   copper mixed with lead, created in the Hittite Empire and used widely starting about 1200 B.C.E., cheaper but had to be worked, not poured, set off a wave of barbarian invasions  
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Hittite   in present-day Anatolia  
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empire   large territorial state  
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Persian Empire   used metallurgy during the Iron Age for military and civilan purposes, conquered the Assyrian Empire's area by 546 B.C.E. using cavalry  
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Assyrian Empire   Iron Age kingdom of all of Mesopotamia by 800 B.C.E., overthrown in 612 B.C.E., ruled by force  
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Nineveh   capital of the Assyrian Empire  
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cavalry   the part of an army mounted on horses, invented in the Eurasian steppes  
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steppes   plains  
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Sanskrit   Indo-European language used by the Aryans, a group of steppe nomads  
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Aryans   migrated into India through the Khyber and Bolan Passes in the Hindu Kush as early as 1500 B.C.E.  
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Dravidians   native people of India, some were conquered by the Aryans and others moved south  
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Rig Veda   oldest religious writings, a collection of hymns dating from 1800 to 1300 B.C.E.  
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Mahabharata   epic poem describing battles between aristocratic charioteers  
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Ramayana   epic poem of India  
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Ganges River Valley   iron tools were used to clear jungles here  
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monsoons   seasonal winds from the Indian Ocean that bring the summer rains essential to agriculture in South and East Asia  
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Jati   the Indian caste system, in which different castes had specific jobs and religious duties, stronger than political ties  
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dharma   religious and moral duties of one's caste  
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raj   local prince, made political centralization difficult  
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transcendental   abstract, metaphysical  
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Indra   principle Aryan god, destroyer of cities and god of thunder and storm  
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Brahman   caste of priests  
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Vedas   four boooks of sacred knowledge in Sanskrit, hymns to the gods  
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Shiva   the aspect of Brahma that represented destruction, the cosmic dancer who creates and destroysdhar  
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Vishnu   the aspect of Brahma that preserved created things  
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Brahma   the universal force in all things, the universal all  
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asceticism   a rival religion unwilling to cede authorities to the Brahman caste, believed that truth could be found in self-discipline and meditation  
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Upanishads   oral tradition of Indian asceticism conceiving the end of religious life as a quest for release from reincarnation  
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reincarnation   a cycle of rebirths  
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Hinduism   religion based on the Vedic and Upanishadic traditions  
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Hindustan   a word meaning riverland describing India  
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Kush   Nubian state that laid the foundations for a "golden age" of trade, culture, and metallurgy, made powerful by iron and traded extensively, became independent in 1000 B.C.E., conquered Egypt in 715 B.C.E., and lost Egypt to the Assyrians in 672 B.C.E.  
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Meroe   Kushan capital in Egypt rich in iron deposits  
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Phoenicians   traded purple dye, emerged on the eastern Mediterranean coast around 2000 B.C.E. and established the cities of Tyre, Sidon, Byblos, and Beirut and the colony of Carthage  
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Lydians   migrated from Greece to the eastern Mediterranean coast and develeped coined money  
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Aborigines   first Australian people  
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Dreamtime   Aborigine belief in a time when great ancestors walked the earth  
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Hebrews   trace their origins to Abraham  
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Abraham   a nomadic herder from Ur who left Sumer at the command of Yahweh to found a new nation  
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Old Testament   Jewish and Christian holy book  
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Yahweh (Jehovah)   Jewish God  
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Canaan   nation founded by Abhahan between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea  
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Jacob   led the Hebrews to Egypt because of famine  
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Exodus   book of the Old Testament that describes Moses's story  
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Moses   led the Hebrews out of Egypt about 1240 B.C.E.  
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Mount Sinai   where Moses received the Ten Commandments  
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Ten Commandments   ethical basis for Judaism and Christianity viewed by the Hebrews as a covenant with God  
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covenant   solemn promise  
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Torah   the first five books of the Old Testament, contain the Law of Moses  
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ethical monothiesm   ethical conduct and belief in one God  
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Saul   leader who united the Hebrew tribes by 1021 B.C.E.  
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David   Saul's successor, built Jerusalem  
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Jerusalem   Hebrew capital  
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Solomon   David's son, built trade networks, especially with the Phoenicians, using chariots  
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corvee labor   work required of those who could not pay taxes in money or goods  
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Israel   kingdom formed by the ten northern Hebrew tribes  
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Judah   kingdom formed by the two southern Hebrew tribes  
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prophet   messenger of God  
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Messsiah   a savior  
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dessication   the process by which the Sahara Desert dried up by 3000 B.C.E.  
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sahel   dry area under the Sahara  
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savanna   grassy area in Africa  
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Nok   African people who lived in central Nigeria between 900 and 200 B.C.E. and produced terra cotta sculptures and cast iron  
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El Ninos   periodic warm water currents in the Pacific that can bring higher temperatures, torrential rain, drought, and earthquakes  
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Moche   civilization in the Moche valley along the Peruvian coast that expanded by conquest, started in 200 B.C.E. and collapsed by 700 C.E. because of environmental challenges  
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Aymara   Peruvian people at Tihuanaco that used intricate irrigation, possibly abandoned by 1100 B.C.E. because of climate change  
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Hopewell culture   used canals along the Ohio River, started 200 to 50 B.C.E., possibly declined in 300 to 600 B.C.E. because of overpopulation, cooling, or warfare  
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Anasazi   lived in canyons 300 to 1200, noted for their ceramics and kivas, part of Pueblo society, matrilineal  
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Bantu migrations   spread agriculture and iron making throuout Africa from central Nigeria  
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Hellenic   Greek  
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Mycenae   city that inherited power in the Aegean from the Minoans about 1400 B.C.E.  
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Ionia   the mediterranian coast of Southwest Asia where Greeks went during the Dorian invasions  
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polis   Greek city-state ruled by a king and a council of elders  
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civic   social and political organization and relationships in a city  
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Athens   polis composed of Attica  
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Attica   a peninsula in eastern Greece  
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Sparta   a polis in a river valley  
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acropolis   a city on fortified high ground  
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oligarchy   rule by a few upper-class citizens  
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tyrants   a leader that illegally seized power and/or member of the oligarchy  
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democracy   system of government in which all citizens (however defined) have equal political and legal rights, privileges, and practices, originated in Athens from traders with increasing power and increasingly impoverished farmers and slaves  
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phalanx   formation of eight ranks of military soldiers in which men formed a wall with theirs shields, wealth and rank mattered little  
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Hellenic Age   612 to 339 B.C.E.  
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Draco   aristocrat who codified the harsh Athenian laws and made them public  
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Solon   chief magistrate elected in 594 B.C.E. who empowered commoners  
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Peisistratus   tyrant who supported building programs and arts for commoners in 560 B.C.E.  
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Cleisthenes   aristocrat who institutionalized Athenian democracy in 508 B.C.E.  
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direct democracy   used in Athens, all citizens vote on everything  
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Assembly   all male Athenians over 19 who voted on policy and taxes  
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Council of 500   legislature chosen by lot from the Athenian Assembly  
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Jury   in Athens, tried all cases, chosen from the Assembly by lot  
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commander-in-chief   executive branch of Athens, along with nine generals elected anually by the Assembly  
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ostracism   individuals considered dangerous to Athens were banished  
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Pericles   Athenian leader in 432 B.C.E.  
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Peloponnesus   southern Greek peninsula  
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helots   Spartan slaves  
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ephors   five selected Spartan officials aided by two kings and a council of elders  
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Battle of Marathon   490 B.C.E., the Persians were defeated by the Greeks  
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Miltiades   Greek general at the Battle of Marathon  
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Xerxes   Persian king seeking revenge after the Battle of Marathon at Thermopylae  
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Thermopylae   a narrow Greek mountain pass where the Persians massacred the Spartans, who were led by King Leonidas  
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Battle of Salamis Bay   Athenians defeated the Persian navy after northern Greece was conquered and Athens was burned  
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Battle of Plataea   Sparta and Athens defeated the Persians in 479 B.C.E., stopping Persian expansion into Europe  
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Delian League   alliance of Greek city states dominated by Athens formed in 478 B.C.E. in response to the Persian threat  
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Pelopennesian Wars   431-404 B.C.E., Sparta triumphed over Athens, which was using the resources of the Delian League for its own interests  
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Philip of Macedon   conquered the Greek city-states in 338 B.C.E.  
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Thucydides   recounted the history of the Peloponnesian wars using only verifiable facts  
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Demosthenes   orated for Greek unity against the Macedonians  
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Isocrates   orated that outside rule would be preferable to continuing Greek squabbling during the Macedonian conquest  
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humanism   Hellenic cultural achievement a system of thought that makes humans the center of existence, based in rationalism  
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Rationalism   the idea that order can be conceived, not by gods, but by men  
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Olympia   location of a Panhellenic festival in honor of Zeus, including the Olympic Games  
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Delphi   location of a Panhellenic festival in honor of Apollo  
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Aeschylus   wrote Greek tragedies including Oresteia and Promethus Bound  
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Sophocles   wrote Greek tragedies including Oedipus Rex  
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Euripides   wrote Greek tragedies including Trojan Women and Medea  
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Sappho   Greek poet who wrote about love  
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Thales of Miletus   Greek "father of philosophy", described physical reality by earth elements  
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materialist   school of philosophy developed by Thales of Miletus  
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Pythagoras   a mathematician who developed the "harmony of spheres"  
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Hippocrates   the Greek father of medicine who separated natural science from philosophy  
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Sophists   Greeks who believed in logic, and that humans were the proper subject of study  
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Socrates   Athenian philosopher-scientist who challenged ideas with logical questioning, including the opinions of Athenian politicians, for which he was executed  
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Plato   Socrates's pupil, who believed in a world of immaterial forms and that the ideal state was ruled by experienced philosopher-kings  
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Aristotle   Plato's pupil, who advocated the Golden Mean, thought that all matter was an inseparable unity (Metaphysics), analyzed poetry (Poetics), explored deduction and induction (Organon), and argued that the state should serve all, not a few, citizens (Politics)  
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Parthenon   Athenian temple on the Acropolis dedicated to Athena, appears balanced and proportioned from all angles  
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Doric   plain columns  
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Ionian   scrolled columns  
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Corinthian   columns with acanthus leaves  
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Phidias   greatest Greek sculptor who created the equestrian procession on the Parthenon frieze  
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Herodotus   wrote history, including the History of the Persian Wars, by gathering information, not mythology, though he could not verify the facts  
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Golden Age of Greece   last half of the fifth century B.C.E. when Athenians had great artistic and philosophical output  
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Age of Pericles   ca. 461 to 429 B.C.E., when, under Pericles's leadership, Athens showed Greek achievementPersians and Medes  
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Persia   Iran, a land bridge between India and East Asia and Southwest Asia  
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Cyrus II (the Great)   Persian warrior who conquered the Medes and created the Achaemenid dynasty in 550 B.C.E.  
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Achaemenid   Persian dynasty that lasted until 331 B.C.E., included Mesopotamia, Syria, Palestine, the Phoenician cities, Lydia, Greek Southwest Asia, and Egypt  
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Darius   conquered the Indus Valley in 513 B.C.E. to make the Persian empire the largest empire of its time  
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satrap   the governor of one of the 20 Achaemenid province  
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Royal Road   Persian road from Susa in Persia to Sardis in Anatolia with stations for travelers, provided long-distance communication  
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Zoroastrianism   Persian polytheistic religion that sought no converts, making Persia tolerant of other religions  
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Ahuramazda   chief Zoroastrian god, the creator and benefactor fo all living creatures  
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Mithra   Zoroastrian sun-god who saw to justice and redemption  
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Magi   priestly class that developed among the Medes  
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Zend Avesta   a collection of Zoroastrian hymns and poems  
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Zoroaster (Zarathustra)   preached dualism around 600 B.C.E.  
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dualism   teaching that life is a conflict between two opposing forces, Ahuramazda as good and Ahriman as evil for Zoroastrianism  
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Ahriman   Zoroastrian force of evil  
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Persepolis   Darius's capital, shows Zoroastrian and Greek styles  
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Macedonia   northern Greece  
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Alexander the Great   son of Philip of Macedonia who overthrew Persia and spread Hellenism from Egypt to India  
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Hellenism   Greek culture, thought, and way of life  
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Hellenistic   age that lasted from the death of Alexander the Great in 323 B.C.E. to 30 B.C.E.  
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Ptolemies   Egyptian dynasty following the death of Alexander the Great  
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Bactrian Greece   Greek state that probed towards China  
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koine   common dialect of Greek that helped to facilitate trade and government  
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mystery cult   Eastern Hellenistic religions not attached to Greek polises, like Serapis and Isis  
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Cynicism   Hellenistic philosophy led by Diogenes that believed that happiness was possible only by foregoing luxuries  
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Epicureanism   Hellenistic philosophy advanced by Epicures that believed that the principal good of human life was pleasure  
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Stoicism   Hellenistic philosophy introduced by Zeno that taught that people should participate in affairs but not try to change the order of things  
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Thales   founded astronomy based on Babylonian observations  
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Aristarchus   Hellenic astronomer who argued heliocentricism  
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Ptolemy   Alexandrian mathematician and astronomer  
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heliocentric   theory that the earth and planets move around the sun  
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Nicolaus Copernicus   Polish astronomer who reinvestigated heliocentricism during the Renaissance in his book On the Revolution of Heavenly Bodies  
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Euclid   Hellenic mathematician who compiled The Elements of Geometry from existing knowledge  
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Archimedes   Hellenic inventor and mathematician  
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Eratosthenes   Hellenic, calculated the circumference of the earth  
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Aristophanes   wrote Greek comedies like Knights, satirizing corrupt officials, and Clouds, ridiculing philosophers  
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Herophilus   Hellenic scientist who dissected corpses and found that there were two types of nerves, that the brain was the center of intelligence, and that blood circulates through veins and arteries  
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Etruscans   settled north of the Tiber River at the same time that the Dorians moved south into Greece  
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society   organized group of people with identifiable languages and social structures that reflect values purposefully taught  
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Tiber River   in the Italian Peninsula  
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Italy   name given to the Italian Peninsula by the Greeks  
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Latins   people between the Greeks and Etruscans protected by the Appenine mountains, ruled by the Etruscans  
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Romulus and Remus   traditional founders of Rome in 753 B.C.E.  
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republic   power is in the hands of the people  
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patricians   wealthy landowning Roman class making up about ten percent of the population  
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plebians   Roman class of small farmers, artisans, and shopkeepers  
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consuls   two leaders of the republic elected from the patricians who could veto each other, could give power to a dictator elected for a maximum of six months  
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Senate   300 patricians who advised the Etruscan king and the Roman consuls, served for life, proposed laws  
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Assembly of Centuries   all male citizens organized for military purposes in units of 100 that voted on laws  
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tribunes   representatives elected by plebians starting in 494 B.C.E. as a result of plebian refusal to serve in the army  
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Assembly of Tribes   assembly of plebians that elected tribunes and passed resolutions that the tribunes presented to the Senate for ratification  
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Twelve Tables   Roman law code in 450 B.C.E.  
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praetors   Roman judges who customarily announced laws they considered out of date  
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jus civile   civil law, used predecents, customs, and procedures  
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jus gentium   coalescing of Roman and foreign law to promote justice over the laws of a particular country  
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jus naturale   universal lawlegion  
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Pontifex Maximus   chief Roman priest  
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Pyrrhus   Hellenistic king of Epirus who tried to aid Greek cities and lost them to Rome, which became master of all Italy  
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Punic Wars   fought 264 to 146 B.C.E. between Rome and Carthage allied with Macedonia for Mediterranean power and wealth, Rome won the whole Mediterranean world  
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First Punic War   Rome won Sicily  
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Hannibal   leader of the Carthaginian forces during the Second Punic War, was defeated  
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Battle of Zama   Hannibal was defeated by Scipio in 202 B.C.E.  
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Second Punic War   Carthage sought revenge for the Roman annexation of Sardinia and Corsica  
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Scipio   Roman general during the Punic Wars  
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Third Punic War   Carthage was completely destroyed  
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latifundia   huge Roman estates worked by imported slaves  
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empiricism   based on observations  
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Tiberius Gracchus   a tribune who tried to limit the amount of land a person could own  
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Gaius   brother of Tiberius who tried to get the government to buy grain and sell it to the poor at low prices  
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Marius   general who created a professional army and overrode the Roman Senate, the first successful Roman reform  
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Sulla   took over the government with the Senate's support in 83 B.C.E. and restored it to its former state, ruled as a dictator  
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Spartacus   led a massive slave revolt in Rome shorly after Sulla's rule, which failed  
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Pompey   Julius Caesar's rival, earned fame by conquests in the East, supported by the Senate  
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Julius Caesar   earned fame by conquest in Gaul, supported by the people, became Rome's dictator  
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Crassus   wealthy businessman who shared power with Pompey and Julius Caesar  
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First Triumvirate   Pompey, Julius Caesar, and Crassus shared power over Rome in 59 B.C.E., ending a civil war  
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Rubicon River   boundary between Gaul and Rome that Pompey forbade the popular Caesar to lead his army over, distrusting him  
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Ides of March   March 15, 44 B.C.E., date when Caesar was assasinated  
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Brutus   led the Senatorial conspirators who assasinated Caesar  
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Antony   an ally of Julius Caesar  
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Cleopatra   last of the Ptolemies  
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Actium   where Antony and Cleopatra were defeated following Caesar's assasination  
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Octavian   grandnephew of Caesar who ended almost a century of chaos in Rome and took the titles of imperator, pontifex maximus, and princeps civiatis  
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Augustus   title assumed by Octavian  
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constitutional monarchy   established by Octavian in Rome  
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Principate   age of Augustus during which he tried to restore republicanism outwardly, when in reality he was the dictator  
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imperator   chief military general  
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princeps civiatis   first citizen  
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Caligula   Augustus's descendant, cruel and incompetant  
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Nero   Caligula's successor, excessive and irresponsible  
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Marcus Aurelius   one of the Five Good Emperors of Rome from 161 to 180 C.E.  
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Pax Romana   period from Augustus through Marcus Aurelius, 27 B.C.E. to 180 C.E., coonsisting of relative political peace in Rome, which encouraged trade and wealth  
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mosaic   innovated by the Romans and reached its zenith in the eastern Roman Empire, small, flat pieces of stone or colored glass are fit in mortar  
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Virgil   Roman author of the Aeneid, an epic poem  
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Livy   Roman who wrote the prose counterpart of the Aeneid, a history of Rome  
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Horace   Roman author of odes commemorating Augustus's victories  
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Latin   language of the Latin Christian church and the basis of the romance languages of Europe, advanced by Virgil, Livy, and Horace  
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romance languages   Portuguese, Spanish, French, and Italian in Europe  
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Pliny   Roman who produced Natural History, which discussed several scientific topics from biology to botany  
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Plutarch   Roman who was interested in the moral qualities of famous people, wrote 65 bigraphical sketches  
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barrel vault   Roman invention of extending the Etruscan rounded arch  
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cross vault   Roman building style of setting two arches at right angles to each other, equally distributing a building's weight so that walls didn't need to be as thick as in the post and lintel system  
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the Pantheon and the arch of Constantine   illustration of Roman architecture incorporatin Greek balance and harmony and Roman genius in building  
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collegia   Roman trade guilds organized for soccial and religious purposes  
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Justinian's Code (Corpus Juris Civilis)   corpus of law that included protection for the poor and for slaves, fully codified by the sixth century C.E., preserved the Roman legal heritage and provided the legal foundation for nearly every modern European counrty  
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Parthia   Persia/Iran during the Roman Empire, tried to replicate the classical age after Alexander's empire disintegrated  
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Amber Road   built to carry amber from the Baltic area to Rome, followed the valleys of the Rhine, Danube, Vistula, and Elbe  
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Hadrian   ruled 117 to 138 C.E. withdrew eastern Roman troops to the Euphrates River and built a wall across Britain to protect it from attack  
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Diocletian   ruled 284 to 305 C.E., tried to deal with the problem of trade decreasing in the Roman Empire because of the threat of invasion by establishing price and wage controls, dividing the empire, appointing more caesars, and claiming divine status  
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Sassanids   a people indigenous to southern Iran who replaced the Parthians after they fell to the Romans in 226 C.E., last king was slain by Arabs in 651 C.E.  
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Ardashir   a Persian noble who killed the Parthian king, seized the capital of Ctesiphon, and proclaimed the Sassanid empire in 227 C.E., which followed the Achaemenid style  
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Manicheism   a reformist sect of Zoroastrianism established under the Sassanids  
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Shapur II   Sassanian Persia's greatest monarch, made gains against the Romans and extended Persian influence to China, spreading western religions, including Zoroastrianism, Judaism, and Christianity, and culture  
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Silk Road   overland route linking Parthia, China, India, and Rome that fostered the growth of cities along its length  
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Kan Ying   Han ambassador to the Roman Empire sent by sea from 96 to 98 C.E.  
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Pontius Pilate   prefect of Rome during whose time Rome had direct rather than indirect control of Judea, removing their political autonomy  
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Zealots   Jewish extremists who worked to rid Judea of the Romans  
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Apocalyptics   Jews who believed that the coming of a Messiah was near to end the crisis under Rome  
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Torah   where the Law, the core of Judaism, is recorded  
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rabbis   interpreted the Jewish Law  
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Talmud   writings and interpretations of the Jewish Law  
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Diaspora   dispersion of Jewish peoples outside of Palestine  
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Gentiles   non-Jews, familiarized with the Jewish concept of monotheism and the moral principles of the Law  
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Jesus of Nazareth   a Jew who emphasized the importance of brotherly love, the love of God, and a kingdom in heaven, not on earth, followed by twelve apostles, lived 5 B.C.E. to 29 C.E.  
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Baptism   ritual used by prophets and later by Jesus of Nazareth's disciples  
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Eucharist   communal celebration of the Lord's supper  
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Paul of Tarsus   traveled preaching Jesus's message 5 to 57 C.E. and making it a religion for all believers, not just Hebrews  
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Gospels   histories of Jesus written by Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John  
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epistles   Paul'sletters to various Christian communities  
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priests   met the local needs of parishioners  
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bishops   headed communities of believers  
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Pope   leader the Roman Catholic Church starting with a successor the the Apostle Saint Peter, founder of the church in Rome  
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canon law   the body of law organized by the church using Roman law  
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martyrdoms   dying for one's beliefs, made Christianity more popular when it defied Rome by refusing to offer sacrifices to the emperor  
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Constantine   Roman emperor who encouraged Christianity  
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Edict of Milan   issued by Constantine in 313 C.E. making Christianity a legal religion  
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Constantinople   eastern Roman capital built by Constantine to be safer from Germanic invasions and closer the the new center of trade, made the pope more powerful in the West and the emperor the ruler in the east  
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Cathedral of the Hagia Sophia   crowning building of Constantinople  
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Gnostic Christians   believed in a divine, not mortal, Christ  
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Arian Christians   believed that Christ could not have been a coequal to God  
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Nestorian Christians   believed in the humanness of Jeses, rejected by Western Christian as heretics, established communities from Syria to China  
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heresy   denial of a doctrine of faith  
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Nicene Creed   a church council including Emperor Constantine that determined in 325 C.E. that Christ was the "eternally begotten son of the Father" and established the Trinity  
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Catholic   derived from the Greek work for universal, Christians who claimed one world of believe united in the pope  
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Saint Jerome   translated the Old and New Testaments from Hebrew and Greek into vernacular Latin  
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Vulgate edition   the Bible translated into vernacular Latin by Saint Jerome  
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Sain Augustine   combined the Greco-Roman belief that knowledge is virtue with the Christian idea that even knowledgeable people sin in Confessions, thought that history is the account of God acting in time, as the church's Greco-Roman heritage survived barbarian attacks  
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Huns   pushed Germans to invade Rome  
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Visigoths   a group of Germans that rebelled against Roman rule in 378 C.E.  
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Alaric   leader of the Visigoths who sacked Rome in 410 C.E.  
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Odoacer   German general who seized power in Rome in 476 C.E.  
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Ancestors   worshipped by the family in China because they were thought to provide the communication link to the nature spirits  
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Yin   negative, feminine, and passive force of the Tao  
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Yang   positive, masculine, and active force of the Tao  
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Taoism   Chinese dualistic thought that sought harmony between man and nature, believed that all things were united and governed by the cosmic law or Tao  
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Confucianism   sought harmony between men, based on five relationsphips between rulers and the ruled, the father and the son, the husband and the wife, the older and younger brother, and the older and younger friend  
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Zhou (Chou) Dynasty   ca. 1027 to 256 B.C.E., a time of feudal turmoil and transition during which the formal philosophies of Confucianism, Taoism, and Legalism emerged  
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Confucius (Kung Fu-tzu)   court official appointed by the prince of Lu who taught that humans should live according to the universal natural law and that the family was the basic unit of society  
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filial piety   respect for one's parents or elders advanced by Confucianism  
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li   Confucian moderation and proper conduct by which both aristocrats and the poor could become gentlemen  
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Analects   a book of Confucius's thoughts compiled by his disciples centering on the duties and proper behavior of the individual within society  
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Mencius   Confucius's most famous follower who added the idea of self-perfection as the mode through which society would be ordered to Confucian thought, taught that moral leaders must have the respect and support of his subjects  
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Mandate of Heaven   divine right to govern thought in China to be possessed by good rulers, used by the Zhou to justify overthrow of the Shang dynasty  
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Dynastic Cycle   interpretation of the past to predict the future used in China  
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Lao Zi (Lao-tzu)   lived in the sixth century B.C.E., taought that the tao was a set of values that would allow a person to live in harmony with nature by flowing with it, taught that the best ruler governed least  
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Tao Te Ching (Book of the Way and Its Power)   book attributed to Lao Zi, probably the work of several people, dates from the fourth century B.C.E.  
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Legalism   philosophy gained from many related schools of political thought that flourished during the late Zhou and triumphed under the Qin dynasty, believed that human nature was evil  
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Han Fei Zi (Han Fei-tzu)   leader of Legalism  
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Li Si (Li Ssu)   prime minister to the First Emperor of the Qin who centralized power by crippling the nobles and standardizing China  
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I Ching   the Book of Changes, a book of oracles read by tossing coins  
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Zhou (Chou)   believed to be Turkic-speaking people from Central Asia who subjugated the Chinese  
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King Wu   Zhou leader who overthrew the Shang and extended China, keeping Shang culture  
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Wei Velley   location of a second Zhou capital west of the Huang Ho  
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well-field system   Zhou system in which eight peasant households cultivated one plot each and one plot to be given to the lord as tribute  
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shi   regular, educated, salaried Zhou officials  
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Warring States   period 402 to 332 B.C.E. during which the political organization of the Zhou collapsed  
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Sun Zi (Sun Tzu)   probably a contemporary of Confucius, wrote The Art of War about how to win conflicts with deception, and strategies rather than brute strength  
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Shi Huangdi (Shi Huang-ti)   First Emperor of the Qin Dynasty, deposed the last Zhou king in 256 B.C.E., united China, purged Confucian scholars and alienated the peasants with heavy taxes and forced labor  
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Quin (Ch'in) Dynasty   one rebel state of nomadic origin conquered Zhou China  
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China   Western word derived from Shi Huangdi  
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Xiongnu (Hsiung-nu)   northern nomads who threatened Qin China  
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Great Wall   built and rebuilt in China during the Qin and Ming Dynasties as protection against northern nomads  
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Sima Qian (Ssu-ma Ch'ien)   wrote studies of Chinese history using eyewitnesses and written documents, including Records of the Grand Historian, recorded that Shi Huangdi ordered the building of his royal tomb, Mount Li, which left a record of the clothing and warfare of the period  
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Liu Bang (Liu Pang)   Qin petty official who defiated the Qin and established the Han Dynasty, replaced Legalism with Confucianism  
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Han Dynasty   207 B.C.E. to 210 C.E., one of two major Chinese dynasties established by a commoner, Chinese civilization was consolidated  
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Han Gao Zi (Kao-tsu)   posthumous imperial title of Liu Bang  
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civil sevice bureaucracy   largest one in the preindustrial world was in Han China  
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mandarins   Confucian scholar-bureaucrats chosen by examination during the Han and Tang Dynasties, provided a reverence for education  
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sons of Han   way the Chinese refer to themselves, showing their identification with the tradition developed by scholar-bureaucrats at the time  
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Wudi (Wu Ti)   Liu Bang's successor who moved from his feudal tendencies towards bureaucratic centralization, starting a struggle in Chinese history between aristocrats and scholars  
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Changan (Ch'ang An)   Han capital of China where an imperial university was established in 124 B.C.E. for the study of Confucianism  
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tributary relations   nomadic rulers had to travel to the Han imperial court with gifts  
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ridge-and-furrow   system of planting developed in the Han period, seeds were planted in ridges along furrows that collected water  
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Ts'ai Lun (Cai Lun)   invented paper in 105 C.E.  
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paper   cheaper than silk, increased literacy  
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Ban Qao (Pan Chao)   China's first woman historian and scholar, wrote Lessons for Women in the Han period  
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Ching Chi (Ching Chih)   wrote Treatise on Fevers in the Han period  
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Chang Heng (Ch'ang Heng)   concluded that the earth was round in the Han period  
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Dunhuang (Tun-huang)   where the Silk Road when from Changan  
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Brahmanism   Aryan religious traditions  
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Code of Manu   where the division into the Hindu castes is written  
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karma   the accumulation of good and bad deeds during life by how one observes dharma  
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Moksha   release from the wheel of life and unity with Brahma  
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non-violence   a tradition especially evident in Jainism originating from the Hindu emphasis on a god-force in all life, not just human life  
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Bhagavad Gita   a Hindu hymn that serves as a spiritual guide to one's problems, like the Christian parables  
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Arjuna   a warrior who struggles with the descision of whether to go to battle against his own kinsmen and is counseled in the Bhagavad Gita  
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Krishna   a manifestation of the god Vishnu who instructs Arjuna to carry out his duties to his caste as a warrior  
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Jainism   a sixth century B.C.E. reform of Hinduism protesting the power of the Brahman caste, said that one must do the least violence as one moves up the hierarchy of life  
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Mahavira   Kshatriya founded Jainism, thought that the whole universe was composed of souls and matter and that one must rid oneself of matter to rise to Brahma as a soul  
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Siddhartha Gautama   Kshatriya who founded Buddhism, most likely to resent Brahman privilege  
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Buddha   "Enlightened One", concluded that happiness was found not by asceticism and changing one's karma but by changing one's thought to be released from desire  
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Four Noble Truths   1. life is suffering, 2. suffering is caused by desire, 3. one can be released from desire by following the Eightfold Path, after which 4. a state of grace when desire is extinguished (Nirvana) can be reached, releasing one from karma  
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Eightfold Path   way to be released from desire with a conscious descision to adopt right conduct and free oneself from desire at its heart, symbolized by a chariot wheel with eight spokes  
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Nirvana   a state of grace wheen desire is extinguished, releasing one from karma governed by a bureaucracy and by division into provinces  
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Sangha   circle of Buddha's disciples who systematized Buddhism with temples, rituals, etc. making active participation possible and spread it through the Asian trade routes  
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Theravada   "Lesser Vehicle" of Buddhism which rested on the life and teachings of Buddha, strict and conservative  
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Mahayana   "Larger Vehicle" of Buddhism popular in China, Japan, Korea, and Vietnam which emphasized compassion and that there were many ways to salvation, more liberal  
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Bodhisattva   a wise, saint-like being, Buddha in his previous lives declining nirvana in order to help others seeking enlightenment, prayed to in Mahayana Buddhism  
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mudras   hand positions consistent through all depictions of Buddha showing what he is doing  
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Mauryan   ca. 322 to 232 B.C.E., largest Indian empire of its time  
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Gupta   320 to 467 C.E., empire in the Ganges Valley that did not include the Deccan Plateau, considered the Golden Age of Indian culture because of the output in literature, art, and science  
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Maghadha   a strong Aryan kingdom supported by Brahmins that developed around the Ganges Valley to rebuff the Achaemenid Persians  
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Chandragupta Mauryan   ruler of a small state in the Ganges Valley who defeated the Greek general Seleucus to become king in 322 B.C.E., used centralized despotism  
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Bay of Bengal   eastern border of the Mauryan Empire  
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Hindu Kush Mountains   western border of the Mauryan Empire  
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Deccan Plateau   conquered by the Mauryan Empire to its south  
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Pataliputra   capital of the Mauryan and Gupta Empires  
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Megasthenes   Greek ambassador to Pataliputra in 302 B.C.E.  
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Kautilya   chief minister to Chandragupta Maurya  
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Arthashastra   gives advice to rulers about how to amass and use power by any means as long as the subjects are pleased  
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Ashoka   Chandragupta's grandson who embraced Buddhism and used benevolent paternalism, reigned 268 to 232 B.C.E.  
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centralized despotism   used by Chandragupta Maurya, efficient and centralized, governed by a bureaucracy and by division into provinces  
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benevolent paternalism   more compassionate form of government used by Ashoka after slaughtering over 150,000 men in war over Kalinga and killing his brothers for the throne  
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Kalinga   eastern Indian state fought for by Ashoka before using benevolent paternalism  
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stupas   domelike structures that contained the remains of saintly monks, encouraged as shrines by Ashoka  
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King Demetruis   Hellenistic Bactrian Greek invader of northwestern India in the second century B.C.E. who introduced Hellenistic medicine, astronomy, and culture  
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Kushan   invaders who entered India ca. 100 B.C.E. who became the Kshatriya caste, Buddhists who introduced Greek ideas to form the Gandaran school of art, which used Greek styles to portray buddhist subjects  
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Kanishka   Buddhist convert who lead a council of Buddhist monks to form Mahayana Buddhism, like the Council of Nicaea  
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Chandra Gupta I   came to power in 320 C.E., forming the Gupta Empire  
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Dravidians   dark-skinned Tamil-speaking people who ruled the Deccan Plateau in the time of the Gupta Empire, prospered through maritime trade  
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Tamil   language spoken by the Dravidians, who controlled the Deccan Plateau in the time of the Gupta Empire and traded on the east Indian coast  
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Kalidasa   Indian dramatist and poet during the Gupta Empire, wrote not tragedies but stories with romance, tranquility, and happy endings  
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Nalanda   Buddhist monastery in the time of the Gupta Empire  
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Indian numbers   also known as Arabic numerals, developed in India as early as the third century B.C.E. along with decimals, the concept of zero, quadratic equations, and the use of the square root of two in algebra, during the Gupta Empire  
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Caraka   Indian doctor who developed a code of ethics for doctors during the Gupta Empire, when fine steel could be made into scalpels  
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Sanchi   location of a 56-foot high stupa built in the Gupta period  
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rock-cut temple   architectural form of the Gupta period, temple cut into a solid cliff of rock  
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Chaitya   principal chamber of a rock-cut temple  
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Ajanta   rock-cut temple with 29 chambers  
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Ellora   rock-cut temple with 34 chambers  
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frescoes   pictures painted on stucco, decorated rock-cut temples  
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Lakshmi   symbolized fertility in Gupta architecture  
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Kali   symbolized death in Gupta architecture  
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mandalas   cosmic designs in which temple complexes were built in the Gupta period  
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gurus   Brahman role during the Gupta period as teachers of local notables  
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sati (suttee)   tradition of widow's self-emolation at her husband's funeral developed during the Gupta period  
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White Huns   ended the rule of the Gupta by invading in 480 to 500 C.E., causing India to fall into a patchwork of warring rajas until the Moslem invasion  
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Mesoamerican   Middle American civilization resting on the agricultureal Olmec  
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Oaxaca Zapotecans   established a large urban center at Teotihuacan about 150 B.C.E. second only to Rome, rested on agriculture  
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Teotihuacan   near modern Mexico City, burned in about 700 C.E.  
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barrios   apartment compounds that housed working people at the edge of the city in Teotihuacan  
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Maya   city-states and surrounding territories ruled by families 300 to 900 C.E., contemporaries of the Tang, Charlemagne, and the Abbasids, developed politics, a calendar, trade, language, and art, declined because of agricultural exhaustion  
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Time of Troubles (Mayan)   800 to 1000 C.E. in Middle America, marked by militarism and rule by priests in large cities and by warriors in small states  
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Toltec   feudal confederation/state during the Time of Troubles that admired and absorbed Teotihuacan culture, 1000 to 1300 C.E., collapsed in 1224 when the Chichimec captured Tula  
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Zamna   early Maya culture god from whom the word Maya seems to have been derived  
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Pacal of Palenque   Mayan ruler until 683 C.E. whose deeds in war were recorded, entombed in a pyramid at Palenque  
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ritual ball games   Mayan players hit a rubber ball with their hips and elbows through a ring as a form of worship and sport  
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ridged rield system   Mayan agricultural system used with irrigation and swamp drainage, raised fields were built above seasonally flooded lands  
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milpa   Mayan agricultural system used in areas with heavy rainfall and sunlight in which patches of forest were burned and cotton and maize was planted in the ash  
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steles   Mayan stone slab monumengts  
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corbeled arch   architectural feature of Mayan temples in which stone blocks were placed with upside-down steps over openings  
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codices   Mayan books of hieroglyphs made of bark paper and deerskin  
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Tikal   area of population density resulting from intensive agriculture  
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Yucatan   peninsula where Mayan culture moved to from the area around Tikal after its decline  
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Chichen Itza   center of Mayan tradition in the Yucatan Peninsula, conquered by the Toltec by 1000 C.E.  
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Tihuanaco   Moche city on the shore of Lake Titicaca, extended control through Chile  
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Huari   Moche city in southern Peru  
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verticality   different social and political niches were found by Moche families at different altitudes, where different crops were grown  
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ayllus   Moche kinship units based on descent from a common mythical ancestor  
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reciprocity   Moche concept of cooperative relationships between anyone from family members to different states  
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Chimu   state that Tihuanaco and Huari fell to about 800 C.E., conquered by the Incas in 1465  
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Nubia   early state in Africa in southern Egypt and northern Sudan that appeared by 6000 B.C.E., produced and marketed pottery  
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Kerma   independent Nubian state destroyed by Egyptian forces, appeared between 1800 and 100 B.C.E.  
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Coptic   monophysite branch of the Christian church that expanded in Nubia, faded with the Islamic conquest of Egypt  
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monophysite   sect of Christianity that argued that Jesus had a single divine nature rather than being both divine and human  
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Aksum   literate urban African state that emerved in the Ethiopian highlands around 400 B.C.E., benefited from cultural exchange through trade  
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Nok   people who were woking iron in central Nigeria by 5000 B.C.E.  
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Bantu   people who drew in differing languages based on their farming and metal working traditions, moved east and south from their homelands along the Niger River into southern, Central, and East Africa  
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Mande   complex urban society in the Sudan peopled by farmers who grew sorghum and cotton, including the Ghanians, who fled south  
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Jenne-Jenno   city in present-day Mali, hub of commerce along the Niger River  
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Mande   diverse people including the Soninke, Mandinka, Malinka, and Bambara who had similar languages, customs, dominated the history of the western Niger River Basin  
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Soninke   people who formed Ghana, their name for war chief, used iron technology and horses, occupied the area north of the Senegal and Niger Rivers  
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Ghana   first major Sudanic state formed as early as 500 C.E with a capital near Jenne-Jenno, flourished until the thriteenth century, "the land of gold"  
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chieftancy   Mande political and legal system in which chiefs and village heads combined religious and secular duties  
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griots   Mande class of oral historians and musicians who emphasized the deeds of leaders  
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Guinea   Atlantic coast of Africa from modern Senegal to southeastern Nigeria, mostly swamp with few edible plants and animals, people survived by communal labor  
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migration   process by which people like classical civilizations spread their culture, often because of ecological factors like climate change and overpopulation  
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cultural diffusion   spreading of culture, a method of classical expansion  
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trade systems   trade patterns that became complex, organized, and stable over broad areas, spread religion, culture, and technology  
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feudalism   sometimes followed classical civilizations, characterized by decentralized political system oriented to defense, an agrarian economy, a hierarchical social system, and a culture permeated by the military and a religious preoccupation with death  
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Polynesians   a group of linguistically related peoples who farmed roots and moved across the Pacific by using the outrigger canoe  
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Austronesian   Polynesian language group found in Madagascar, the Philippines, Indonesia, and Southeast Asia  
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ali'i   Hawaiian high chiefs whose claims rested on their ability to recite their genealogical lineages  
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kapu   sets of taboos by which Hawaiian commoners lived  
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Melanesia   a group of islands to the east of New Guinea and Australia from which the Polynesians expanded to Tonga, Samoa, and Polynesia in the east, and to Madagascar in the west about 4000 years ago  
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Polynesia   islands contained in a rough triangle between Hawaii, New Zealand, and Easter Island  
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Society Islands   origin of a group that sailed to New Zealand and established the Maori culture in about the eigth century C.E.  
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Maori   had the highest concentration of Polynesian people in the world in the late eighteenth century C.E.  
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moa   large wingless birds overhunted by the Maori  
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hapu   Maori priest leader who could cut out the heart of the first enemy killed in battle  
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Easter Island   colonized by 20 or 30 Polynesians in about 300 C.E., fell due to the ecological strain, particularly deforestation  
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ahu   large stone statues built on Easter Island  
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pagodas   structures with statues of Buddha reminiscent of the Han watchtowers built by the Northern Wei kingdom along with cave temples between the Han and Sui Dynasties  
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block printing   used by Buddhist monks by 600s C.E. to spread their message in China and later by the Tang to regularize the bureaucracy and for literature  
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Sui Dynasty   united China in 589 C.E., connected it with roads and canals  
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Wei Valley   where the Sui Dynasty, like the Qin, were centered, with the capital at Changan  
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Yangdi (Yang-ti)   second Sui emperor who began a campaign of expansion over northern Vietnam and of Sinkiang and Mongolia and rebuilt the Great Wall  
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Sinkiang   northwestern China, captured by Yangdi  
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Loyang   capital built by Yangdi  
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Grand Canal   built by Yangdi, cemented the unity of north and south China by bringing rice from the Yangzi delta for troops and officials in the semiarid north  
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Hangzhou (Hangchou)   southern terminus of the Grand Canal, later the capital of Song China in 1122, visited by Ibn Battuta and Marco Polo  
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Beijing (Peking)   northern terminus of the Grand Canal and later the capital during the Yuan Dynasty  
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Tang Dynasty   followed and benefited from the Sui Dynasty, reclaimed most Han areas and expanded along the Silk Road into modern Afghanistan and Southeast Asia, ruled for 300 years, Golden Age of China, major exports of porcelain, silk, and tea were established  
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Taizong (T'ai-Tsung)   Emperor under whom the Tang Dynasty profited  
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Sinification   becoming part of Chinese culture, happened south of the Yangzi  
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Talas River   location where Tang territoriall expansion reached its limit in 751 when a coalition of Arabs and western Turks repulsed the Chinese near Samarkand, Chinese captives taught the Arabs the technologies of paper making and printing  
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moveable type   wood or clay type was used by the Chinese by 1050 C.E., iron type was made by 1234  
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Golden Age   cultural high point during which learning and arts flourish  
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Li Bo (Li Po)   Tang poet who wrote lighthearted poetry with images from nature  
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Du Fu (Tu Fu)   Tang poet who wrote somber poems about human troubles connected with Tang expansion  
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meritocracy   system of bureaucratic advancement based on education rather than familial relations, wealth, or power which was established to some extent during the Tang Dynasty  
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Bureau of Censors   Tang department that kept track of officials at all levels  
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Empress Wu   Tang empress from 690 to 705 who favored Buddhism, which led to animosity on the part of Taoists and Confucianists and produced a backlash, which became open persecution in the 840's  
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Song (Sung)   established by a young general in 960, economic growth and innovation continued  
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Kaifeng   Song capital logated near the great bend in the Huang Ho, center of manufacturing and commerce, sacked by Jurchen barbarians, upon which the capital was moved south to Hangzhou, necessitating sea routes to Southeast Asia and India  
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paper currency   issued by the Song government, promoted commerce  
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gentry   class of educated elite that was established during the Song Dynasty  
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tributary system   used by the Song to defend essential territory and appease neighboring barbarian groups with money, bribes, and arranged marriages  
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kowtows   bowing before the emperor, required less of states farther away from Song China  
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Zhu Xi (Chu Hsi)   Song founder of Neo-Confucianism  
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Neo-Confucianism   a mixture of Confucian, Buddhist, and Taoist thought that emphasized self-perfection that supported state and society  
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Kyushu   Japanese island closest to Korea from where they moved north by 400 C.E.  
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Honshu   main island of Japan  
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Yamato clan   seized control of the coastal plain near Osaka Bay by the third century C.E., traced its descent from the sun-goddess  
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Shinto   religion established by the Yamato with the sun-goddess as the chief deity, celebrated the beauty, not the wrath, of nature, appealed to nationalist concerns during the Meiji restoration  
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kami   spirits of nature respected by Shintoism  
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Prince Shotoku   introduced Chinese political and bureaucratic concepts to Yamato Japan, 547 to 622  
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Seventeen Article COnstitution   Buddhist blueprint written by Prince Shotoku that stressed the proper goals of government and ethical conduct  
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Taika Reforms   supporters of Shotoku's reforms overthrew the government in 645 and tried to create a complete imperial and bureaucratic system like that of Tang China  
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Nara   Japan's first capital and city, modeled on the Tang capital, gave its name to the period that lasted from 710 to 794, characterized by the importation of Chinese ideas, an imperial court, and Buddhism, which stopped after 838  
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Kyoto   where the capital was moved to from Nara after a Buddhist monk tried to usurp the throne  
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Heian   name for Kyoto when it was the capital  
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Kana   phoenetic system that was used to transcribe Japanese, replacing Chinese characters  
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Fujiwara clan   ended the Japanese meritocracy, increased influence through intermarriage with the imperial family, ruled 858 to 1086, gave way to the Kamakura period in 1185  
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Lady Murasaki   author of the Tale of Genji, considered the world's first psychological novel, described court life  
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Daimyo   Japanese territorial rulers who became de facto rulers over their lands during the Fujiwara period  
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samurai   frontier warrior class tha emerged as Japanese settlement moved northeastward beyond the Yamato area  
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Indianization of Southeast Asia   Indian monks and merchants spread Indian classical culture throughout Southeast Asia between 650 and 1250  
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devaraja   god-king pattern adopted by Southeast Asian rulers as an intermarriage of Indian culture and the indigenous cultures  
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Thais   lived to the west in Southeast Asia, united in a confederacy in the eight century and expanded northward against Tang China  
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Siam (Thailand)   home of the Thais  
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Burmese   migrated in the eighth century to modern Myanmar (Burma)  
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Pagan   Burmese capital  
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Khmer   indigenous people of Cambodia, lower classes adopted Buddhism for its compassion and equality, upper classes adopted Hinduism because of its social order, rulers later adopted Buddhism and added it to temples, weakened by excessive spending and invasions  
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Cambodia   home of the Khmer  
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Srivijaya   indigenous people of Sumatra who established a maritime empire, suffered a stunning blow from a commercial rival in Southern India, when the king and capital were captured and Indian culture took hold  
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Sumatra   island, home of the Srivijaya and later the first place in Southeast Asia that Islam spread through by sailors and traders  
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Borobudur   Buddhist monument in Indonesia that illustrates the influence of Indian Buddhist culture  
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Angkor Thom   location of a Khmer capital and Hindu temple complex built by King Yasovarman in the ninth century  
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Angkor Wat   Hindu temple complex built less than a mile to the south of Angkor Thom by Suryavarman II, who ruled 1113 to 1150, wat meaning temple  
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barays   Khmer reservoirs in the Mekong floodplains which collected water during heavy monsoon rains and provided irrigation during dry times, allowing for three harvests a year  
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Islam   product of a synthesis of the nomadic and settled Arab cultures, means submission to the will of Allah  
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Bedouin   nomadic Arab herders  
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Umayyad   Bedouin nomad clan, later a caliphate that ruled until 750, establishing control over Syria, western Iraq, and Palestine, then Egypt and Lybia in the early 640's, and later Central Asia and northwest India  
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Mecca   town whose politics and commercial economy was dominated by the Umayyad  
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Kaaba   most revered religious shrine in pre-Islamic Arabia, located in Mecca  
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Yemen and Hadramaut   coasts where regional Arab kingdoms arose, destroyed by Bedouin clans before the time of Muhammad  
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Semitic   languages spoken by Babylonians, Assyrians, Hebrews, and Arabs, who migrated north from the Arabian Peninsula in the third millenium B.C.E. because of its unfertile nature  
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Muhammad   Islamic prophet born about 570 C.E. into one of Mecca's leading families, believed in the resurrectuion of the physycal body in the afterlife and an eventual Last Judgement, as in Christianity  
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Archangel Gabriel   said to have given Muhammad visions and the word of Allah in 610 C.E.  
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Allah   Arabic word for God  
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Qur'an (Koran)   Muslim holy book, contains Muhammad's revelations, required reading for Muslims which placed an emphasis on literacy  
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Muslim   one who submits to the will of God and wins forgiveness by living the pillars of faith, accept Christians and Jews as worshipping the same God, recognize Abraham, Moses, and Jesus as prophets and Muhammad as the last prophet, of the Last Judgemet  
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pillars of faith   five tenets of Islam, 1. profession of the creed (Allah is the only god and Muhammad is his prophet) 2. prayer five times a day called by a muezzin 3. almsgiving 4. fasting during Ramadan 5. a pilgrimage to Mecca  
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muezzin   reciter who called Muslims to prayer  
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zakat   Islamic almsgiving  
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Ramadan   holy month during which Muslims fast  
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hajj   pilgrimage to Mecca  
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Seal of the Prophets   Muhammad, who was believed by Muslims to have revealed the full and perfect religion, making him the last prophet  
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Hadith   a collection of traditional sayings and acts of Muhammad, contains Islamic social teachings  
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Sharia   codified Islamic law, which has an ethical basis in the Hadith and the Qur'an  
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Jihad   holy war through which Muslims believed they must spread Islam with the heart, tongue, hand, and sword, has recently found favor again among poor, unemployed youth bitter toward their own government or the West  
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Sufism   mystic Islamic movement in the eighth and ninth centuries like the Christian monastic movement, played a role in spreading Islam in Africa, India, and Southeast Asia, named for coarse wool robes called sufs  
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Hegira   emigration, name for Muhammad's flight to Medina in 622, won over 1000 converts before his return to Mecca in 628  
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caliph   successor to Muhammad  
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Abu Bakr   political follower and close friend of Muhammad chosen as Caliph by the Sunnis  
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Sunnis   believed that the caliphs should be selected by consensus of the community of believers and that they should be responsible for political and military power  
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Shi'ites   believed that the caliphs should be relatices of Muhammad and that they should be political and religious leaders, became a majority in Persia  
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Ulema   religious scholars who reached consensus on religious policy like the interpretation of the Qur'an and the Hadith by study and discussion  
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Imam   Shi'ite successor of Muhammad believed to be inspired by Allah  
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Karbala   pilgrimage site, location of the martyrdom of the son of Muhammad's cousin Ali, Husayn, which is remembered with the festival of Muharram  
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Ismailis   small branch of the Shi'ia sect who recognizes the Aga Khan as their Imam, located in Pakistan, India, and East Africa  
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Abbasids   established a Persian Caliphate following the Umayyadin 750  
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Battle of Tours   Charles Martel halted the Arabs (Ummayads) coming through the Iberian Peninsula in France in 732  
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Damascus   Umayyad political capital  
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Muawiya   first Umayyad caliph, ruled 661 to 680, established a system of government modeled on Rome  
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mosques   Islamic places of worship, usually simple courtyards with roofed porticoes decorated with calligraphy and mosaics  
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Dome of the Rock Mosque   built in 691 in Jerusalem at the site where Muhammad is believed to have ascended into heaven  
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emirs   Arabs appointed as governors by the Umayyads to maintain Arab and Muslim control over people who were not Muslim or Arab  
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Abdullah al-Mansur   firmly established the Abbasids, 754 to 775  
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Baghdad   where al-Mansur moved the Islamic capital to  
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vizier (wazir)   chief administrator of the Abbasid bureaucracy  
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dhows   Arab sailing vessels with two or three masts built in India of teakwood that traveled in the western Mediterranean to the Indian Ocean to the South China Sea, using the Afro-Eurasian trading network revived under the Tang and Song Empires  
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lateen sails   triangular sails of dhows  
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caravanserais   a kind of camel motel that kept land routes in good condition during the Abbasid Caliphate  
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Harun al-Rashid   ruler during the Golden Age of Islam, when the Islamic Abbasid Empire contained centers of Hellenistic, Egyptian, Mesopotamian, Christian, Jewish, Persian, and Indian culture and preserved the learning of ancient civilizations  
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Omar Khayyam   wrote the synonymous Rubaiyat in the Late Abbasid  
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Ibn Sina (Avicenna)   Muslim scientist who published the Canon of Medicine, in which he identified diseases and their causes  
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Averroes (Ibn Rushd)   Spanish-born Muslim scholar who taught, after studying the writings of Aristotle, that religious beliefs could not be reconciled with philosophy  
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Fatamid   took Egypt from the Abbasids in 969  
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Samanids   took control of parts of Persia and territories east of the Oxus in Central Asia from the Abbasids  
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Seljuk Turks   originally from central Asia, swept through the Middle East, conquered Baghdad in 1055 to become the leaders of the Muslim world, won against the Byzantines in 1071, Sunni  
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Arabian Nights   a collection of stories, some of which are Indian, popular during the Umayyad and Abbasid empires  
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Mahmud of Ghazni   led Turk Muslims to invade northern India, where the slaugher alienated Indians, but the promise of equality attracted them, 971 to 1030  
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Delhi Sultanate   Muslim rule in the Gangetic plain and Indus valley established by Mahmud of Ghazni  
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Bali   island that remained impervious to Islam along with the interiors of the Southeast Asian islands during Umayyad and Abassid expansion  
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stateless societies   African culturally and ethnically homogenous societies without a central government present before the penetration of Islamic civilization between 800 and 1450  
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camel   efficient, economical beasts of burden introduced to North Africa before 200 C.E., gave nomads a political and military advantage  
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Ibn Battuta   Arab traveler likened to Marco Polo who traveled by caravan throughout the Islamic world  
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Sahil   Arabic for the boundary between sand and grassland, where camel caravans going through the Sahara reached safety  
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monetization   happened to European commerce in the late Middle Ages, partially because of West African gold  
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Slavic   refers to Caucasian Slavs from the area around the Black Sea, origin of the word slave  
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manumission   freedom of slaves which contributed to the high demand for them in Muslim trade  
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Sudan   south of the Sahara, Islamized starting in 753, originally ruled by the Berbers, southernmost area in Africa where horses can survive  
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Berbers   indigenous Caucasoid nomads of Northwest Africa, originally Phoenician colonists  
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Senegal River   southern boundary of Ghana  
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Niger River   southern boundary of Ghana, provided a communications network for Mali  
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al-Bakri   Muslim geographer who described Ghana  
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diwan   Muslim recordkeeping agency adopted by the king of Ghana, later Mughal bureau of finance created by Akbar, later Ottoman council  
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Almoravids   Saharan tribesmen converted to Islam who imposed a Muslim king on the Ghanians in 1076 to 1077  
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Mali   formed by the Mande-speadking clans and people who fled from Ghana south of Ghana, most powerful West African state ca. 1250 to 1460 C.E.  
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Sundiata   founder of the Mali empire who put together a state of subservient governors combining the southern half of Ghana, Mali, and parts of what is now Guinea to form a major gold-producing area and communications network, claimed to be both tribal and Muslim  
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Uli   pious Muslim son of Sundiata, establishing good politics and trade relations  
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mediums of exchange   like currency, gold and salt, and cowries introduced by the government, in Mali  
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Mansa Musa   devout Muslim ruler of Mali during its zenith, visited Mecca and Egypt with gold that caused inflation in 1324 to 1325, Mansa meaning emperor in the Mandinke language  
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Timbuktu   capital of Mali, began as a nomad campsite, became a commercial and intelectual center  
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Songhay   fishermen who refused to pay tribute to the Mali empire around 1375, formed into a gold-based Muslim kingdom larger than Mali with the slave trade, fell to Arab rulers in Morocco by 1591  
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Sonni Ali   Songhay leader who captured Mali  
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Gao   Songhay capital  
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Askia Muhammad   followed Sonni Ali as ruler, expanded Songhay territory into the largst West African kingdom in history  
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Swahili   city-states in East Africa, which had strong commercial links with India and the Mediterranean  
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Ethiopia (Abyssinia)   remained Coptic Christian during an emigration from Arabia that accelerated Muslim penetration of the area  
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Mogadishu   where Arabs and Persians settled on the Ethiopian coast beginning in the twelfth century  
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Kilwa   where Arabs and Persians moved to after settling at Mogadishu  
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Madagascar   where Indonesians settled  
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shiek   Arabic title for sultan taken by leaders of mercantile families in Muslim Ethiopia  
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sultan   Turkish word for ruler, rather than Caliph, an Arabic word  
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Great Zimbabwe   empire created in South Africa by the Islamic trade complex, ca. 1000 to 1400  
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Shona   inhabitants of the area of Great Zimbabwe before 1000 who panned and later mined gold  
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Zambezi River   the Shona panned the alluvial gold in its tributaries  
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Sofala   where Shona gold was shipped east and met up with the East African coastal trade complex  
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Karl Mauch   German explorer who found the ruins of the city of Zimbabwe in 1871  
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Eastern Roman Empire   eastern part of the Roman empire after collapse in late fifth century C.E., Greek in language, Roman in jurisprudence, and Christian in culture  
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Greek or Eastern Orthodoxy   form of Christianity followed by the Eastern Roman Empire  
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Byzantium   old Greek city on the Bosporus, location of Constantinople  
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Bosporus   narrow straits beween the Black Sea and the Sea of Marmora  
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Black Sea   under Ukraine and above Turkey  
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Sea of Marmora   between the Black and Aegean Seas  
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monasticism   present in the East church earlier than in the West, which was more focused on missionary work, influenced by Eastern religions, focused on denial and separation from the world  
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iconoclasm   prohibition of veneration of icons that caused controversy in the church in the 700s and 800s  
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icons   sacred pictures or images  
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Trinity   concept of the God the Father, Son, and Holy ghost established in the Nicene Crede that caused the split of the eastern and western churches in 1054  
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schism   separation, split the Eastern and Western Roman Empires over theological issues that divided the Roman Catholic church from the Eastern Orthodox church in 1054  
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Justinian   Emperor under whom the Byzantine Empire reached its greatest height in 527 to 565 C.E., helped to stave off the Sassanid Persians and reconquer lost territory  
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Theodora   Justinian's wife, had Justinian issue a decree allowing a wife to own land  
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Hagia Sophia   most beautiful Byzantine church with a dome anchored by four piers  
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Battle of Manzikert   Seljuk Turks defeated the Byzantines, gaining control of Syria, Palestine, and Turkey in 674 to 678 C.E., initiated the Crusades  
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Mehmet (Mehmed) II   Ottoman ruler who besieged Constantinople with cannons until it surrendered in 1453, ending the 1000-year-old Byzantine Empire  
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Golden Horn   waterway on the northern side of Byzantium where a chain was hung in the water to prevent the entrance of ships  
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themes   districts with governors that the Byzantine empire was divided into  
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stirrups   borrowed from the Persians by the Byzantines, unknown to Romans, gave a steady seat when using weapons  
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Greek fire   ignited when shot as a projectile onto a ship, used by the Byzantine navy  
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Procopius   Byzantine historian who wrote Secret History, in which he reveals the cruelty of an autocratic system where the emperor rules by divine providence and has no order of succession  
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byzantine   word that means extremely entangled and complicated politics, from the Byzantine court's intricate intrigue  
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Slavic peoples   Russians, Belorussians, and Ukrainians, migrated into the Baltic and Black Sea areas sometime during the Roman era  
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Dnepr River   formed the basis of a trade network from Constantinople to the Baltic Sea and then to Europe  
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Varangians   Scandinavians or Swedes, provided boats and sleighs as well as protection along the Dnepr River trade network, crossed into the Casian where they encountered the Persians  
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Russian Primary Chronicle   first Russian history  
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Rus   12 Russian tribes who called on Prince Ruruk to unite them as told by the Russian Primary Chronicle  
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Prince Rurik of Scandinavia   Varangian prince who founded the Russian state and dynasty in 862 C.E.  
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Kievan Russia   confederation of about 300 city-states united by Prince Rurik, fell when Venice offered competition for trade in the eastern Mediterranean and the Seljuk Turks won the trade through Turkey to Asia from Byzantium  
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veche   council of a Kievan city-state that hired a prince with limited powers for protection  
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Cyrillic alphabet   adopted by the Russians after converting to Orthodox Christianity  
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Saint Cyril   namesake of the Cyrillic alphabet, Byzantine missionary sent to eastern Europe during the 800s C.E. to help convince the Slavs to turn to Christianity  
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Vladimir   officially adopted the Orthodox faith for Kiev in 988, because of the brilliance of the Byzantine court according to legend  
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liturgy   Christian ceremony and rituals that innspired the delegation sent by Vladimir to the Byzantine court  
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Ibn Khaldun   Islamic historian who urged historians to analyze the similarities and differences between the present and the past, 1332 to 1406  
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paradigm   model that not only explains the past but is capable of predicting the future  
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Edward Gibbon   historian who wrote Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire  
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Arnold Toynbee   studied civilizations and believed that they rose and fell as recurring patterns  
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Oswald Spengler   produced a cyclical theory of history in which he predicted the eclipse of Western civilization.  
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medieval   between eras, describes the period in western European history after the collapse of classical Greece and Rome and before the modern period, started with the nomadic invasions of the fifth century  
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Dark Ages   name for the medieval period because of its war and illiteracy  
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Age of Faith   name for the medieval period because Christianitiy was the most powerful unifying force of the time=  
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lords   ruled feudal districts with miniature governments, from war chiefs of the Germanic tribes  
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castle   seat of a feudal lord  
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vassal   pledged personal loyalty, military service, and other duties to lords in exchange for fiefs, by which they could outfit themselves for battle  
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fief (feudum)   grant of land given to a vassal by a lord  
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manor   one or several peasant villages on a fief  
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serf or villein   peasants who inherited their position and were bound to their land in exchange for protection  
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open field system   leaving half fallow for refertilization, used by European feudal peasants  
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charters   documents of self-government given from medieval lords to townsmen  
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guilds   medieval organizations of artisans that regulated their goods  
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university system   spawned by guilds, students were taught by masters  
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Umam sanctam   papal bull issued by Pope Boniface VIII in 1302, statement of the medieval Church's claim to spiritual and temporal supremacy  
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heresy   unorthodox views, appeared in the thirteenth century in medieval Europe by the Albigensians  
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Inquisition   "interrogation" created by the Pope to convert, convict, and prevent the spread of heresy in medieval Europe  
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lay investiture   medieval lords and kings claimed the right to appoint local prelates to the pope  
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Crusades   military campaigns of conversion, most famous of which were those to free the Holy Land from the Muslim Turks  
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Pope Urban II   called the first Crusade in 1095 after a cry for help from the Byzantine emperor Alexius I after the Battle of Manzikert, regretting past differences  
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Moors   Islamic infidels in Spain against whom Crusades were directed  
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canon   church law, which carried forward the Roman legal tradition  
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sacraments   Church ceremonies, including baptim, confirmation, penance, the Holy Eucharist, extreme unction, matrimony, and the holy orders, observed under threat of excommunication  
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excommunication   expulsion from the Church and thus condemnation to an afterlife in Hell  
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chivalry   knightly code of behavior with religious origins, consisted of honor, attitudes toward women, and a Christian order of life  
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Romanesque   medieval architectural style characterized by heavy, thick walls and small windows, adaption of the Roman basilica and barrel arch form  
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Gothic   medieval architectural style developed in the late twelfth century in northern Europe to add height and light, exemplified in the cathedral at Chartres, France  
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flying buttresses   braced high walls and stained glass windows in Gothic architecture  
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Scholasticism   major medieval philosophy, an attempt to wed religious beliefs to rational thought  
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Thomas Aquinas   most famous scholastic, attempted to unify all knowledge and describe the nature and destiny of Christian man in his book Summa Theologica  
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monarchy   state headed by a hereditary king, formed in medieval Europe from lords with large tracts of land, major three in the sixth century C.E. were the Frankish in France, Anglo-Saxon in England, and Holy Roman in Germany  
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Charlemagne   early Frankish king who ruled 768 to 814, tried to unite the western territories of the Roman Empire  
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Holy Roman Emperor   title given to Charlemagne by the pope in 800  
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Treaty of Verdun   divided the Western Roman Empire among Charlemagne's three grandsons in 843  
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Vikings   warriors composed mostly of Swedes, Danes, and Norwegians, raided coastal medieval European monasteries, churches, and villages  
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Norsemanland (Normandy)   area of northwestern France colonized by the Vikings  
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Danes   group of Vikings that raided the coasts of medieval Germany, France, Spain, and England  
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Norwegians   reached North Amerians ca. 1000, established Green land and Icy land  
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Norman   invadors who moved south into the Mediditerranean to establish kingdomesin Italy and Sicily  
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Capetian   line of medieval monarchs centered around Paris, or Ile de France, who ruled with a well organized centralized government from 987 to 1328  
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Estates General   assembly of the clergy, nobility, and commoners called by Philip IV "The Fair" of the Capetian monarchs to strengthen his government against the pope because he needed money beyond the feudal dues  
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parlement   high court of trained lawyers, nobles, and clergymen  
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Hattle of Hastings   William I defeated the Saxon army under Harold with 5000 warriors in 1066  
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William I "Conqueror"   Norman duke (of France) who became a strong medieval king in England  
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Salisbury Oath   oath of loyalty given by feudal lords used by William I to centralize England  
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Domesday Book   record of taxable property used by William I to centralize England  
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Henry II   brought the court system under royal control in 1166  
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common law   law for all people of a country, happened to English law under Henry II  
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Thomas a Becket   elected archbishop with Henry II's influence in an attempt to bring the church under his control, refused to be a royal puppet, insisted that the church should be free of temporal control  
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Geoffrey Chaucer   wrote the Canterbury Tales in vernacular in which pilgrims go to worship at the shrine of Thomas a Becket at Canterbury, where he was murdered  
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King John   irritated his vassals by losing English possesions in France, surrendering England as a fief to the pope, and making vassals pay undue taxes  
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Magna Carta   constitutional document that King John's vassals forced him to sign in 1215 at Runnymede in which his powers were limited  
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Parliament   established under Henry III and Edward I as a permenant intsitution with powers of taxation, came from English nobles with large tracts of land in France, comprised of the bishps, barons, knights, and towns  
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House of Lords   represented the nobles in Parliament  
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House of Commons   represented common people in Parliament  
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Concordat of Worms   Henry V of Germany surrendered his claim to invest bishops and the pope gave up his right to govern religious estates in 1122  
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Otto I   brought all of Germany under his control by allying with the Church in Rome, ruled 936 to 973  
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Frederick the Great   Frederick Barbarossa, reunited Germany and Italy, reasserted authority over the popes, ruled 1152 to 1190  
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Golden Bull   allowed seven "electors", lords, authority over their own territories to choose the emperor, continuing feudalism in Germany, written in 1356 after the House of Hapsburg won control of Germany  
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shoen   private domain outside of imperial control in feudal Japan  
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samurai   private soldiers organized by feudal lords to control the shoen, originally only received shiki rights, but later began receiving land in a ceremony like knighting  
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mappo   decline in Buddha's law in feudal Japan thought to be the end of history  
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JoDo   Pure Land form of Buddhism popular in feudal Japan that promised the pure land, heaven, for those who lived upright lives on earth  
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Amida   Buddha of Infinite Light thought to preside over the Western Paradise, reminiscent of the Shinto sun-goddess, central to JoDo Buddhism  
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shiki rights   a certain portion of an estate's produce in feudal Japan  
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Bushido (Way of the Warrior)   harsh samurai code of honor, the bedrock of which was complete loyalty to the lord  
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seppuku   ritual suicide by self-disembowelment committed by samurai to avoid dishonor, to demonstrate loyalty, or to display a protest  
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Zen Buddhism   popular religion among the samurai because it emphasized meditation, giving the warrior the courage to face death  
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Noh Theatre   performed by two masked actors accompanied by music and chorus, became the classical theater of Japan during its feudal era  
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White Heron Castle   most famous Japanese feudal castle  
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shogun   feudal Japanese generals-in-chief, military dictators, to Emperors, who possessed little power beyond the court  
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Minamoto   family that ended civil war in Japan in 1192  
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Yoritomo   leader of the Minamoto family who became shogun  
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Kamakura Shogunate   established by the Minamoto family, 1192 to 1333, unseated because the numbers of samurai grew, though there was little wealth to support them  
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bakufu   "tent government", described the Kamakura Shogunate, during which Yoritomo tried to centralize power  
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Hojo   line of regents starting from Yoritomo's wife's father, who became the de facto shogun at his death, codified law  
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Ashikaga Takauji   military leader who established the Ashikaga Shogunate in 1338  
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Ashikaga Shogunate   lasted until 1573, a commercial class formed because of competing small states  
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Oda Nobunaga   subdued and united Japan by force starting in 1560 by standardizing currency, eliminating customs barriers, and encouraging trade and industry  
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Toyotomi Hideyoshi   centralized institutions like the feudal system after Nobunaga subdued them by force, collected information about taxable property like the Domesday Book, used both a gun-carrying infantry and samurai with swords in 1584  
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Tokugawa Ieyasu   established the Tokugawa Shogunate  
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Tokugawa Shogunate   1600 to 1867, isolated the emperor and nobility from the military class, aimed to establish control over the feudal lords by requiring daimyo to reside in Edo in alternate years, maintained a monopoly of gunpower, introduced to Japan by the Portuguese  
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Nagashino   location of a battle in 1575 where Oda Nobunaga's foot soldiers, equipped with muskets, triumphed over mounted warriors by rotating positions  
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geisha   girls accomplished in the arts that samurai spent heavily on  
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Kabuki Theatre   consisted of bawdy skits about adventure, love, and romance that samurai spent heavily on  
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appanages   separate holdings by individual princes that Kievan Russia collapsed into because of internal division and invasion from abroad, lasted from 1240 to 1462  
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Tartars   Mongols as referred to by Russians, mostly Turkic peoples who attacked Kievan Russia, ruled indirectly through Russian princes  
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Novgorod and Pskov   small appanages to the northwest which essentially escaped Mongol pillage  
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Prince Alexander Nevsky   repelled the Swedes and Teutonic knights from Novgorod in 1240 and 1245, respectively  
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Volynia and Galicia   appanage to the southwest ruled by boyars when they grew independent as Kiev's strengh waned, united in 1197 by Prince Roman and delivered to Catholicism by his son Daniel  
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Estonia, Lithuania, and Latvia   places where Catholic Germans moved into, stopped before Russia, where Orthodoxy was preserved  
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Rostov, Suzdal   northeast appenages whose distance from the Mongold heartland allowed them to move towards independence more quickly  
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Boyars   aristocratic families, independent landowning class  
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Tula   Toltec capital  
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kiva   circular pit used for religious meetings by men of the community  
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Chaco Canyon   area of New Mexico where about 125 planned Anasazi towns built of stobe and adobe are round, show classical Mesoamerican influences  
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Mississippians   group of people in the south central part of the United States who flourished about 800 to 1300 C.E., showed expansionism and feudal decentralization, contemporary to the Pueblo, based on cultivation and trade  
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Adena culture   agricultural people who inhabited the area around the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers around 2000 B.C.E., prior the the Mississippian culture, constructed great earthen mounds for defense and for burial  
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Hopewell culture   rose in the Ohio valley around 200 to 500 C.E., extended Adena culture trade networks as far south as the Gulf of Mexico and the Rocky Mountains  
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pastoral nomadism   people with herds who were driven from the fertile valleys of civilization, widely distributed across Eurasia about 800 B.C.E., displacing hunting-gathering, played a role as herders, mercenaries, empire builders, and long-distance travelers  
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khans   pastoral nomadic rulers in the Asian steppes  
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Shamanist   religion found in East Asia, predominated among nomads in Central Asia, based on the belief that shamans chould serve as intermediaries between humans and deities  
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Temujin   Mongkhal (Mongol) nomadic leader born in Mongolia, 1162 to 1227, later known as Genghiz Khan, "Prince of all between the Oceans"  
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Mongolia   north of China  
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Genghiz Khan   conquered Beijing, Khwarizm, and Bukhara, welcomed and tolerated all religions, devised a law code, and used the wisdom of various cultures  
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Khwarizm   Islamic state between the Caspian Sea and Pamir Mountains  
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tumens   fighting units of 10,000 cavalrymen used in the Mongol war machine divided into units of 10 with commanders at each level  
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Karakorum   capital established by Genghiz Khan south of lake Baikal  
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Ogedei   third son of Genghiz Khan elected Great Khan, extended the Mongol attack against China, Persia, and Europe, overthrew the Northern Song in 1234  
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Batu Khan   a grandson of Genghiz Khan who launched the only successful winter attack on Russia, conquering it, and proceeded into eastern Europe, stopped by disputes over succession after the death of Ogedei in 1241, which altered the course of European history  
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Monke   Ogedei's nephew, elected the Great Khan, undertook a campaign against the Song Empire in southern China, died in 1259, saving the Muslim world from Hulagu  
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Hulagu   Monke's younger brother who captured Baghdad in 1253, destroying much of the world cultural heritage dating back to the Persian empire of Darius, descendants ruled Persia, Russia, and Chagatai, the Mongol homeland  
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hordes   independently ruling divisions of the Mongol empire starting from their defeat at the hands of the Egyptian Mamluks in 1259 near Nazareth  
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Kublai Khan   younger brother of Monke, proclaimed the fifth Great Khan but only had direct authoritiy over China starting in the 1270s  
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Pax Mongolica   imperial peace established by the Mongols which allowed for trade and the spread of ideas and goods and allowed European traders to travel through the east instead of buying goods in Southwest Asia  
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Levant   name for Southwest Asia during the Pax Mongolica, eastern shore of the Mediterranean  
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Yuan Dynasty   1271 to 1368, founded by Kublai Khan, absorbed into Chinese society  
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Hung Wu   peasant monk who, with his followers, drove the Mongols out of China in 1351 and established the Ming dynasty, 1368 to 1644  
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kamikaze   typhoon that saved Japan from Mongol invasion, myth of a "divine wind" that was revived during World War II when American invasion threatened  
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Golden Horde   Batu Khan's domain with Kievan tributary states  
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Sarai   Batu Khan's headquarters on the Lower Volga, far to the south of the Golden Horde, from which he ruled indirectly through the Russian princes  
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autocrats   rulers with unlimited authority, describes the Russian princes who served as intermediaries of the Khan over the Russian people  
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Battle of Kulikovo   Mongol's first defeat at the hands of Moscow on the Don River in 1380  
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Ivan III, or Great   1462 to 1505, Moscow prince who declared Russian independence from the Mongols, assumed the title of czar  
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autocracy   refers to power above and beyond political power, over the church and any other national instruments  
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Russian Orthodox Church   created when the Russian Church became independent of the Eastern Orthodox Church because of the Byzantine Empire's fall to the Ottoman Turks in 1453, had its own patriarch or pope  
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Third Rome   refers to Moscow's status as the center of the Russian Orthodox Church  
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czar   Caesar,Sovereign of all the Russias, and autocrat  
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Sudebnik   code of laws promulgated by Ivan the Great to implement his autocratic authority  
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Moscow   northeast appanage that later became the home of a line of Russian princes who claimed descent from Rurik  
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serfdom   tying of peasants to the land  
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Ivan IV, or Terrible   1533 to 1584, serfdom began and the boyars were replaced by a dependent and politically loyal class of gentry  
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Time of Troubles (Russian)   1598 to 1613, years of turmoil resulting from civil war because of Ivan IV's lack of heirs and Polish invasion  
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Indian math   now known as Arabic numerals  
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Delhi   captured by a second wave of foreign invaders, Turkic Muslims from Afghanistan, in 1192  
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lameseries   Buddhist monasteries characteristic of Tibetan culture, where Buddhists took shrine during the second wave of invasions in India  
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Delhi Sultanate   Muslim kingdom in northern India established by Qutb-ud-din, 1206 to 1526  
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Urdu   mixture of Persian, Arabic, and Hindi, developed under the Delhi Sultanate, official language of Pakistan today  
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Bhakti   rennaissance of pious Hinduism during the Delhi Sultanate which emphasized devotion to a personal divinity  
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Tamerlane   claimed descent from the Mongol Jagatai, Genghiz Khan's second son, conquered Persia, the Fertile Crescent, and southern Russia from Samarkand, then invaded India for booty, leaving it politically divided  
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Babur   claimed descent from Tamerlane, invaded India and established the Mughal Empire, 1526 to 1858  
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gunpowder empires   Chinese technology moved along the reopened Mongol Silk Road to the West, and those with guns created empires, like the Muscovite czars, Mughal Indians, Ottoman Turks, Ming Chinese, Tokugawa Japanese, Spanish, and Portuguese  
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Akbar   Babur's grandson, assembled an empire including Afghanistan, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and all of present day India north of the Godavari River, 1556 to 1605, famous for his policies of religious toleration and leaving village life intact  
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mansabdars   800 imperial officials appointed by Akbar who performed military, judicial, and financial functions at the local level  
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syncretic religion   religion that reconciles different views reached by scholars in Akbar's court  
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Red Fort   built by Shah Jahan, grandson of Akbar, to house the imperial palace, administrative treasury, and arsenal  
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Peacock Throne   consturcted from emeralds, diamonds, pearls, and rubies for Shah Jahan, carried off to Persia by raiders in 1739  
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Taj Mahal   monument built from white marble for Shah Jahan's wife  
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Aurangazeb   Shah Jahan's son who executed his older brother and locked away his father until his death, reigned with extreme Islam  
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Ottoman   powerful Sunni Turkic family in Anatolia, rival of the Safavids after the Mongol destruction of Baghdad  
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Anatolia   Turkey  
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Safavids   powerful Shi'ite Turkic family in Persia that launched a militant reformation of Islam, formed a state, 1501 to 1736  
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Ismail   Safavid commander who proclaimed himself shah in the Islamic heartlands in 1501  
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shah   Islamic emperor, Persian for king, revolted against by a nationalist coalition in 1906, forcing the Majlis  
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Chaldiran   location of a battle between the Ottoman and Safavid Turks in 1514, won by the Ottomans by gunpowder but not followed up, resulting in two empires in Southwest Asia  
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theocratic   state based in religion, like that of the Safavid Turks, who claimed descent from one of the imams, still distinguisihes Iran  
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Shah Abbas   ruler under whom Safavid power reached its height, built a strong army based on the Ottomans' using cannons and the skills of Sir Anthony Sherley, expanded militarily and endowed the arts, 1587 to 1629  
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Isfahan   capital city of Shah Abbas  
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Osman   Ottoman leader who began expansionist moves, 1299 to 1326  
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gazis   frontier fighters in the jihad  
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Dardanelles   strait between the Black and Mediterranean Seas, also known as the Hellespont, crossed by the Ottoman Turks near Gallipoli in 1352  
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Gallipoli   peninsula in the European part of Turkey where the Turks, who entered on Germany's side in World War I, repulsed an Allied attempt to invade via the Dardanelles  
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Balkans   mountains in southeastern Europe  
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Battle of Mohacs   Suleiman crushed the Hungarians in 1526  
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Battle of Lepanto   Ottoman fleet was driven out of thier bid to control the Mediterranean by a combined Spanish, Venetian, and Hapsburg force led by Charles V in 1571  
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Suleiman the Magnificent   expanded Ottoman Turkey to its farthest limit, 1520 to 1566  
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Mustafa Naima   Ottoman historian who described how society was divided into producers of wealth, Muslim and non-Muslim, and the military  
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trimars   landed estates given to the Ottoman Muslim bureaucratic ruling class for thier lifetime, reverted to the sultan upon death  
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devshirme   system in which boys in the Ottoman empire from poor villages were taken as slaves for civil service jobs and military service, ensuring a class loyal to the sultan for their lives  
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janissaries   Turkish for rectuits, boys taken as slaves and prepared for military service  
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pashas   Ottoman provincial governors  
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vizirs   Ottoman sultan's closest advisers, met together in a diwan, Grand Vizir acted as a prime minister  
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Pasha Sinan   a Christian contemporary of Michaelangelo rounded up in the devshirme, designed 312 public buildings  
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harem   the place a Muslim house assigned to women  
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Dar al Islam   community of Islam, monopolized Eurasian trade by 1500  
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indulgence   remission of sin in Christianity for those who crusaded or gave money to the church  
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Crusader states   states resembling feudal European states set up from the upper Tigris valley to the boundary of Egypt by Crusaders, had Italiian merchants and religious tolerance  
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Saladin   Turkish leader who reunited the Muslim world from Egypt to Mesopotamia, warred with the Crusader states, especially with Richard the Lion-Hearted of England, signed a truce leaving the Crusaders a foothold in the Holy Land in 1192  
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Moors   Muslims on the Iberian peninsula warred against in a Crusade  
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el Cid   "Master", cruel, self-seeking, and haughty but fearless and daring Spanish hero who became a model for later noblemen  
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Teutonic Knights   conquered lands on the southern coast of the Baltic, now Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, and converted them to Latin Christendom  
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heretics   people who believe other than the official doctrine, popes called a number of mostly unsuccessful Crusades against them, fellow Christians, which discredited the Church  
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Marco Polo   journeyed to China, stimulating interest in travel and geography  
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Ming   dynasty proclaimed by Zhu Yuan-chang (Chu Yuan-chang), a southern rebel, in 1368 during the Yuan dynasty  
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Yongle (Yung-lo)   Zhu Yuan-chang's fourth son, moved the capital back to Beijing in 1398  
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Forbidden City   palace city built in Beijing by Yongle, showed the lofty despotism of the Ming and Qing Dynasties  
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Qing (Ch'ing) Dynasty   1644 to 1912  
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Zheng He (Cheng Ho)   Muslim admiral sent by Yongle to find his rival, explore, expand trade, and find luxury objects for the imperial court, went to the Indian Ocean, Ceylon, the Persian coast, and the east coast of Africa, brought tribute  
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junks   Chinese ships that used square sails able to carry up to 1500 tons, sturdier than dhows  
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Ibn Majid   wrote Arab sea manuals describing trade routes driven by monsoon wind patterns in the Arabian Sea, Bay of Bengal and Straits of Malacca, and for going to the Mediterranian by rounding the Cape of Good Hope  
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Cape of Good Hope   southern tip of Africa sailed past by Arabs and later Vasco da Gama  
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Gujarat   western Indian peninsula where trade developed, especially during the Delhi Sultanate  
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Cambay   major port of Gujrat, most inhabitants were foreign merchants  
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Malaba   area of trade on the west Indian coast  
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Calicut   major city of Malaba, later a center of British trade  
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Chola   state that supported Tamil traders, who lost ground in the twelfth century to Muslim merchants  
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Flanders   where the North Sea meets the English Channel  
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Flanders Fleets   Italian ships that took luxury goods from the Eastern trade to Italian ports and then to Atlantic ports near Flanders starting in the early fourteenth century  
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Henry the Navigator   younger son of the king of Portugal in 1415 who explored the Atlantic coast of Africa, helping to find offshore islands and places from which goods like gold, ivory, and slaves were exported  
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Bartholomew Dias   rounded the Cape of Good Hope in 1488  
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Vasco da Gama   rounded the Cape of Good Hope in 1497 and arrived at Mozambique, where Muslim traders were already established, then to Mombasa and Calicut, starting a Portuguese movement to divert the Indian Ocean trade from Muslim into Christian hands  
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Pedro Alvares Cabral   sent by King Manuel of Portugal to the Indian Ocean to set up trading posts and destroy Muslim commerce in 1500, accidentally discovered and claimed Brazil on the way  
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Yoruba   group of people who produced art in wood and ivory around 1000 C.E., organized in a small number of city states under the authority of regional kings who were considered divine, similar to the Edo people to the east  
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Ile-Ife   major Yoruba city  
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Benin   large Yoruba state formed sometime in the fourteenth century under Ewuare the Great, reflected contact with outsiders like Portuguese soldiers  
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Oba   Benin's ruler and theme of its artistic output in ivory and cast bronze  
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Nordic   North European countries that began active trade and exploration to England, the Baltic, Iceland, Greenland, Ireland, and France in the ninth to eleventh centuries  
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Iceland and Greenland   islands settled by Nordic barbarians in small war parties  
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Lubeck   example of a town built on the northeast European coast by people pushed by an increase in population and Viking (Nordic) raids, rebuilt and fortified on the Baltic in 1143 near a dam, assuring future prosperity in processing by watermills  
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Hanseatic League   alliances lead by Lubeck in 1294 from London to Novgorod and Bergen to Cologne, increased trade and wealth and decreased conflict  
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Aztec   empire formed by the last of the Chichimec to arrive in central Mexico, spoke Nahuatl like the Toltec, absorbed Olmec, Maya, Teotihuacan, and Toltec culture, comprized all central Mexico from the gulf to Guatemala by 1502, 1224 to 1520  
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Quetzalcoatl   Aztec god who gave crops, learning, and the arts who warred with the Toltec god Tezcatlipoca, who required human sacrifice, driven into exile by Tezcatlipoca, promised to return the same year as Cortes's landing in Mexico  
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Tenochtitlan   Mexico City, founded by the Aztecs on an island in Lake Texcoco in 1325, from where they started expanding in 1428  
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Moctezuma I   conquered the area around the central plateau around Tenochtitlan in 1440 to 1469  
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Moctezuma II   ruled 1502 to 1520  
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chinampas   gardens that, along with tribute from conquered people, maintained the Aztec professional army  
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Codex Mendoza   one of the few surviving manuscripts about pre-Columbian America, contains a copy of the register of tribute paid anually to the Aztec emperors  
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calpulli   original clan heads that became the Aztec upper class  
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macana   Aztec weapon, paddle-shaped wooden club edged with obsidian that any freeman could master in military training to become a warrior  
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Bernardino de Sahagun   Spanish missionary who prepared an encyclopedia about the Aztec Empire called The General History of Things of New Spain  
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metates   stone slabs used in the Aztec Empire to grind corn by hand, took up six hours of a woman's day and limited social development  
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Huitzilopochtil   Aztec war god whose temple crowned the central square of Tenochtitlan  
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Tlatelolco   Tenochtitlan's sister city, site of a market  
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Alexandria   city established by Alexander the Great on the Nile Delta  
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Pachacuti   Inca who came to the throne in 1438, he and his successors, including his son, Topa Inca, extended Inca control for 2000 miles along the Andes in 40 years using a bureaucracy, state religion, conscripted army, and communication network  
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Cuzco   Inca capital connected to the fringes of the empire with an elaborate system of roads, which facilitated an advanced communication network  
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Quechua   official Inca language imposed on all conquered peoples along with the Inca gods  
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Machu Picchu   Inca temple which clings to a crag on a mountain  
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Pueblo   from the Spanish word for permanent town, culture in the dry American Southwest  
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Hokohum   culture that emerged in Pueblo society ca. 700 C.E., built large buildings and develeped masonry technology for hosue building, abandoned about 1300 C.E. due to drought, like the Mogollan settlements, also in Pueblo society  
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Mesa Verde   center of the Anasazi where huge sandstone blocks were used to construct masonry homes  
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Chaco Canyon   center of the Anasazi, adobe towns with multistoried houses around central plazas sat on the rim of the canyon  
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Cahokia   main Mississippian center, strategically located near the junction of the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers, St. Louis today, trade enrepot for the midsection of North America reaching the Great Lakes and the Gulf of Mexico, reflects Mesoamerican influences  
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states   soveriegn entities based on conquest and control (empires), dynastic heritage and lineage (kingdoms), cultural and religious bonds (tribes, theocracies), or civic cohesion (polis or city-state), until the rise of nation-states  
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nations   people who share a common language, geography, history, and culture, soveregnty of the people rather than leadership  
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Niccolo Machiavelli   1469 to 1527, wrote The Prince recognizing that princes of nations should be loved by their people, but also feared  
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universities   appeared secularly in response to increasingly political churches and increasingly bureaucratic nation-states in Italian cities and France by the twelfth century  
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scholastics   first university teachers who, in lectures, tried to use faith and reason to arrive at truth, using Roman law and Greek and Arabic medical texts  
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Peter Abelard   inspirational university teacher who challenged accepted dogmas by systematic questioning, 1079 to 1142  
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Saint Thomas Aquinas   1225 to 1274, devoted his time to collecting and organizing knowledge on all topics into summa, or reference books  
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Summa Theologica   most famous of Thomas Aquinas's summa, dealt with a vast number of theological questions  
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Assize of Clarendon   issued by Henry II in 1166, created a system of juries, the processes o indictment, and English common law  
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rights   institutionized in 1215 by English lords to keep King John under conrol  
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William Shakespeare   wrote plays in the national English language with national themes, 1564 to 1616  
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Louis IX   Capetian king during whose reign a uniform coinage, standard system of law, and parlement developed, and a money tax and court of commoners for appeals over the heads of nobles was introduced  
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Philip IV "Fair"   challenged the power of the Church and the pope by calling the first Estates General, governed most of France and made the language of the Ile de France supplant many local dialects  
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Babylonian Captivity   the papacy was transferred from Rome to Avignon, France, 1305 to 1377, by Philip IV  
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fabliaux   vernacular literature in little songs about animals, spreading the Ile de France dialect  
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chansons de geste   vernacular literature in heroic tales, spreading the Ile de France dialect  
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Hundred Years' War   1337 to 1453 between England and France, forced inhabitants and nobles to identify themselves as English or French, kings gained the loyalty of the commercial middle class at the expense of the nobles and challenged the rights of the popes  
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Joan of Arc   French peasant girl who led an army to free France of the English during the Hundred Years' War, successful  
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Jacquerie   peasants agitated for higher pay and greater freedom during the Hundred Years' War in 1358, partially because of the Black Plague  
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Holy Roman Empire   German leader attempted to create a state that relied on the church rather than a German state, causing power to remain in the hands of the local princes  
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Investiture Controversy   controversy over who had the power to appoint bishops and abbots, caused by the close relationship between German emperors and the Church  
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Maximilian I   Hapsburg emperor who unsuccessfully tried to restore a German central government, added the Netherlands and Spain, 1493 to 1519  
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condottieri   hired soldiers who were used by northern Italian towns to fight each other, which, along with the southern division of the kingdoms of Naples and Sicily, meant that no nation-state was formed  
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Iberian peninsula   peninsula containing Spain and Portugal  
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Cortes   Portuguese parliament that elected John I in 1385, the king who united Portugal and brought it independence from the Spanish and Arabs, later became a commercial empire  
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Castile and Aragon   Christian kingdoms in the Iberian peninsula contemporary to Portugal whose kings tried to create national spirit over religious unity  
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Granada   Moorish state in the Iberian peninsula contemporary to Portugal, fell to Spain in 1492, which, along with Isabella's removal of the Jews, united Spain religiously  
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Ferdinand   heir to the throne of Aragon, married Isabella in 1469, paving the way for a single Spanish monarchy in which the people were given a voice in the Cortes  
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Isbella   heiress to Castille  
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Renaissance   fourteenth to sixteenth centuries, a cultural movement that began in Florence, Italy, then moved into northern Europe, rebirth of classical Roman and Greek civilization that stressed science and secularism  
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individualism   hallmark of the Renaissance, stressed uniqueness, creativity, genius, and personality  
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Baldassare Castiglione   gentleman type of Renaissance individual, wrote The Book of the Courtier, a Renaissance guide to proper behavior  
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Francesco Petrarch   scholar type of Renaissance individual, studied and admired the classics  
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Lorenzo de' Medici   tyrant ruler of an Italian city type of Renaissance individual, from a banking family  
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humanism   hallmark of the Renaissance, stressed the relearning of antiquity and classics to be educated and civilized, copied classical authors' concern with man's problems and possibilities on Earth  
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Dante   wrote The Divine Comedy, an example of humanist writing in which classical figures appear  
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Leonardo da Vinci   showed the Humanist stress of the classical interest in science, remembered for his artistic masterpieces and inventions  
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secularism   hallmark of the Renaissance, concern with the material world instead of with eternal and spiritual considerations, caused by the rising prosperity of the Italian cities, which shifted people's thoughts towards the material world  
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Julius II   pope 1503 to 1513, patronized artists during the Renaissance, showing secularism  
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Michelangelo Buonarotti   Renaissance artist whose hiring by the church showed the secularism of the time  
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Raphael   Renaissance painter whose bright colors inspired Leonardo and Michelangelo  
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Johann Gutenburg   developed movable metal type around 1450  
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Scholastic   Renaissance philosophy that joined classical ideals of broadmindedness and stoic patience to Christian virtues of love, faith, and hope  
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Desiderius Erasmus   famous Scholastic who launched a humorous attack on the problems of the Catholic Chuch in his book In Praise of Folly, 1511  
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Thomas More   humanist who explored the idea of an ideal socialistic community in Utopia  
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Albrecht Durer   "Leonardo of Germany", example of a northern Renaissance painter who painted everyday and religious subjects with attention to perspective and proportion  
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Hieronymus Bosch   Flemish Renaissance painter who painted Death and the Miser, which had a "dance of death" theme and reflected on worldly wealth versus the divine  
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Galileo Galilei   Renaissance scientist who supported heliocentricism with telescopic observations and mathematical proof, aided by Muslim ideas in math, formulated the law of inertia  
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Rene Descartes   introduced analytical geometry and the deductive method during the Renaissance, kept separate religious and physical worlds  
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Blaise Pascal   introduced the law of probabilities during the Renaissance, said there was no separation between the religious and physical worlds and that one must "wager" that the world has meaning in his book Pensees  
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Isaac Newton   Renaissance scientist who explained the law of gravitation as a governing principle of the universe, insisted that ideas must meet the test of reason and observation in his book Principia, mathematically proved the basic laws of physics  
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Lateran Council   called by Pope Julius II from 1512 to 1517 to discuss the Renaissance attack on the Church's theology  
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Martin Luther   argued that salvation could be attained by faith alone and that the church was the entire Christian community, not just the clergy  
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Ninety-Five Theses   attached to the door of the Wittenburg church by Martin Luther in 1517 before the Lateran Council could institute reforms, challenged the pope in matters of faith  
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Charles V   Holy Roman Emperor who put out the Edict of Worms, prevented from taking strong measures against the Protestants because of his preoccupation with his territories in Flanders, Spain, Italy, the Americas, and the Muslim siege of Vienna by the Ottoman Turks  
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Edict of Worms   declared Martin Luther and outlaw  
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Protestant   movement following Martin Luther's ideas, named for the meeting of German princes in 1529 to protest the Edict of Worms  
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Confessions of Augsburg   formally defined the Protestant movement in 1530  
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On Christian Liberty   treatise by Martin Luther which Holy Roman peasants interpreted as license to rebel against local lords in 1525  
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Peace of Augsburg   Charles V officially recognized Protestantism in 1555 after it was advanced by Catholic French kings during the Hapsburg-Valois wars as an opposing force to the Holy Roman Emperor  
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Calvinism   Protestant movement with a belief in predestination and the value of work, had a strong and well-organized church and a systematic theology, promoted education so that people could read the Bible, originated in Switzerland  
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Henry VIII   set up the Anglican Church  
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Anglican Church   Protestant church initially set up by Henry VIII to challenge papal attempts to enforce his first marriage  
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Council of Trent   met between 1545 and 1563 to discuss Catholic counter-reformation, corrected many of the abuses that had previously plagued the Catholic Church  
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Society of Jesus   Jesuits, played a powerful role in converting Asians, Latin American Indians, and others to Catholicism and in spreading Christian education  
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Ignatius of Loyola   founded the Society of Jesus  
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Inquisition   instrument of the Catholic Counter-Reformation which ferreted out heretics and punished them  
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Huguenots   French Protestants who fought the Catholics  
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Edict of Nantes   granted tolerance to the Huguenots in 1598, also ended rebellions by landed nobles against royal authority  
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Thirty Years' War   German Protestants and their allies, such as Lutheran Sweden, fought the Holy Roman Emperor, backed by Spain, starting in 1618  
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Treaty of Westphalia   ended the Thirty Years' War in 1648, allowed princely cities and states to choose one religion or another, reduced Spanish power in favor of France  
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Commercial Revolution   greatly increased amount and distance of trade and the middle class, originated in the increase in trade in Eastern luxury items and staple items, noted in the rise of maritime trade complexes, the nation-state, and in the scientific and secular spirit  
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"putting out" or "domestic" system   merchants would distribute wool to cottage weavers and sell the finished cloth in the marketplace, greatly undermined the medieval guild system, prelude to the factory  
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capitalism   ownership of private property allowed traders to take great risks hoping for great profits, or capital, which they invested in their own businesses or held in banks to lend to others, hallmarked by private ownership, capital reinvestment, and free market  
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entrepreneurs   capitalistic merchants who were willing to take great risks, took measures to reduce risks and formed trading leagues and partnerships with governments to protect markets and create monopolies  
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insurance   system formed by entrepreneurs to reduce financial risks  
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partnerships   formed by entrepreneurs to reduce financial risks  
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joint stock companies   formed by entrepreneurs to reduce financial risks  
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banking system   made loans to merchants for the vast amounts of capital they needed  
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Johann Fugger   founded an influential bank in Germany in the late 1300s  
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mercantilism   policy instituted by governments to increase state wealth by exporting more than importing, attempted to create a favorable balance of trade with tariffs, trade monopolies, and increased foreign trade  
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Holland   province of the Netherlands which dominated the republic because of the middle class merchants who dominated the republic, emphasizing the value of thrift and separating the state and religion  
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Dutch East India Company   joint stock company formed in 1621 by Dutch provincial ruling merchants, or regents, traded with Latin America and Africa  
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absolutism   unlimited sovereignty is embodied in the person of the ruler, who often claimed to rule by "divine right" and controlled all important institutions of state including the church, bureaucracy, and military, freed from the nobility and church  
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Philip II   Spanish king who believed that his inability to restore Catholicism and regain the Netherlands was due to Elizabeth I's rule  
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Spanish Armada   sent by Philip II to England in 1588, defeated, Spain went into decline afterwards  
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Escorial   palace of Philip II, Spanish equivalent of Versailles  
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Louis XIV   French king 1643 to 1715 who exemplified and inspired absolute monarchy  
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Cardinal Richelieu   set in place the cornerstone of French absolutism by subordinating all groups and institutions to the monarchy  
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intendants   agents of the central government sent by Cardinal Richelieu  
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Cardinal Jules Mazarin   Richelieu's successor, attempted to increase royal revenue, which led to the Fronde  
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Fronde   French uprising between 1648 and 1653 which resulted in certain factions of French society remaining beyond taxes  
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Versailles   palace built by Louis IV to symbolize order and the king's power  
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baroque   style used in Versailles characterized by religious emotionalism, drama, and lavish decoration and frescoes  
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bastion   key to land warfare of the period, projected outward from a fort, had low walls, vast moats, outworks, and defensive cannons, counteracted by blockates, making siege the most common form of warfare  
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field army   military revolution of absolutism, army size grew, technology improved, and field training was developed, meant that small countries needed alliances with large countries  
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War of the Spanish Succession   1701 to 1713, Dutch and English countered the French acquisition of the Spanish Netherlands and rich trade with Spanish colonies, provoked by dynastic and territorial questions  
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Treaty of Utrecht   ended the War of the Spanish Succession, balance of power and partition principles prevailed, England gained American territories and control of the Spanish African slave trade  
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Boubon   French, such as Louis XIV's grandson Philip of Spain  
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Peter the Great   absolutist monarch of Russia 1682 to 1725  
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St. Petersburg   city built by Peter the Great to rule from, like Versailles or the Escorial  
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Great Northern War   Peter the Great gained much of Estonia and Latvia from Sweden from 1700 to 1721  
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Hapsburgs   monarchs who created an absolutist state in Austria, not a nation state  
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Hohenzollern   monarchs who created an absolutist state in Prussia, not a nation-state  
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Puritanism   movement in England to inject middle-class values and ethics into the Church of England and "purify" it  
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Long Parliament   called by Charles I 1640 to 1660 in response to the Scottish revolt, limited the power of the monarch  
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English Civil War   1642 to 1649 between Parliament and its supporter, the Roundheads, who prevailed, and the king and his supporters, the Cavaliers  
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commonwealth   republican form of government following the English Civil War  
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Oliver Cromwell   controlled the parliamentary army in the English Civil War and the commonwealth government, instituted a sort of Puritan military dictatorship which collapsed on his death  
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Glorious Revolution   1688 to 1689, Parliament bloodlessly replaced the Stuart monarchs with William and Mary, who recognized Parliament's supremacy once and for all  
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Prester John   mythical Christian ruler of Ethiopia searched for by the Portuguese from Ceuta, a Muslim city in northern Morocco, in 1415 along with gold, a sea route to India, and the Christian conversion of the Muslims  
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Prince Henry's School of Navigation   sent out Portuguese navigators to explore the West African coast ca. 1394 to 1460  
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Alfonso de Albuquerque   destroyed Muslim coastal forts with cannons at Calicut, Ormuz, Goa, and Malacca from 1509 to 1515 to control South Asian trade  
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Christopher Columbus   Genoese merchant funded by Isabella and Ferdinand after religious unification, discovered several Central American lands from 1451 to 1502  
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Hispaniola   Haiti, where Christopher Columbus left a crew before returning to Spain for the first time  
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Treaty of Tordesillas   negotiated by the pope in 1494 to end the New World rivalry between Spain and Portugal  
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Line of Demarcation   drawn by the Treaty of Tordesillas, gave Portugal trading rights in Asia, the East Indies, and eastern Brazil, and the Spanish trading rights in the Americas  
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Ferdinand Magellan   commissioned by Charles V of Spain to find a direct route to Southeast Asia in 1519 because precious metals had not been found in the Carribean, killed, expedition was successful and proved that the earth was round  
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Cape Horn   southern tip of South America, passed by Magellan  
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Malay Archipelago   passed by Magellan's expedition through the Pacific Ocean to Spain  
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Hernando Cortes   Spanish adventurer who crossed from Hispaniola to Mexico in 1519 and conquered the Aztec Empire, helped by disgruntled Aztec subjects who believed him to be Quetzalcoatl, disease, horses, and superior weaponry  
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Francisco Pizzaro   crushed the Inca Empire in Peru like Cortes crushed the Aztec Empire  
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Montezuma   Moctezuma I, taken captive by Cortes  
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conquistador   Spanish New World explorer, conqueror  
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Atahualpa   Inca leader imprisoned and killed by Pizzaro  
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Potosi   richest New World silver mine, found by Pizarro in the Peruvian highlands, caused the Spanish to lose interest in the spice trade  
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John Cabot   Genoese merchant living in London who discovered Newfoundland in 1497 and the New England coast in 1498  
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Jacques Cartier   Frenchman who explored the St. Lawrence region of Canada between 1534 and 1541  
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caravel   light, three-masted Portuguese ship with lateen sails that was slower than a galley but could hold more cargo, gave Europeans navigational and military supremacy when exploring the New World  
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Reconquista   reconquest of Spain from the Muslims after which young upper-class Spanish found economic and political opportunities limited to the aristocracy and sought their fortunes in the New World  
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Colombian Exchange   process of exchange across the Atlantic of people, disease, plants and animals, and traditions  
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missionaries   Franciscans, Dominicans, Mercedarians, Augustinians, Jesuits, etc. who followed the Conquistadors to spread Christianity using already established local traditions  
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Pachamama   Andean earth mother identified with the Virgin mary by missionaries  
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Santeria   "Worship of Saints", reflected fused art, blended the African pantheon with the iconography of Catholic saints  
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encomienda   system through which Native Americans were granted to the Spanish in a kind of serfdom  
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Council of the Indies   vehicle of Spanish rule, made policy and appointed viceroys, and oversaw the treasury and audiencia  
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viceroys   Spanish colonial governors  
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audiencia   colonial Spanish royal court of appeals  
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New Laws   Spanish legislation in 1542 that prohibited exploitation and enslavement of Indians, who died in large numbers because of disease, dislocation, and the rigors of mine work  
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Bartoleme de las Casas   Bishop who argued that Native Americans were like children who needed protection and care  
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diaspora   dispersion of people, like that of the African slaves to replace the Indians  
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mestizo   racially mixed between European and Native American  
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mulatto   racially mixed between European and African  
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zambo   racially mixed between Native American and African  
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castizo   racially mixed between Mestizo and European  
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castas   people of mixed origin segregated to secondary status, Portuguese word meaning race or lineage, origin of the word caste  
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peninsulares   whites in the New World born in Spain  
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Creoles   whites born in the New World, later became the upper class during the Latin American Revolutions  
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Roanoke   first North American New World colonization attempt in 1587, abandoned  
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Jamestown   English sustained colony established in 1607  
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St. Lawrence   settled at Quebec by the French in 1608  
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Middle Passage   two-month voyage of African slaves, usually debtors or prisoners of war, to the Americas  
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factories   European settlements along the West African coast that collected slaves from African kingdoms and merchant groups in the interior, later British ports in India with walled compounds, later buildings with power-driven machines used to produce goods  
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Ashanti   kingdom located in the Gold Coast, present-day Ghana, that profited from the slave trade  
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Osei Tutu   first Ashanti leader, built a powerful army using guns, conquered neighbors and sold them into slavery, died in 1717  
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Agaja   king of Dahomey from 1708 to 1740 under who used the gun-for-slaves exchange  
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Dahomey   kingdom inland from the Bight of Benin which became a royal monopoly  
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Bight of Benin   Lagos, Benin, and Togo  
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Kanem-Borneo and Hausaland   Muslim states that rose due to slave trade, which was limited by the Koran's teachings prohibiting slavery of fellow Muslims  
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Mauritius and Zanzibar   islands where Swahili, Indian, and Arabian merchants set up plantations with African slaves following the European model  
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Boer   name for the Dutch in pushed African populations north and west in a series of wars for the Dutch East India's plantation colony on the Cape of Good Hope in 1760  
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chattel slavery   form of slavery in which slaves are considered as legal property  
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metis   mostly French mulatto class in West Africa which adopted the French language and Catholic religion and gained economic and political power  
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Goa   Portuguese port established in 1510 on the Arabian Sea  
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British East India Company   organized under the charter of Queen Elizabeth to compete with the Portuguese for control of the Indian spice and cotton trade  
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sepoys   native troops that manned British garrisons in India because of disorder and violence in the early eighteenth century  
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Treaty of Paris   France recognized British control in India in 1763  
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India Act   1784, British governors in India had to be picked from outside the British East India Company  
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Francis Xavier   led a Jesuit order to convert low-caste Indians to Christianity starting in 1540, won many converts in Japan in 1547  
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Robert di Nobili   Italian Jesuit who tried to convert the elite class in India in the early 1600s, a strategy that never had much success  
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Matteo Ricci   Jesuit who settled in Macao on the mouth of the Canton River in 1582, failed to convert people to Christianity because it ran counter to Chinese traditions but admired China  
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Shimabara Rebellion   revolt by Christian peasants in Japan, 1637 to 1638, Western contact was supressed afterwards  
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Manchus   Manchurians, threatened China from the north during the Ming Dynasty and established the Ch'ing dynasty  
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Ch'ing   dynasty establised in 1644 by the Manchus that replaced the old bureaucracy, covered China Proper, Manchuria, Mongolia, and Tibet, and had tribute trade from Myanmar, Nepal, Laos, Siam, Annam, and Korea  
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Manila galleons   tied the system of European exploration and conquest together, made in the Philippines, synthesis of Europe and the Orient  
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Malacca   Malay peninsula from which, along with Goa, Portuguese ships sailed to Macao  
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Macao   Portuguese settlement on the South China Sea where ships loaded with Chinese silks and porcelains  
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Nagasaki   Japanese port used by Portuguese ships coming from Macao to trade for Spanish silver  
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Manila   Philippine port used by Portuguese ships coming from Macao to trade for Spanish silver  
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Philippines   conquered by the Spanish and used to build galleons from tropical wood  
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galleons   trade warships with three or four decks at the stern and one or more at the bow, used by the Spanish to create a world exchange  
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Miguel Lopez de Legazpi   led a Spanish fleet from America to claim the Philippine islands for Philip II of spain in 1565  
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Francisco de Coronado   Spaniard who moved across Texas to Kansas in search of gold in the 1540s  
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Hernando de Soto   Spaniard who advanced into Florida in search of gold in the 1540s  
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presidio   military garrisons used by the Spanish starting in 1769 to consolidate holdings gained by missionaries before conquistadors north of the Rio Grande  
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Juniperro Serra   Franciscan monk who established a series of missions  
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missions   religious outposts where Native Amerians were either persuaded or coerced into living and working  
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Northwest Passage   sea route past America to Asia sought by the French near the St. Lawernce river  
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Company of New France   chartered by the French king in 1627 to encourage emigration to America, failed because population pressures were less than England's, the weather was cold, and Huguenots were barred from emigrating for fear of revolt, became a fur trading enterprise  
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Jacques Marquette and Louis Joliet   French Jesuit priest and fur trader, respectively, who reached the Mississippi, which was claimed in the name of Louis XIV in 1681  
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Henry Hudson   of the Dutch East India Company, named the Hudson river and established fur trading posts on Manhattan island  
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Dutch West India Company   given a trade monopoly in America by the Dutch government in 1621, "purchased" Manhattan  
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New Amsterdam   founded by the Dutch West India company as the capital of its New Netherlands colony, became a British colony after a series of Anglo-Dutch wars because Dutch emigrants were lured to Brazil's slave-worked plantations  
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corporate colony   colony that is an enterprise started by ambitious merchants  
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Virginia Company   received a charter from James I to settle North America for commercial and religious reasons  
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indentures   bound migrants to the New World as laborers for four to seven years in exchange for passage  
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Pilgrims   settled Plymouth in 1620 without a charter from James I  
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Mayflower Compact   constitution created by the Pilgrims  
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Puritans   settled in the Massachusetts Bay Colony in the 1630s  
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Old Believers   religious traditionalists like the Puritans fleeing east of the Ural Mountains along with runaway serfs in the sixteenth century  
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Anika Stroganov   Russian trader whose agents crossed the Urals in the early 1500s in search of furs to exchange for liquor  
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Siberia   largely mapped by the Stroganovs, who had a monopoly of Siberia's fur trade by 1594, became a haven for free farmers, and a place of exile after the Treaty of Nerchinsk  
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Yermak   a Cossack (horseman) in the czar's employ who swept across Siberia in search of gold, claiming territory for Russia as he went  
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Lena River   location of Siberian fortresses such as Tobolsk, Sunger, and Yakutsk  
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Okhotsk   place where a small band of Cossacks reached the Pacific coast of Russia in 1639  
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Kamchatka and the Kuriles   explored by Russia by 1711  
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Russian American Company   established by Russians who crossed the Bering Strait and founded permanent settlements, established a trading point at Fort Ross a few miles from San Francisco by 1812  
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Treaty of Nerchinsk   established the Sino-Russian border after Russians moved into the Amur Valley  
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gender   refers, in history, to the roles that men and women have played in their societies  
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patriarchy   system of social organization in which descent and succession are traced through the male line, increased in in urban societies  
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matriarchy   system of social organization in which descent and succession are traced through the female line, dominated in agricultural societies  
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liberalism   ideology based on Enlightenment ideas that favored emancipating the individual from restraints, especially governmental, economic, and religious ones  
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republicanism   political system in which the power to govern is granted by the "people" (however defined) rather than inherited or assumed by force  
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liberal democratic   thought that can be traced back to the science and politics of the Enlightenment, during which the scientific view was that the natural world is regulated by laws of nature that maintain order and harmony in the universe  
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Scientific Revolution   began during the sixteenth century in Europe, stimulated by Islamic science, born in the medieval university system when science began to develop as a distinct branch of philosophy  
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laws of nature   govern the natural world and maintain order and harmony, discovered by Renaissance science using the scientific method  
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Francis Bacon   formalized the inductive method during the Scientific Revolution  
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inductive method   also the empirical method, way of finding knowledge through observations, measurement, experiment, hypothesis, and verification  
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Enlightenment   intellectual movement centered in France that advocated using scientific methods to study human society, believed that humankind's condition could improve with the discovery of the laws of nature, used to justify the bourgeois revolution  
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laws of society   believed during the enlighenment to govern society as the laws of nature governed the natural world, supported the view that all men have natural rights that, if violated by a government, disrupt the balance of power  
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philoshophes   French intellecutals who developed much of the new thinking that challenged absolute morality and truth during the Enlightenment  
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natural rights   include life, liberty, and property, posessed by all men, must not be violated by a government, which is a contract between the ruler and the ruled  
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Thomas Hobbes   applied natural laws to society, observed after the English Civil War that people must enter into a contract with the ruler in which they give up some of their freedom to avoid a brutish state without laws  
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John Locke   wrote during the Enlightenment that all people have natural rights and that the government must protect them in order to keep the consent of the governed, who have the right to rebel otherwise  
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Charles, Baron de Montesquieu   French, argued that despotism could be avoided if the power of the state were divided so that neither one person nor one governing body had unlimited power  
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separation of power   distinct branches of government responsible for specific functions of government with power to check the other branches, envisioned by Montesquieu  
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Voltaire   pen name of Francois Marie Arouet, who advocated equality before the law, believed that the best government was one with a good monarch, and envisioned God as a clockmaker who built an orderly universe and then stepped aside and let it run  
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civil rights   included in natural rights by Voltaire, especially the choice of religion and cultural expansion  
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Jean-Jacques Rousseau   last great philosophe, committed to individual freedom, argued in The Social Contract in 1762, influenced by Chinese thought, that sovereign power is vested not in the monarch but in the people, who had the right to revolt if their will was ignored  
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bourgeois   middle class, used to refer to the American, French, and Latin American Revolutions  
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American Revolution   1776 to 1789, both only asserted English liberties and achieved goals way beyond independence  
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Thomas Jefferson   drafted the Declaration of Independence  
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Declaration of Independence   adopted by the Second Continental Congress in 1776, listed tyrannical acts and then proclaimed rights for all humanity, appealed to Creole leaders  
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first and second estates   clergy and nobility, generally exempt from taxes until 1788, when a tax was imposed by Louis XIV, who faced bankrupcy, on all landed property  
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Louis XIV   French king during the revolution  
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third estate   middle class, mostly lawyers and government officals  
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National Assembly   name taken by the third estate after the first and second estates refused to meet with it, gained lawmaking power and established a constitutional monarchy for the following two years  
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Tennis Court Oath   the National Assembly swore not to disband until a constitution was written  
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sans culottes   French lower classes, who had suffered inflation and food shortages and took to the streets prior to the French Revolution  
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Bastille   medieval fortress where prisoners were held, stormed by the sans culottes during the Great Fear, when countryside peasants revolted  
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liberty, equality, and fraternity   ideals of the French Revolution  
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Declaration of the Rights of Man   issued by the National Assembly, closely followed the American Declaration of Independence, guaranteed liberal ideas like equality before the law, representative government, and individual freedom based on natural rights  
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Jacobins   liberal majority of the Legislative Assembly of France elected in 1791, enlarged the republican crusade on Austria and Prussia  
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Maximilien Robespierre   leader of the Jacobins, executed by the Thermidorian Reaction in the National Convention  
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Reign of Terror   1793 to 1794, put in place by the Committee of Public Safety after France declared war against Britain, Holland, and Spain  
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Directory   five-man executive put in place by the constitutuion written after Robespierre's execution  
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Napoleon Bonaparte   replaced the Directory with a dictatorship in 1799, abdicated in 1814, replaced by a Boubon monarch who accepted a constitutional monarchy  
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Napoleonic Era   1799 to 1815, when France created and lost an empire enshrining revolutionary ideals  
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Civil Code   1804, created by Napoleon, based on Roman law's equality of all citizens and the security of wealth and private property, made women dependent  
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Lord Nelson   English leader at the Battle of Trafalgar  
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Battle of Trafalgar   kept Napoleon from invading England  
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Battle of Austerlitz   Napoleon beat a combined Austrian and Russian force in 1805  
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Tilsit   Russia sued for peace from Napoleon when defeat was certain in 1807  
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Waterloo   where Napoleon's comeback was defeated  
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Declaration of the Rights of Wome   Olympe de Gouge's attempt to extend the Declaration of the Rights of Women in 1791  
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Mary Wollstonecraft   argued for the elimination of economic and sexual inequality  
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A Vindication of the Rights of Women   written by Mary Wollstonecraft in advocacy of feminist ideas like educational opportunity and professional achievement  
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Klemens von Metternich   Austrian leader of the Congress of Vienna  
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Congress of Vienna   representatives of Russia, Austria, Prussia, and Great Britain constructed a peace settlement based on balance of power  
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balance of power   meant, during the Congress of Vienna, an international equilibrium of political interests and military forces that would preseve the freedom and independence of the great powers  
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Congress System   agreement that the members of the Congress of Vienna would meet periodically to settle international crises, lasted well into the nineteenth century and kept the peace in Europe  
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Haiti   revolted in a way that the Creole elite wanted to avoid and that the lower classes saw as a symbol of hope  
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Toussaint L'Ouverture   led a slave revolution that resulted in the indepenent republic of Haiti in 1804, the only successful slave revolt in world history  
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juntas   control the government after a revolution, set up by the Creoles to rule in place of Ferdinand VII during the Napoleonic Era  
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Father Miguel de Hidalgo   led Creoles to a number of early victories in Mexico in 1810, lost their support when he called for Indian and Mestizo help, executed  
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Augustin de Iturbide   a Creole officer who linked up with insurgents to occupy Mexico City in 1820, named the Emperor and briefly included Central America in the Mexican Empire, which became a republic in 1838  
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Simon Bolivar   wealthy Creole officer who led a movement for independence in northern South America centered in Caracas in 1810 which led to a nation called Grand Colombia, which broke up, rejected all efforts to crown him king  
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Jose de San Martin   leader of the South American independence movement centered around Buenos Aires, a booming commercial center which resented Spanish trade restrictions, ranged across the Andes  
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caudillos   generals who ruled in practice instead of the Creole revolutionaries, who had no expirence in government  
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nationalism   a feeling of allegience to a national group rather than to monarchy  
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Alexander Ypsilanti   led the Greeks to revolt against the Ottoman Turks in 1812, helped by Russians, Europeans, and Americans though opposed by the Great Powers, who had pledged to maintain the status quo at the Congress of Vienna  
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Victor Hugo   romantic who immortalized the 1830 French Revolution, a response to Charles X's retraction of voting rights and free press, in Les Miserables  
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Eugene Delacroix   painted Liberty Leading the People during the 1830 French Revolution, in which Liberty unites the worker, bourgeois, and street child in a righteous crusade against privilege and oppression, example of women in romantic attire symbolizing revolution  
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Louis Philippe   leader produced by the 1830 French Revolution, disappointed the republicans, democrats, social reformers, and poor of Paris as the elite actually tightened its control  
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June Days   revolution of French workers, who wanted a socialist republic, in response to Louis Philippe's retraction of voting rights from the middle and lower classes, ending with Louis Napoleon, a strong executive contained with a constitution  
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Louis Kossuth   led Hungarian nationalists in the Austrain empire to demand national autonomy, civil liberties, and universal suffrage, fell apart serfdom was abolished and the minorities went over to the monarchy, exemplified the revolutions of 1848  
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romanticism   artistic and cultural movement that accompanied liberalism, reaction to the enforced rules of classicism and of the Enlightenment, stressed emotionalism, imagination, and yearning for the unattainable  
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Johann Wolfgang von Goethe   German romantic poet and dramatist, saw the cosmos as an organism composed of innumerable individual elements, which was easy to apply to the relationship of the individual to the state  
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William Wordsworth   leading English romanticist, whose works are filled with fantasies of the glory of the English countryside  
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J. M. W. Turner and John Constable   English romantic artists who painted wild storms, sinking ships, and the unspoiled English countryside in emotional terms  
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Ludwig von Beethoven   early romantic composer who wrote symphonies that inspired emotional heroics and patriotic sentiment  
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Pyotr Tchaikovsky   Russian romantic composer  
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modernization   process of change along the lines of Western societies, hallmarked by republican and democratic political systems, a free market, economies, and military establishments based on technology and industry, secularism, and consumerism  
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Industrial Revolution   transformation of the economy, environment, and living conditions due to the replacement of human labor and energy with mechanized processes and technologies that spurred innovation particularly in production, transportation, and communication  
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enclosed fields   common grazing lands were put into private cultivation, an innovation of the intensive agriculture that led to the Industrial Revolution  
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Charles Townsend   learned intensive agriculture innovations like enclosed fields in the Low Countries (Belgium and Holland) and introduced them to England in 1674 to 1738  
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Jethro Tull   made the agricultural advance of sowing seeds with a drill instead of scattering them by hand, an innovation of the intensive agriculture that led to the Industrial Revolution  
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James Hargreaves   invented the cotton spinning jenny with a wheel turned by hand which supplied the power in 1765  
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Richard Arkwright   invented the water frame, in which water supplied the power for cotton spinning  
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James Watt   used coal to power a steam engine  
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steam engine   powered by coal, adapted to work in the iron industry to power bellows, to power mills, and to pump water out of coal mines, applied to sailing ships and overland transportation  
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George Stephenson   built an effective locomotive (train) in 1825  
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Zollverein   internal customs union among the German states created in 1834 to increase industry  
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Credit Mobilier of France   most famous big stockholder or industrial bank, which supported industrial development, founded in 1852 by two young Jewish journalists  
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Alfred Krupp   set up an armaments works in the Rurh in Germany in the 1840s, an example of abrupt and large-scale urbanization  
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proletariat   class of urban workers bred by city life  
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bourgeoisie   entrepreneurial middle class during the Industrial Revolution, stressed hard work, usually rented homes, devoted most of the family budget to food  
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Jeremy Bentham   Industrial Revolution philosopher who taught that public problems could be solved according to the dictum "the greatest good for the greatest number", believed that the government should solve industry-related problems  
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Edwin Chadwick   advocated a public health movement during the Industrial Revolution that included clean, piped water, public parks, and transportation  
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Georges Haussmann   transformed Paris during the Industrial Revolution with broad boulevards and parks and streetcars instead of letting it turn completely into the usual Industrial mess  
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Louis Pasteur   developed the germ theory during the Industrial Revolution, which replaced the miasmatic theory that bad odors cause disease and allowed identification of organisms that caused disease and vaccines to protect against them  
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Joseph Lister   formed the "antiseptic principle" during the Industrial Revolution, which led to the use of disinfectants and improved the surgical and public hospital environment  
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iron girders and glass   new industrial-age building materials  
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Crystal Palace   reflected new industrial-age building materials, designed by Joseph Paxton with a steel frame with large windows  
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Exhibition of 1851   housed in the Crystal Palace in London's Hyde Park  
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socialism   came from a romantic view of how progress could be achieved for workers, originated in France, argued that the government should organize the economy and not depend on competition, protect the poor, more equally distribute wealth, and own property  
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laissez-faire   opposition to government interference  
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classical liberalism   form of liberalism with no government interference, used by businessmen to outlaw labor unions as they restricted free labor competition  
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Adam Smith   outlined the idea of a free economy in Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations in 1776, which founded modern economics  
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free capitalist economy   described by Adam Smith, characterized by private property, profit, and a free market whose "invisible hand" guides and regulates supply and demand  
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Thomas Malthus   argued that the population always tends to rise faster than the food supply, and that government interference would make the population too high  
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David Ricardo   postulated that population could be controlled by wage rates in Iron Law of Wages  
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Count Henri de Saint-Simon   early French socialist thinker who believed that the "doers" in society, the scientistss, engineers, and industrialists, should plan the economy, create public works projects, and create national banks  
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Charles Fourier   French utopian socialist who envisioned a social utopia in which self-sufficient communities lived communally, and in which women were totally emancipated  
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Louis Blanc   French utopian socialist who advocated universal voting rights and government-backed workshops and factories guaranteeing full employment  
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Pierre Joseph Proudhon   French utopian Socialist who wrote in his pamphlet What Is Property? that property was theft as it was profit stolen from the worker, also feared the state as a solution to this problem  
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Robert Owen   successful Scottish cotton manufacturer who testified before a parliamentary committee about the poor working conditions in factories, especially for women and children, and suggested that healthy people would be better producers  
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John Stuart Mill   argued in his Essay on Liberty that voting rights should be extended to procect the rights of individuals and minorities  
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George Hegel   German predecessor of socialism who proposed the theory of change, or dialectics  
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Karl Marx   wrote the Communist Manifesto, which said that the bourgeoisie would be conquered by the proletariat in revolution as they had triumphed over feudal aristocracy, which would produce communism  
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Frederick Engels   German socialist who, like Karl Marx, applied Hegel's theory to economic relationships between classes  
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dialectical materialism   state of conflict between factory owners and workers, or bourgeoisie and proletariat, over material things proposed by Karl Marx  
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communism   a utopia in which the state would wither away, there would be freedom from want, and the world would be united in a world of international workers without national bounddegasaries  
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realism   reflected life in the second half of the nineteenth century as it was, using scientific objectivity rather than emotional intuitiondegas  
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Emile Zola   realist author who sympathized with socialism and wrote about inequality in his stories about urban slums, coal strikes, and the stock exchange  
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George Eliot   pen name of Mary Ann Evans, who examined the way people are shaped by their society in her novel Middlemarch  
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Edgar Degas   realist painter who captured the hard work of the laboring classes in Women Ironing  
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determinists   realists, believed that human beings were governed by unalterable natural laws of heredity and environment, not individual freedom  
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Charles Darwin   determinist who concluded in On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection that life had evolved or changed on the basis of a struggle for survival  
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Herbert Spencer   applied Darwin's theory to society in Social Darwinism  
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Social Darwinist   believed that social progress occurred as a result of human survival of the fittest  
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Sigmund Freud   determinist founder of psychoanalysis who theorized that much of human behavior was motivated by unconscious emotional needs  
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Feodor Dostoevsky   Russian author whose works, filled with problems of the conscience, explored the mind  
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feminists   campaigned for equal rights for women and access to higher education in the nineteenth century  
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nationalists   believed that every nation, like every citizen, should have the right to exist in freedom after the Napoleonic Era  
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Monroe Doctrine   from the U.S. in 1823 warning against European territorial expansion in the western hemisphere  
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manifest destiny   belief that God had ordained America to cover the continent, coined by John L. Sullivan in 1845  
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Count Camillo Cavour   united Sardinia and Piedmont (northwest Italy) during the unification of Italy from 1858 to 1870, after which Victor Emmanuel II was elected king  
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Giuseppe Garibaldi   rallied the people of Sicily during the unification of Italy from 1858 to 1870, after which Victor Emmanuel II was elected king  
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Otto von Bismarck   prime minister of Prussia who wanted to unite Germany with "blood and iron", used obtaining Schleswig Holstein, the Seven Weeks' war, in which Austria approved the dissolution of the German confederation, joining the northern states to Prussia in 1867  
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Franco-Prussian War   fought in 1870, ended in the French cession of Alsace Lorraine  
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Second Reich   empire made up of all of the German states but Austria in 1871  
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Suez Canal   opened in 1869, cut the sea journey from Europe to India by half, a cause of imperialism  
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Panama Canal   completed in 1914, shortened the trip from New York to San Francisco  
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Trans-Siberian Railroad   completed in 1905, linked Europe and Asia  
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neo-imperialism   acquisition of territory to keep other European countries from doing so, as with European nations seeking expansion and resources outside Europe after the Congress of Vienna  
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Cecil John Rhodes   discovered diamonds, made a fortune, and became prime ministeer of the Cape Colony  
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John Livingston   missionary who spread Christianity in Africa  
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Rudyard Kipling   wrote the poem "The White Man's Burden", which rationalized imperialism by saying that Europeans had a duty to spread their civilization  
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J. A. Hobson   criticized imperialism in Imperialism, saying it was an outgrowth of capitalism's need for labor, raw materials, and markets, influenced Lenin and others  
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Joseph Conrad   castigated Europeans for pure selfishness in "civilizing Africa"  
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Zulu   South Africans who fought the Boers in 1835  
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Boer War   the Afrikaner states, the Orange Free State and the Transvaal, were conquered by the British from 1899 to 1902  
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Berlin Conference   arranged by Bismarck to establish principes for European claims in Africa in 1885, causing a push to the interior  
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Khartoum   where Muslim forces stopped British imerialists in Sudan in 1885  
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Horatio Kitchener   British general who built a railroad to suppy arms and reinforcements for expansion attempts in Sudan after they were stopped at Khartoum  
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Omdurman   where Britain defeated the Sudanese forces in 1898 and pushed on to Fashoda on the upper Nile, where Britain came in conflict with France  
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Scramble for Africa   relentless quest of the European nations for African empire  
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doctrine of lapse   British method of expansion in India, in which native states without a clear successor fell under British rule  
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Sepoy Rebellion   mutiny in 1857 among the native regiments of the British army in India, resulted in the transfer of India from the British East India Company to the crown  
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Indian National Congress   organized by British-educated middle-class Indians in 1885, demanted an end to British rule by the early twentieth century  
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The Opium War   Chinese imperial court tried to halt the opium trade in 1832, defeated, forced to cede Hong Kong to Britain, open five cities to foreign trade, and to accept low tariffs in the Treaty of Nanking in 1842  
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Taiping Rebellion   brought on in 1853 by the economic dislocation caused by the replacement of silver with opium, favored a redistribution of land, gender equality, and tax reduction, weakened Ch'ing rule  
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Boxer Rebellion   aimed at ousting foreigners in 1900 after the Russians captured the Amur Basin, Britain acquired Burma, France, Indochina, and Japan, Korea, caused the Ch'ing to call on Western powers to restore order, was divided into spheres of influence in return  
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Spanish American War   the United States gained Cuba and the Philippines in 1898  
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modernizers   people in imperialized countries who tried to adapt to the ways of the conquering country  
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traditionalists   people in imperialized countries who tried to maintain their old ways  
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anti-imperialists   people in imperialized countries who resented foreign domination and eventually used their masters' theories of liberalism and nationalism to overthrow the Europeans  
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Commodore Matthew Perry   American, arrived with a fleet in Edo Bay in 1853 to threaten bombardment if Americans were not allowed to trade, forcing Japan concede  
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Tokugawa shoguns   dynasty of military autocrats that ruled Japan and created a centralized state  
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Emperor Meiji   threw out the shogun system because of the Tokugawa shoguns' failure to stand up to the Westerners  
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Meiji Restoration   Empreor Meiji reclaimed the right to rule in 1868, starting political and economic restructuring  
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genro   Emperor Meiji's advisers  
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Diet   Japanese parliament, only about 5 percent of the adult male population could vote  
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zaibatsus   large new industrial combines that emerged in Japan as a result of accumulations of capital and far-flung merchant and industrial operations by the 1890s  
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Taiwan   acquired by Japan from China in 1895 after annexing the Ryukus in 1879  
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Russo-Japanese War   caused by conflicts over Russian influence in Manchuria and Japanese influence in Korea in 1904, after which Japan annexed Korea in 1910  
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Karlowitz   location of a peace treaty in 1699 between the Ottoman empire and Austria, proved a turning point after which the Ottoman empire declined  
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Serbia   where a Christian uprising was ended in 1804 under the Ottoman empire, gained independence in 1867, Austria's rival  
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capitulations   series of agreements signed by the Ottomans allowing French, English, and Hapsburg merchants to travel, buy, and sell throughout Ottoman dominions, pay low customs duties, and be exempt from Ottoman law  
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the sick man of Europe   name given to the Ottoman empire at the beginning of the nineteenth century because of loss of territory, pressures of European imperialism, and unresolved internal problems  
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ulama   Muslim religious scholars, primary interpreters of Islamic law, and the core of Muslim societies, opposed internal reform  
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Tanzimat Reforms   carried out by Mahmud II from 1839 to 1876, westernized the Ottoman empire but did not end the sultanate  
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Young Turks   organization of Ottoman Westernized officers and civilians who staged a bloodless coup in 1908 against the despotism reintroduced by Sultan Abdul Hamid  
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Muhammad Ali   undertook a modernization program in Egypt after Napoleon left the Egyptian part of the Ottoman Empire, in which he developed commercial agriculture geared to the European market  
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Khedive Ismail   continued the modernization trend started by Muhammad Ali from 1863 to 1879, promoted education, infrastructure, and communication, supported the Suez Canal, incurred huge debt like many modernizing countries and was occupied by Britain  
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Crimean War   lost by the Russians to the English and French in 1853 because of the lack of a modern military, making the urgency for reform apparent  
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Emancipation of Serfs   proclaimed in 1861 to avoid revolt among the peasants following the Crimean War and to provide a labor force for industry  
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Zemstvos   institutions of local government in Russia, marked a limited first step towards popular participation in government  
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Sergei Witte   Russian Minister of Finance from 1892 to 1903 under whom the government enacted high tariffs to protect industry, improved the banking system, and encouraged foreign investors to build industry in Russia  
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Bloody Sunday   a peaceful demonstration of factory workers marched to the Winter Palace in St. Petersburg in 1905 following the Russo-Japanese War, when troops suddenly opened fire, after which more protests followed, such as that of the ship Potemkin  
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October Manifesto   granted civil rights and the Duma following massive strikes in Russia  
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Duma   popularly elected legislative branch in Russia  
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Fundamental Laws   issued by the czar limiting the powers of the Duma, backtracking from the October Manifesto  
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Peter Stolypin   Chief Minister of Russia who pushed through land reforms after the Fundamental Laws, encouraging the most enterprising peasants to produce for the market, as land was no longer collectively owned by villages  
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golden age of the middle class (bourgeoisie)   nineteenth century, because their culture and habits became the aspirations for many  
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working classes   proletariat, four out of five people in the nineteenth century, people who depended on physical labor like landowning peasants and factory owners and did not employ domestic servants  
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immigration   movement to become part of another country, as opposed to the more favored migration, from which many people returned to their homelands in the industrial revolution  
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Great Potato Famine   major reason for Irish immigration to the Americas between 1845 and 1851  
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pogroms   organized persecutions or massacres, like that of the Russian Jews that began in 1881, causing emigration  
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science   the study of the natural world  
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technology   knowledge regarding fashioning of implements  
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blitzkrieg   swift, systematic barrages in World War II that used the weapons introduced in World War I and perfected in the interwar period  
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mutually assured destruction   deterred nuclear war for countries with large economies, wars of traditional and guerrilla nature continued among those without such advanced weapons capability  
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Sputnik I   first sattelite, sent by the Russians in 1957  
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Yuri Gagarin   first man in space, sent by the Russians in 1961  
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Neil Armstrong   first man on the moon, sent by America in 1969  
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Balkans   location of Russia and Austria-Hungary's sparring prior to World War I  
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Triple Entente   France, Russia, and Britain  
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Triple Alliance   Germany, Austria, and Italy  
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Powder Keg of Europe   the Balkans  
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Archduke Franz Ferdinand   Austrian, assassinated in 1914 by Serbian-backed terrorists  
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Schlieffin Plan   German war plan that advocated a swift knock-out blow against France before turing on Russia used during World War I after Russia mobilized in response to Austria declaring war on Serbia  
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Battle of the Marne   German troops were stopped by French and British forces, outflanking maneuvers failed, trench warfare started  
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trench warfare   losses were appalling due to artillery, poison gas, and the horrors of the trenches  
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U-boat   submarine, German use succeeded in blockading Britain during World War I, which brought the United States into the war  
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Peace of Brest-Litovsk   Russia left World War I in early 1918 because of the Russian revolution  
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Weimar Republic   replaced Emperor William of Germany, who abdicated, during World War I and authorized a cease-fire  
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Erich Maria Remarque   German author of All Quiet on the Western Front, the classic statement of disillusionment with war that documented life in the trenches  
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Albert Schweitzer   a theologian who saw in Christian revival in the 1920s in the United States the return to sanity and the moral path  
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Washington Naval Agreements   plans for arms reductions were agreed to after World War I  
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Wilson's Fourteen Points   influenced the peace treaties after World War I, along with the interests of the victors  
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Treaty of Versailles   ended World War I, blamed Germany for the war and invoked repartations and demilitarization of Germany  
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national self-determination   principle applied in redistributing European territory after World War I, allowed historic peoples and ethnic groups to form their own nation-states  
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mandate system   used in former colonies of defeated powers of World War I instead of national self-determination, "nations on the road to independence" were assigned to the supervision of one of the victors, applied in Africa, the middle east, and in the Pacific islands  
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League of Nations   administered the mandate system, the first worldwide association of governments in world history dedicated to the resolution of disputes by peaceful means  
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Great Depression   started in the United States in 1929 and spread throughout the world, bringing extremist governments, and in the West, pacifism, isolationism, and appeasement, partially caused by the withdrawal of government involvement in the economy after World War I  
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John Maynard Keynes   postulated an economic theory that stressed the importance of government spending to compensate for the loss of purchasing power during the Depression  
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welfare state   grew because of World War I, meant to reduce the impact of economic inequality, social insurance measures from medical care to housing, retirement insurance, and child care  
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Benito Mussolini   seized power in Italy in 1922  
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Fascists   Mussolini's party, ruled Italy as a one party state, both antidemocratic and anticommunist, advocated nationalism, authoritarianism, totalitarianism, militarism, and idealism  
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Adolf Hitler   German dictator during World War II, believed in German racial superiority  
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National Socialist or Nazi Party   Hitler's party  
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Sun Yat-sen   established a fragile national republic in China after the fall of the Manchu dynasty in 1911  
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Twenty-One Demands   signed by the Allies after World War I, giving Japan control of Shantung and southern Manchuria  
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May Fourth Movement   Chinese students protested the Twenty-One Demands in 1919  
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Kuomintang   Sun's Nationalist party, allied with the communists in the face of civil disorder after the May Fourth Movement  
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Three Principles of the People   democracy, people's livelihood, and especially nationalism, used by Sun in an campaign against warlords who threatened Chinese republican unification  
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Chiang Kai-shek   purged the communists from China in 1927 after Sun's death  
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Mao Tse-tung (Mao Zedong)   leader of the Chinese communists, shifted their focus to the countryside after being purged by Chiang Kai-shek  
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Lucknow Pact   Muslims and Hindus joined in 1916 to work for self-governing status as a British dominion in return for help during World War I  
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Government of India Act   established dual administration in 1919, part Indian and elected, part British and authoritarian  
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Rowlatt Acts   indefinitely retracted bipartisan rule in India in 1919 as "wartime emergency measures"  
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Amritsar Massacre   protest erupted at a Hindu religious festival, followed by several Indians being killed and wounded by British troops  
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Mohandas Gandhi   led Satyagraha for Indian national liberation starting in 1920  
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Satyagraha   "strength of spiritual truth", nonviolent protest  
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Jawaharlal Nehru   led radical Indian nationalists in calling for outright independence, tempered by Gandhi, who involved the general population, prime minister who introduced reforms like equality and economic advancement, hindered by population growth  
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Dawes Plan   worked out in 1924, German reparations to Britain and France would pass on to the United States in repayment of war debt, led to a massive imbalance in economy as Europe diverted resources to debt payment, reduced the market for American industrial goods  
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Enabling Act   abolished the German Reichstag, or parliament, in 1933, followed by a program of Nazification, which brought people back to work with public works, as with many dictatorial regimes at the time  
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Long March   Chiang Kai-shek's chase of Mao and his followers from their southern bases in Kiangsi and Hunan to a new base in the northwest, where a truce was formed primarily because of fears of Japan  
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Mein Kampf   Hitler's outline of his domestic and foreign policy goals  
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appeasement   giving in for the sake of peace, Britain and France's allowance of Italian and German aggression  
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Nuremburg Laws   Hitler's enforcement of German racial superiority in 1935, deprived Jews of civil and commercial rights  
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Final Solution   deliberate Nazi extermination of Jewish communities throughout Europe starting in 1941  
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Dachau and Auschwitz   concentration camps where Jews were transported by rail and systematically gassed  
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Gestapo   German secret police that ran the state with SS, Hitler's private army  
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Anschluss   German annexation of Austria in 1938  
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Munich Agreements   Great Britain and France's sanctioning of German annecation of large areas of Czechoslovakia  
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Francisco Franco   fascist leader in the Spanish Civil War, aided by Germany and Italy  
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Pablo Picasso   immortalized the Spanish Civil War's horricic cruelties for civilian populations in his painting Guernica  
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Non-Aggression Pact   signed by Germany and Russia, allowed Hitler to attack Poland from the west as Stalin invaded from the east, at which point appeasement ended and Great Britain and France entered the war  
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Vichy   city from which the Southern half of France was ruled by a puppet government as the northern half was occupied by Germans  
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Winston Churchill   led England as it withstood massive German bombings in World War II without capitulating, alone after France surrendered  
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Erwin Rommel   brilliant German general during World War II who advanced across North Africa towards the Suez Canal in 1941  
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Pearl Harbor   attacked by the Japanese in 1941 after Russia was attacked by Germany, bringing the United States into the war, took the Philippines, Malaya, Singapore, and Hong Kong shortly thereafter  
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El Alamein   crucial defeat of the Germans during World War II in North Africa in 1942  
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Stalingrad   turning point of World War II in Russia in 1942  
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Lend-Lease   program through which the United States supplied weapons and war material to Britain and Russia during World War II  
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Arsenal of Democracy   name given to the United States for the Lend-Lease program  
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D-Day   Operation Overlord, started the same year as the fall of R, a Cold War allianceome, amphibious operation that ended in the surrender of the Nazi leadership in 1945  
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Harry Truman   U.S. President who ordered atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima, and then Nagasaki  
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Hirohito   Japanese emperor who accepted the terms for Japan's surrender after the dropping of atomic bombs, several months after the war ended outside the Pacific theatre  
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Nuremberg   where Nazis were put on trial for "crimes against humanity", part of Fascist regimes being blamed for the war  
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United Nations   replaced the League of Nations in 1945 after World War II, with its main power in the security council, whose permanent members, the United States, Soviet Union, Britain, France, and China, could veto any descisions  
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Atlantic Charter   expression of war aims of World War II's aims in 1941 calling for peace without territorial expansion or secret agreements and for free elections and self-determination for liberated nations, broken by Stalin's territorial gains in Poland  
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Tehran   location of an agreement in 1943 by which Soviet troops could liberate eastern Europe  
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Yalta   where the Red Army were already in eastern Europe in 1945 before Britain and France could enter Germany  
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Franklin Roosevelt   U.S. President who agreed to divide Germany, pay reparations to the Soviet Union confiscated in the occupied areas, and welcomed Soviet help against Japan  
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Potsdam   where President Truman demanded free elections in eastern Europe after Roosevelt's death, instead, elections were held under Stalin's Communist party  
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Iron Curtain   declared by Winston Churchill to divide Europe into two camps during the Cold War  
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Tito (Josip Broz)   Yugoslavian communist leader who kept Yugoslavia out of the Soviet sphere because he had his own army and had not been dependent on Soviet troops to liberate Yugoslavia from the Nazis  
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containment   the United States's foreign policy during the Cold War, taking action where necessary to stop the spread of Soviet and communist influence  
🗑
Truman Doctrine   announced by the U.S. during the Cold War, making it a duty to support people resisting communism  
🗑
Marshall Plan   Secretary of State John Marshall's offer of economic aid to rebuild Europe on behalf of America  
🗑
Douglas MacArthur   American general who led the occupation of Japan during the Cold War, dismantling the military, adopting a democratic constitution, and restoring the economy with American aid  
🗑
NATO   North Atlantic Treaty Organization, European defense alliance formed by the U.S., a Cold War alliance  
🗑
Warsaw Pact   military alliance between the Soviet Union and eastern European allies to counter NATO, a Cold War alliance  
🗑
European Economic Community   western European economic union, a Cold War alliance  
🗑
COMECOM   eastern European trade union between the Soviet Union and its allies to oppose the EEC, a Cold War alliance  
🗑
SEATO   Southeast Asia Treaty Organization signed by the United States in Asia, a Cold War alliance  
🗑
Sino-Soviet Alliance   Russia's counter to SEATO, a Cold War alliance  
🗑
Berlin Wall   built by the Soviets in 1961, sealed off East Berlin from West Berlin  
🗑
Syngman Rhee   leader of the republic established by elections in 1948 in the south in Korea  
🗑
Kim Il Sung   Moscow-trained leader of the Democratic People's Republic set up by the communists in the north of Korea  
🗑
Korean War   lasted from 1950, when North Korea, heavily armed by the Russians, invaded the south, until an armistice signed at Panmunjom in 1953, division remains at the 38th parallel  
🗑
Cuban Missile Crisis   began when the United States issued an ultimatum to end missile shipments from the Soviet Union to Cuba and dismantle them  
🗑
peaceful coexistence   when the United States and the Soviet Union accepted the existence of an antagonistic relationship but began to work together where possible  
🗑
Gamal Abdel Nasser   Russian-backed Egyptian President who seized the Suez Canal from Great Britain, bringing them to the brink of war, ended by the United States and the Soviet Union in peaceful coexistence to avoid a superpower war  
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Test Ban Treaty   signed between the United States and the Soviet Union in 1962, prohibited nuclear tests in the atmosphere, outer space, and underwater  
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detente   relaxation of tensions during the cold war due to the fragmenting of Cold War blocs and the spread of nuclear capability to other countries  
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revolution   complete change in the political, economic, and social system within a country, as in Russia in 1917 and China in 1949  
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decolonization   the process by which colonial powers gradually turned over power and gave independence to former colonies, like Britain and India and Pakistan in 1947  
🗑
wars of national liberation   wars of independence fought by former colonies against former colonial powers, often towards communism, like in Vietnam  
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Mensheviks   faction of the Russian Social Democratic party in 1903 that believed that Russia was not yet ready for a Marxist revolution because it was not industrialized  
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Bolsheviks   faction of the Russian Social Democratic party in 1903 that believed that a proletarian revolution in Russia was inevitable  
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V. I. Lenin   Bolshevik leader who orchestrated the Bolshevik takeover of the St. Petersburg and Moscow soldiers' and workers' soviets from his exile  
🗑
1905 Russian Revolution   disappointed the Bolsheviks because it resulted in a Western liberal government instead of a Marxist one  
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soviet   workers' council formed by the Russian Social Democrats instead of associating with the Duma  
🗑
dictatorship of the proletariat   goal of Lenin's planned and directed revolution for Russia  
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Communist International (Comintern)   exported the Soviet brand of communism around the world, added to communism by Stalin  
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Marxism-Leninism   socialism as modified for Russia, with a revolution of worker and peasant, a planned revolution ending in dictatorship of one class over another, imperialists as well as capitalists as the enemy, and the power of the state to carry out socialism  
🗑
communism   Marxism-Leninism  
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Nicolas II   czar away at the front of World War I during start of the Russian Revolution directed by Lenin, forced to abdicate upon his return  
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Provisional Government   name of the Duma following the czar's abdication, ran the state, discredited by the failure of the July 1917 offensive  
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soviets   worker-soldier committees who controlled the streets of Russia following the czar's abdication, issued an order placing military affairs under the control of elected street committees  
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Alexander Kerensky   moderate socialist appointed prime minister of the Duma who exiled Lenin  
🗑
Whites   separatists, former officers, and Provisional Government proponents, assisted by Japanese, Polish, and Western armies, during the Russian Civil War  
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Reds   communists during the Russian Civil War, controlled the central part of Russia and the railroads  
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New Economic Policy   instituted by Lenin to inject some capitalism at the consumer level to make up for the cost of the Russian Civil War  
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Union of Soviet Socialist Republics   reorganization of Russia with other states following the Russian Civil War  
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collectivization   pursued by Joseph Stalin, Lenin's successor, with forced industrialization to fully implement communism  
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kulaks   class of peasant landowners purged by Stalin  
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Third World   used during the Cold War to refer to Asia, Africa, and Latin America, looked up to the Russian model of revolution, lacked the literacy, national cohesiveness, strong middle class, and business economy needed for liberal democracies, many ended up with di  
🗑
Porfirio Diaz   dictator of Mexico from 1881 to 1910, made great strides in the economy through huge U.S. investment, making for political, social, and antiforeign discontent  
🗑
Pancho Villa and Emiliano Zapata   Porfirio Diaz's rivals, who challenged the politicians that supported the new constiturion, which guaranteed universal suffrage, the right to strike, eight-hour work days, and the redistribution of land to peasants  
🗑
PRI   Mexico's Institutional Revolutionary Party, claimed to represent all factions of Mexican politics, though Mexico City politicians gained the upper hand  
🗑
Alvaro Obrego   Mexican president who reneged on most of the constitutional promises  
🗑
Alliance for Progress   U.S. pledged $10 billion in economic assistance to stop the growth of leftist governments like that in Cuba during the Cold War, often propped up dictatorships instead  
🗑
North American Free Trade Agreement   NAFTA, decreases tariffs and customs among the U.S., Canada, and Mexico, allows for the free flow of money, investment, and goods and services, helped to modernize the Mexican economy  
🗑
Vincente Fox   Mexican president elected 2000 in a democratic election, made reforms like a free press, stabilized economy, national health insurance, and credible voting procedures, but didn't reform the state owned oil monopoly (PEMEX) or stop migrants to the U.S.  
🗑
Felipe Calderon   Mexican president of the right-center National Action Party elected in 2006, narrowly defeated Andres Manual Lopez Obrador of the left-wing Democratic Revolution Party (PDR) in what was considered a fair election  
🗑
Pakistan   "land of the pure", called for by the Muslim League in India when the popular nationalist movement was coalesced around Hinduism  
🗑
Congress Party   Gandhi's movement  
🗑
Quit India   called for by Gandhi when Britain declared war on Germany on India's behalf without consultation, though India had been given limited self-rule  
🗑
Muhammad Ali Jinnah   English-educated leader of the Muslim League who called for a Muslim state in India when the Congress Party leaders were arrested following the Quit India movement, leading to West and East Pakistan (Pakistan and Bangladesh), leading to great tragedy  
🗑
Kashmir   disputed area between Pakistan and India  
🗑
Bangladesh   nation created by East Pakistan by a revolt, as they were only related to West Pakistan by religion  
🗑
Indira Gandhi   Nehru's unpopular daughter, who subverted parliamentary democracy in order to attack corruption and carry on a campaign of mass sterilization  
🗑
Sikhs   one Indian group that posed a challenge to democracy, have a religion between Islam and Hinduism and a military culture marked by turbans, militants occupied the Golden Temple of Amritsar and used it as a base for attacks against the anti-Sikh government  
🗑
Punjab   border region between India and Pakistan dominated by Sikhs  
🗑
Majlis   Persian national assembly crushed by Britain and Russia, who divided Persia into spheres, formed, with a constitution, by a nationalist group of merchants, religious leaders, and intellectuals revolting against Russia and Britain's puppet shah in 1906  
🗑
Reza Shah Pahlavi   strong military dictator who came to power in Persia, ousting the British, in 1921, tried, as in Turkey, to build a modern secular nation, overthrown for his son because of his courting of Western powers, his brutal rule, and his support of Nazi Germany  
🗑
Ayatollah Khomeini   religious leader who seized power in Persia in 1978, forcing the shah to flee abroad, set up a radical Shi'ite Muslim government, fought a bloody war with Soviet and American weapons against Iraq, a Sunni state  
🗑
Saddam Hussein   Iraqi leader who invaded Kuwait in 1990, the Persian Gulf War, foiled by swift action on the part of the U.S. and other Arab states  
🗑
mujahidin   "holy warriors", conservative Islamic Afghan rebels who revolted against Sovietization  
🗑
Taliban   "students", took control of Afghanistan, instututed strict Islamic rules, spends money on fighting internal opposition rather than on economic development  
🗑
Hamid Karzai   leader of Afghanistan's democracy following the U.S. invation in 2001  
🗑
Sykes-Picot treaties   Britain and France agreed on how to divide the Arabs in 1916, though they had allied with the British against the Ottoman Turks with the vague promise of independence after World War I  
🗑
Balfour Declaration   showed British favor towards forming a Jewish state in Palestine in 1917, has contradictory promises to both Jews and Palestinians  
🗑
Syria   Arab country that gained independence from French imperialism, which made use of ethnic and religious groups, in 1936, by giving a treaty of friendship  
🗑
Lebanon   French Arab mandate from the Ottoman Empire, became a mostly Christian republic, collapsed into civil war in 1990 from the Muslim minority, ended in a quasi-democracy plagued by sectarian tensions, Syrian occupation, and Israeli and Palestinian influence  
🗑
Fatah   Palestinian terrorist militia that has plagued Lebanon  
🗑
Hezbollah   Shi'a Islamic terrorist militia that has plagued Lebanon  
🗑
Hamas   Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), a terrorist militia that has plagued Lebanon  
🗑
OPEC   Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, Islamic alliance among the Pan Arab nations  
🗑
Arab League   Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Syria, and Yemen, Islamic Pan Arab alliance opposed to Jewish settlement in Palestine  
🗑
Israel   created by the Jews out of the former Palestine after the British mandate ended in 1948  
🗑
Arab-Israeli War   fought in 1948 between the Arab countries and Israel, who used modern weaponry acquired with U.S. help, left a bitter legacy between Israel and its allies, the U.S. and Great Britain, and the Arab states and their growing ties with the Soviet Union  
🗑
Palestine Liberation Organization   (PLO), Palestinian independence organization formed after the Arab-Israeli War, main weapon was Terrorism  
🗑
Six-Day War   resulted in Israeli occupation of Gaza, Sinai, Old Jerusalem, the Golan Heights, and the West Bank in 1967, after persistent Palestinian raids  
🗑
Anwar el-Sadat   led the Egyptian foces in the Yom Kippur War of 1973, showing new fighting ability against the Israelis  
🗑
Golda Meir   led the Israeli coalition government in the Yom Kippur War of 1973  
🗑
Henry Kissinger   U.S. secretary of state who tried to find a diplomatic solution to Israel following the Yom Kippur War of 1973  
🗑
Menachem Begin   agreed with Egyptian president Anwar Sadat for Egypt to recognize Israel in return for the Sinai, frustrating the PLO  
🗑
Yasser Arafat   PLO leader who moved into Lebanon and instigated its dismemberment  
🗑
neocolonialism   economic or political dependence, followed liberal nations in China, Southeast Asia, Africa, and Latin America after decolonialization, context of national liberation wars, resulted in nations susceptible to dictatorships  
🗑
Chinese Communist Revolution   led by Mao Zedong, followed the Russian model, but with only the peasants, the most oppressed by the Kuomintang, as the engine of change in the countryside with guerilla tactics against imperialists, became the model for Third World peasant revolution  
🗑
guerrilla warfare   inspired by Sun Tzu, used by Mao during the Chinese Communist Revolution  
🗑
The Little Red Book   a collection of Mao's sayings that became a bible of Chinese communism, in which Mao defined the enemy as the imperialist rather than than the capitalist  
🗑
Taiwan   where Chiang Kai-shek and a million mainland Chinese fled after the civil war in China between the communists and the nationalists, weakened by fighting the Japanese while the communists gained peasant support  
🗑
People's Republic of China   proclaimed by Mao in 1949, who claimed a new Mandate of Heaven  
🗑
Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution   launched by Mao, who feared that China was becoming bureaucratic, capitalistic, and "revisionist", object was to purge the party of the time-serving bureaucrats and recapture the revolutionary fervor  
🗑
Red Guards   young people who denounced their teachers and parents, dispatched by Mao during the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution  
🗑
Jian Qing   radical Maoist, Mao's wife, arrested, tried for crimes against the people, purged from the party, and imprisoned for life after the Cultural Revolution  
🗑
Deng Xiaoping   moderate leader during the liberal counter-shift to the Cultural Revolution, began economic liberalization after Mao's death, which caused demands for political liberalization  
🗑
Tiananmen Square   where Xiaoping crushed the liberal student revolt in 1989, the year the Berlin Wall fell in Europe  
🗑
Indochina   included Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia, French colony since the 1880s scramble for empire after seventeenth century Christian missionaries won converts there, reluctant to decolonize because of the rubber and plantations and the universalist attitude  
🗑
Ho Chi Minh   leader of the Vietnamese Communist party educated in France and Russia, followed Mao's path of peasants  
🗑
Viet Minh   Vietnamese Communists who advanced into Vietnam as the Japanese withdrew, gaining peasant support by helping them  
🗑
Dien Bien Phu   where the Viet Minh descisively defeated the French, aided by the U.S., after a ten year guerrilla war, winning North Vietnam  
🗑
domino effect   U.S. fear that if one Southeast Asian country fell to communism, others would follow  
🗑
Ngo Dinh Diem   backed by the U.S. as the leader of South Vietnam, discredited as a Catholic, elite, and sometime U.S. resident, overthrown by a U.S. coup when he could not handle the Viet Cong  
🗑
Viet Cong   southern Vietnamese communists supplied weapons by the Viet Minh to counter Diem  
🗑
Richard Nixon   withdrew U.S. troops from Vietnam because of popular sentiment in 1973  
🗑
boat people   fled Vietnam after the Vietnam War was won by the North, many coming to the U.S.  
🗑
Pol Pot   led Chinese-backed communists in Cambodia, which was later invaded by Vietnamese communists, led a holocaust in which over one-third of the population died  
🗑
Thailand   also Siam, only Southeast Asian country to avoid colonization, built a culture based on a reverence for Buddhism and the monarchy, threatened by Muslim and communist insurgent factions and a military coup in 2006  
🗑
Aung San   nationalist Burmese leader supported by Britain, assassinated, succeeded by U Nu  
🗑
U Nu   Buddhist idealist and supporter of democracy, deposed by the army in 1962  
🗑
Aung San Siu Kyi   Burmese dissenter who has been under house arrest for years, while Burma has been closed  
🗑
Ahmed Sukarno   President of the Republic of Indonesia in 1950, feared Western efforts to exploit Indonesian natural resources  
🗑
Bandung Conference   sponsored by Sukarno, called on newly independent states to be neutral during the Cold War  
🗑
Thojib Suharto   overthrew Sukarno, who had been becoming increasingly dictatorial, in a coup, began to court Western capital  
🗑
negritude   idea formulated in the 1920's by black and white intelluctual, blackness, meaning racial pride, self-confidence, and black creativity  
🗑
Kwame Nkrumah   example of an African leader who kept European boundaries, focusing instead on thier own power, led Ghana to independence in 1957, first in Africa, set up a socialist state with the support of communist countries that was plagued by political instability  
🗑
Nigeria   adopted a feudal system after independence because of divisions between the Yorubas and Ibos and Christians and Muslims, which led to breakdown  
🗑
Biafra   Ibo nation that seceded from Nigeria for three years after being persecuted, became the site of genocide and starvation  
🗑
Zaire   current neame for the Congo, where, after the retreat of the extremely dictatorial Belgian regime, a series of rulers and then leftist rebels came to power  
🗑
Joseph Mobuto   created a military rule in the "republic" of Zaire  
🗑
Jomo Kenyatta   led the Kenyan independence movement to success, sought the support of all races but became increasingly repressive  
🗑
Mau Mau   rebel Kenyan independence movement, crushed by the British  
🗑
Daniel Moi   Kenyatta's successor, has maintained power despite debt, inflation, and disputes with neighbors  
🗑
apartheid   Dutch policy of legal racial separation in South Africa, giving whites the upper hand, armed by America and counter-armed by the Soviets  
🗑
Nelson Mandela   South African nationalist leader who was jailed  
🗑
F. W. de Klerk   white president of South Africa who began discussions with Nelson Mandela after the Cold War to start ending apartheid  
🗑
Namibia   Southwest Africa, a German colony mandated to South Africa after World War I  
🗑
Southwest Africa People's Organization (SWAPO)   Marxist Namibian organization that launched guerrilla warfare during the Cold War, gained independence at its end  
🗑
Angola and Mozambique   former Portuguese colonies where Cold War violence began in a civil war after they were given independence  
🗑
UNITA (National Union for Total Independence of Angola)   led by Jonas Savimbi, who negotiated Cuban and South African troop removal as the Maoist president Samora Machel promised communism, ending the civil war  
🗑
Guantanamo Bay   location of a United States naval base used to dominate the Cuban economy  
🗑
Fulgencio Batista   assumed dictatorial control of Cuba in 1952, overthrown immedietly by Fidel Castro's guerrillas  
🗑
Fidel Castro   instituted a communist government in Cuba, which became a Soviet satellite  
🗑
Salvador Allende   Marxist who took over in Chile, overthrown by a repressive anti-Marxist military junta, which was later rid of in 1989  
🗑
Sandinista   Marxist guerrillas who battled Somoza in Nicaragua  
🗑
Anastasio Somoza   "elected" general backed by the U.S., fled, leading to increased intervention  
🗑
less developed countries (LDCs)   characterized by subsistence agriculture, low capital, poor infrastructure and technology, an illeterate workforce, and dependency on primary products, many borrowed heavily for modernization, which turned into revolution  
🗑
NEP   new economic policy, allowed private trade and property, abandoned by Stalin  
🗑
Five-Year Plans   meant to industrialize Russia without Western aid by Stalin  
🗑
collecivize   farms are gathered into collectives so that profit can be used for industrialization, resisted by the peasants in Russia to the point of man-made famine  
🗑
communized   in China, farms were made to work like factories  
🗑
Great Leap Forward   program of industrialization launched by Mao after agricultural failures, displayed success because, as in the U.S.S.R., any gain was a leap forward  
🗑
Four Modernizations   agriculture, industry, science and technology, and national defense, campaign started by Deng Xiaoping, capitalism was introduced, successful  
🗑
Japan Inc.   institution of policies that foster higher economic growth rates by strengthening the relationship between government and business in Japan in early 2000  
🗑
Afro-Marxism   rigorous Marxism-Leninism used by LDCs after socialism failed, if capitalism was not used  
🗑
World Bank   a U.N. agency whose purpose is to pglasnost  
🗑
International Monetary Fund   an international bank funded by industrialized countries to make money available to countries having difficulty securing loans  
🗑
multinational corporation   problem for capitalism in Third World countries along with debt, invested on the behalf of other countries so that the profits flowed back to America and Europe, stunting local development and limiting LDCs to raw materials  
🗑
Tanzania   began independence with a mixed economy, growing communism, organized the resistant peasantry, improved the literacy rate and health care, hampered by inefficiency, corruption, and a lack of infrastructure  
🗑
Julius Nyerere   leader of Tanzania during its attempt to modernize  
🗑
Mozambique   started Afro-Marxism, which failed because of the disruption of agriculture, has since tried to make economic connections to the West and South Africa  
🗑
Grameen Bank   Bangladeshi model for banks that lend small sums of money to women to get them out of poverty  
🗑
newly industrializing countries   states between the LDCs and the industrializing countries, like Taiwan, South Korea, Singapore, and Vietnam, distinguished by their emphasis on education and social and political structures, integrate their own traditions with industrial economic models  
🗑
South Korea   has the hightest literacy rate in the world, huge industrial firms were created, industry was helped along and encouraged by the government, workers responded well  
🗑
Singapore   became a center of merchant and individual capital for Southeast Asia with a strong political leader  
🗑
Vietnam   the most recent economic area in Southeast Asia, starting foreign investment, education, and industry under a quasi-communist political system  
🗑
neoliberalism   an economic model encouraged by the United States that promoted free markets, Western investment, and privitization, adopted by some Latin American nations starting in the 1980s, weakened by corruption, rich elites, and dependence on foreign loans  
🗑
privitization   relying less on government to meet people's needs and more on private institutions like the marketplace, family, and voluntary organizations  
🗑
Augusto Pinochet   launched privatization in Chile by unilaterally freeing prices, gutting labor laws, and auctioning off hundreds of companies  
🗑
glasnost   "openness", one of Gorbachev's reforms in 1985 by which he hoped to gain new political allies among the intellectual class and to explore new solutions to Soviet problems  
🗑
perestroike   "economic restructuring", one of Gorbachev's reforms in 1985 in which he encouraged private investment and growth of the consumer economy  
🗑
Brezhnev Doctine   proclaimed the right of the Soviet Union and its allies to intervene at will in eastern Europe, denounced by Gorbachev  
🗑
Boris Yeltsin   replacement for Gorbachev after his downfall, faced problems including the transformation of the economy and political system from socialist and communist to free market and republican  
🗑
oligarchs   well-placed former communists who amassed enough property, prosperity, and wealth to control major segments of the Russian economy after the fall of the U.S.S.R.  
🗑
Vladimir Putin   replaced Yeltsin in 2000, faded liberalism, has taken control of much on the media and industry, the contrast between the rich and poor has become stark  
🗑
Solidarity   Polish democratic movement that represented the workers, Catholicism, and nationalists, won in the free elections in 1989  
🗑
Lech Walesa   Solidarity's leader, sworn in as the first non-communist leader in eastern Europe  
🗑
Vaclav Havel   elected president of Czechoslovakia in 1989  
🗑
Velvet Revolution   massive demonstrations forced Czechoslovakian communist leaders to resign before the election of Havel  
🗑
Nicolae Ceausescu   communist dictator of Romania who was defeated by an opposing coalition government in a violent revolution  
🗑
Bosnian War   breakup of Yugoslavia because of ethnic rivalries, from 1992 to 1995  
🗑
Max Planck   challenged the "God is a clockmaker" theory by showing that subatomic energy is emitted in uneven spurts called quanta and not in a steady stream, calling into question the distinction between matter and energy  
🗑
Albert Einstein   explained what happened to Newtonian laws at the speed of light  
🗑
relativity   Einstein's idea that time and space are not absolute  
🗑
Ernest Rutherford   showed that the atom could be split  
🗑
Niels Bohr   physicist who held that, within the atom, properties are massless, and that small particles move randomly  
🗑
quantum physics   quantum meaning quantity or discrete amount with the connotation of smaller, rather than subatomic, particles  
🗑
James Watson and F.H.C. Crick   developed a model for the DNA molecule in 1953  
🗑
computer   an extension of memory and a machine of numeracy  
🗑
Internet   technology of linkage that moved to the public sector largely due to the work of Tim Berners-Lee, made English the language of the world  
🗑
Fourth World Conference on Women   held in 1995, reached a consensus that women's rights are human rights  
🗑
Mukhataran Bibi   illiterate Pakistani woman who gained sympathy for her resistance to conservative Muslim practices against women, publicized throught the internet  
🗑
hijab   veil, has caused conflict over the rights of French Muslim girls to wear it in public schools  
🗑
Guglielmo Marconi   started transatlantic "wireless" communication in 1901, making world-scale interaction possible  
🗑
Sergei Eisenstein   Russian, the first to use the camera as a device to tell a story rather than to record events, made The Battleship Potemkin  
🗑
Leni Riefenstahl   made the documentary The Triumph of the Will, using the camera to make Nazi propaganda  
🗑
Louis Sullivan   invented the skyscraper with steel and concrete  
🗑
Frank Lloyd Wright   student of Louis Sullivan, built a series of modern houses featuring low lines and attentiveness to the surrounding environment  
🗑
Bauhaus   group that worked to merge the schools of fine and applied arts with architecture, culminating in buildings using steel frames and glass walls  
🗑
Claude Monet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, and Camille Pissarro   impressionists, tried to capture the overall feeling, or impression  
🗑
Vinvent van GOgh   Postimpressionist, or Expressionist, painted with a style that allowed him to depict worlds other than the visible world of fact, painted the vision of his mind's eye in The Starry Night  
🗑
Paul Cezanne   Expressionist, said, "You must see in nature the cylinder, the sphere, and the cone"  
🗑
Henri Matisse   Expressionist painter  
🗑
Pablo Picasso, Marc Chagall, and Salvador Dali   surrealist painters, used dreams and complex symbols  
🗑
Arnold Schoenberg   led musical experimentation in the twentieth century, abandoned traditional harmony and tonality in favor of abstract mathematical patterns, or "tone rows"  
🗑
Frantz Fanon and Chinua Achebe   Third World writers of The Wretched of the Earth and Things Fall Apart, argued that real independence would come only with a total rejection of Western values  
🗑
Alexander Solzhenitsyn   opened up the secrets of the slave labor camps and psychological torture in the Soviet Union in books like One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich and Cancer Ward  
🗑
Milovan Djilas   Yugoslav writer who unmasked the ideological failures of communism in The New Class  
🗑
Rachel Carson   wrote environmental protest in her book Silent Spring  
🗑
Green Revolution   higher yields and more land in cultivation because of population increase and famine after the 1960s  
🗑
deforestation   has become a major problem in rural areas  
🗑
Chernobyl   where a nuclear reactor in the Ukraine experienced a meltdown and devastated immediate regions with radiation in the 1980s  
🗑
Earth Summit   U.N. Conference on Environment and Development, held in Rio de Janeiro, where 178 nations reached acccords on sustainable development  
🗑
sustainable development   reconciling economics with environmental responsibility  
🗑
global warming   rising average temperature of the earth, thought to be caused by pollutants  
🗑
Kyoto Protocol   many nations pledged to begin reducing harmful gases that contribute to global warming in 1997  
🗑
terrorism   small-scale but violent attacks aimed at undermining a government or demoralizing a population  
🗑
Irish Republican Party (IRA)   wanted the independence of Ireland from Britain in 1945  
🗑
Al Qaeda   "The Base", reflects increasingly global terrorist organizations  
🗑
Osama bin Laden   leader of Al Qaeda, used modern communication technology  
🗑
AIDS   a disease that has spread from Africa to many other parts of the world  
🗑
genocide   any effort to destroy a national, ethnic, racial, or religious group  
🗑
Darfur   where genocide was carried out in 2005 between African Muslim farmers and Arab pastoralists, when the government faced further rebellion  
🗑
famine   a catastrophic drop in food supplies causing widespread death and the diseases of malnutrition, occur as a result of commercial changes, or are politically motivated  
🗑
globalization   a pattern in which economic, political, and cultural processes reach beyond political boundaries after 1945  
🗑
General Agreement on Trades and Tariffs (GATT)   established by twenty-three nations in 1947, evolved into the World Trade Organization, (WTO)  
🗑
European Union   trading bloc, successful, lowers tariffs for cross border trade and systemizing regulations  
🗑
Maastrich Treaty   recogniced the Euro, a central bank, and the goal of achieveng an economic and monetary union  
🗑
euro   European currency  
🗑


   

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