AP World History - Unit 1: The Global Tapestry
After the fall of classical civilizations (like Rome and Han China), new political states and empires emerged, often influenced by the remnants of earlier cultures. Trade networks such as the Silk Roads, Indian Ocean trade routes, and Trans-Saharan trade expanded, promoting cultural and economic exchange between regions.
History Within Civilizations
What rises out of collapse of classical civilization and interactions developing between new states
Growth of long-distance trade
Key Terms
History Within Civilizations
What rises out of collapse of classical civilization and interactions developing between new states
Growth of long-distance trade
...
World’s Major Religions
Most belief systems still are impacting history
Most major religions have divisions = subgroups and sects (focus more on ove...
Religious Mysticism
adherents within religions focusing on mystical experiences that bring them closer to divine - prayer, meditation
Buddhism
Cultures: India, China, Southeast Asia, Japan
Context:
Founded by Siddhartha...
Christianity
Cultures: started as group of Jews, quickly expanded through Europe, northeastern Africa, Middle East
Confucianism
Cultures: China (400 BCE+)
Context:
Founded by Confucius, educator and polit...
Related Flashcard Decks
Study Tips
- Press F to enter focus mode for distraction-free studying
- Review cards regularly to improve retention
- Try to recall the answer before flipping the card
- Share this deck with friends to study together
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
History Within Civilizations | What rises out of collapse of classical civilization and interactions developing between new states
|
World’s Major Religions |
|
Religious Mysticism | adherents within religions focusing on mystical experiences that bring them closer to divine - prayer, meditation |
Buddhism |
|
Christianity |
|
Confucianism |
|
Hinduism |
|
Islam |
|
Judaism |
|
Abbasid Dynasty | Islamic Empire from 750-1258 CE - capital in Baghdad
|
What caused the decline of Islamic Caliphates? |
|
Middle Ages in Europe |
|
European Feudalism | Hierarchy social system of Middle Ages |
Feudalism Structure |
|
Emergence of Modern Countries | At end of Middle Ages, people began moving from feudal kingdom organization to linguistic and cultural organization |
Germany’s Path to Statehood (13th Century) | reigning family of emperorship died out, entering a period of interregnum (time between kings)
|
England’s Path to Statehood (13th Century) | English nobles rebelled against King John and forced him to sign the Magna Carta - reinstated the nobles, laid foundation for Parliament
|
France’s Path to Statehood (13th Century) | England began to occupy many parts of France which spurred revolts - Joan of Arc fought back English out of Orleans
|
Hundred Year’s War (1337-1453) | Unified France, leading to England’s withdrawal from the country |
Spain’s Path to Statehood (13th Century) | Queen Isabella of Castile and Ferdinand of Aragon married to unite Spain in a single monarchy and forced all residents to convert to Christianity - Spanish Inquisition |
Russia’s Path to Statehood (13th Century) | Taken over by Tartars (group of eastern Mongols) under Genghis Kahn in 1242 until Russian prince Ivan III expanded his power in 1400s and became czar |
China’s Song Dynasty (960-1279) |
|
Foot Binding | Song Dynasty practice of bounding women’s feet after birth to keep them small |
China’s Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) | Took over China again after brief period of Mongol dominance |
China’s Zen Practice | meditation and appreciation of beauty |
Japan | relatively isolated from external influences outside Asia for many years
|
Japan’s Feudal Structure |
|
India | History filled with conflict between Islam and Hinduism
|
Khmer Empire (9th-15th century) | Hindu Empire in modern day Cambodia, Laos, Thailand
|
Africa |
|
Africa’s Hausa Kingdoms | off Niger River, series of state system kingdoms
|
3 Great Ancient Civilizations of the Americas | Maya, Incas, Aztecs |
Aztecs |
|
Incas |
|