Communication and Exchange Networks
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Transcript of Communication and Exchange Networks
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Communication and Exchange Networks
Expansion, Intensification, and Innovations
Key Concept 3.1
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"Improved transportation technologies and commercial practices led to an increased volume of trade, and expanded the geographical range of existing and newly active trade networks."
New trade routes centering on Mesoamerica and the Andes developed.
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New Trading Cities
•Novgorod (Russia)•Timbuktu•The Swahili city-states•Hangzhou•Calicut (a.k.a. Kozhikode)•Baghdad•Melaka•Venice•Tenochtitlan•Cahokia
River port of Hangzhou
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Growth of Trade in Luxury Goods
•Silk and cotton textiles•Porcelain•Spices•Precious metals and gems•Slaves•Exotic animals
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Transportation/Commercial Technologies: Caravan Organization•Caravanserai•Camel Saddles
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New Forms of Credit and Monetization
•Bills of exchange•Credit•Checks•Banking houses
http://www.ancientmoney.org/
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State Practices
•Minting of coins•Use of paper money•Grand Canal in China
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Expansion of Empires
•China•The Byzantine Empire•The Caliphates•The Mongols
How does the expansion of an empire influence trade and communications?
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Environmental Knowledge and Technological Adaptations•The way Scandinavian Vikings used their longships to travel
in coastal and open waters as well as in rivers and estuaries•The way the Arabs and Berbers adapted camels to travel
across and around the Sahara•The way Central Asian pastoral groups used horses to travel
in the steppes
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Migrations and Their Environmental Impacts• The migration of Bantu-speaking peoples who facilitatedtransmission of iron technologies and agricultural techniques inSub-Saharan Africa
• The maritime migrations of the Polynesian peoples who cultivated transplanted foods and domesticated animals as they moved to new islands
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Diffusion of Languages
•The spread of Bantu languages including Swahili •The spread of Turkic and Arabic languages
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Cross-Cultural Exchanges- Islam
•Based on revelations of the 'prophet' Muhammad•Arabian peninsula•Reflected interactions among Jews, Christians, and
Zoroastrians•Military Expansion•Also spread through trade activity and missionaries
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Diasporic Communities
•Cultural traditions were introduced into indigenous cultures•Muslim merchant communities in the Indian Ocean region•Chinese merchant communities in Southeast Asia•Sogdian merchant communities throughout Central Asia•Jewish communities in the Mediterranean, Indian Ocean
basin, or along the Silk Road
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Interregional Travelers
Marco PoloIbn Battuta
Xuanzang
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Diffusion of Literary, Artistic, and Cultural Traditions•The influence of Neoconfucianism and Buddhism in East
Asia•Hinduism and Buddhism in Southeast Asia•Islam in Sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia•Toltec/Mexica and Inca traditions in Mesoamerica
and Andean America
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Diffusion of Scientific and Technological Traditions•The influence of Greek and Indian mathematics on Muslim
scholars•The return of Greek science and philosophy to Western
Europe via Muslim al-Andalus in Iberia•The spread of printing and gunpowder technologies from
East Asia into the Islamic empires and Western Europe
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New Foods and New Diseases•Bananas in Africa•New rice varieties in East Asia•The spread of cotton, sugar, and citrus throughout Dar al-
Islam and the Mediterranean basin•The spread of epidemic diseases, including the Black Death,
followed the well established paths of trade and military conquest.
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Continuity and Innovation of State Forms and Their
Interactions
Key Concept 3.2
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Empires Collapse and Reconstitute
•Combined traditional sources of power and legitimacy with innovationsoPatriarchyoReligionoLand-owning elites
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Islamic States•Abbasids•Muslim Iberia•Delhi Sultana
tes
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City-States
•In the Italian peninsula•In East Africa•In Southeast Asia•In the Americas
What are city-states?
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Synthesis by States
•Persian traditions that influenced Islamic states •Chinese traditions that influenced states in Japan
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Technological and Cultural Transfers
•Between Tang China and the Abbasids•Across the Mongol empires•During the Crusades
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Increased Economic Productive Capacity and Its
Consequences
Key Concept 3.3
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Increased Agricultural Production -> Technological Innovations•Champa rice varieties•The chinampa field systems•Waru waru agricultural techniques in the Andean areas•Improved terracing techniques•The horse collar
Terracing in ChinaHorse collar (early form of harness)
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•Crops were transported from their indigenous homelands to equivalent climates in other regions.
•Chinese, Persian, and Indian artisans and merchants expanded their production of textiles and porcelains for export
•Industrial production of iron and steel expanded in China.
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Factors of Decline
• Invasions
• Disease
• The decline of agricultural productivity
• The Little Ice Age
As older cities declined, numerous new cities emerged to take on established roles
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Factors of Revival
•The end of invasions•The availability of safe and reliable transport•The rise of commerce and the warmer temperatures between
800 and 1300•Increased agricultural productivity and subsequent
rising population•Greater availability of labor also contributed to urban growth
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Labor Organization
• Free peasant agriculture
• Nomadic pastoralism
• Craft production and guild organization
• Various forms of coerced and unfree labor
• Government-imposed labor taxes
• Military obligations
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Social Structures
•Still shaped by class, caste, and/or hierarchy•Patriarchy, BUT•In some areas women gained power and influence, such as:oThe MongolsoWest AfricaoJapanoSoutheast Asia
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Slaves and Peasants
•New forms of coerced labor•Serfdom•Mit'a•Demand for slaves for military and domestic purposes
increased•Free peasants resisted attempts to raise dues and taxes by
staging revolts. Areas:oChinaoThe Byzantine Empire
•Diffusion of Buddhism, Christianity, Islam, and Neoconfucianism often led to significant changes in gender relations and family structure.
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CCOT
Identify important changes/continuities for each of the following regions:
Europe, Middle East, South Asia, East Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa
Identify CCOT in terms of SPICE
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Review Questions: 1. Compare the impact of the Mongol Empire on cultures and institutions in Eastern Europe, Middle
East, and East Asia2. Contrast the economic, social, cultural, and political role of cities such as Guangzhou (Canton),
Samarkand, Timbuktu, Cairo, and Venice played vital roles in the development of in the period 1100-1368. Choose two the urban centers and analyze how their location, and other factors, contributed to their role as a member of the interregional networks of this era.
3. Compare schisms in Christianity (Roman Catholic-Orthodox) and Islam (Sunni-Shia).4. Compare and contrast the developments in political and social institutions in two of the following
regions from 600 to 1450: Pre-Columbian Americas, Eastern Europe, Western Europe, Islamic World, East Asia, South Asia.
5. Compare the significance of Indian Ocean trade patterns to those of the so-called “Silk Road” and the trans-Saharan caravan routes. Do land-based transportation networks impact adjacent peoples differently from maritime networks?
6. The era of 600-1450 was marked by different forms of treatment of women and the different roles they played in society. Choose two different cultures below and compare and contrast the role and treatment of women in them.East Asia Americas Western Europe Sub-Saharan Africa Middle East
7. Compare and contrast the impact of Islam on two gender systems in sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia or South Asia.
8. Compare and contrast the social, cultural, political and economic structures of the Aztec Empire and Inca Empire.
9. Compare and contrast European and sub-Saharan African contacts with the Islamic world10. Describe and analyze the cultural, economic, and political impact of Islam on ONE of the following
regions between 1000 CE and 1750 CE. Be sure to discuss continuities as well as changes: West Africa, South Asia, Europe