Reformation Islamic Empires ChinaJapanPotpurri Game design by Mary Catherine McGillvray.
Global Connections Transformation of Europe New World: Americas & Oceania Africa East Asia Islamic...
-
Upload
bertha-campbell -
Category
Documents
-
view
213 -
download
0
Transcript of Global Connections Transformation of Europe New World: Americas & Oceania Africa East Asia Islamic...
Global ConnectionsTransformation of Europe
New World: Americas & Oceania Africa East Asia
Islamic Empires
Game design by Mary Catherine McGillvray
Global Connections
$200
$300
$400
$500
New World: Americas & Oceania
$200
$300
$500
$100
$200
$300
$400
$500
$100
$200
$300
$400
$500
$100
$200
$300
$400
$500
$100
Transformation of Europe Africa East Asia
Islamic Empires
Final Jeopardy!
$400
$100
Which of the following was not one of the main inspirations for European
exploration?
a. the desire to conquer China and India b. the search for basic
resourcesc. the desire to establish new
trade routes to Asian marketsd. the desire to spread
Christianitye. the search for lands suitable
for cultivation
The first circumnavigation of the world was completed in
1522 bya. Francis Drake.
b. Ferdinand Magellan.c. Vasco da Gama.
d. Ferdinand Magellan’s crew.
e. Vasco Nunez de Balboa.
The center of the Spanish commercial activity in Asia was
a. Manila. b. Batavia.c. Bombay.d. Melaka.e. Hawai`i.
In the long term, the Columbian exchange
a. brought a lasting decline in population because of the ravages of
diseases such as smallpox.b. had very little influence on world
population figures.c. led to economic instability
because of a glut of Chinese silver.d. barely broke even financiallye. increased world population
because of the
spread of new food crops.
By 1750, all parts of the world participated in a global
trade network in which European’s played dominant
roles except:a. China.
b. South America.c. Australia.
d. India.e. Africa.
Which one of the following was not one of Luther’s
problems with the Roman Catholic Church?
A. The church’s decision to translate the bible into vernacular languages.
B. The selling of indulgences.C. Pluralism.D. Absenteeism.
E. The immense wealth of the Catholic Church.
Which one of the following was not one of the foundations of the
Catholic Reformation?
A. the Council of Trent.B. the religious fervor of the
Renaissance popes.C. the efforts of Ignatius Loyola.
D. the Society of Jesus.E. the philosophy of St. Thomas
Aquinas.
Which of the following was not one of the policies pursued by Louis XIV?
A. The maintenance of a huge standing army.
B. The use of the more dependable middle class as officials.
C. The creation of the palace at Versailles.
D. The promotion of economic development.
E. An attempt to make the nobles an active part of the government.
The most important consequence of the Peace of Westphalia was
A. laying the foundation for English control over much of the world.
B. promoting the notion that the European nations viewed each other as
sovereign and equal. C. combining the Spanish and French
thrones.D. ending the carnage of the Seven Years’
War.E. establishing an Anglo-French alliance
that would last until World War I.
The conflict that resulted in the establishment of British hegemony
was
A. the Seven Years’ War. B. the Hundred Years’ War.
C. The Thirty Years’ War. D. the French and
Indian War.
E. the Glorious Revolution.
When the Spanish invaded the Aztec empire,
a. the subject tribes of the empire remained faithful to the Aztecs.
b. the subject tribes fled south for Inca protection.
c. many of the subject tribes formed alliances with the Spanish.the were emboldened by their
previous easy conquest of the Inca.d. they were interested in gaining
control of tobacco as a profitable cash crop.
e. the were emboldened by their previous easy conquest of the Inca.
The Treaty of Tordesillas
a. granted England control over Australia.
b. ended the Seven Years’ War. c. split Central and South America
between Spain and Portugal. d. limited Spanish northern expansion
at modern-day Florida.e. ended the English practices of raiding Spanish treasure galleons.
The Portuguese began to show much more interest in Brazil
a. after the discovery of rich gold and silver mines.
b. after the English victory over the Spanish Armada.
c. after brazilwood became a major cash crop.
d. after a Spanish military loss to France removed Spain as a serious rival
for control of Brazil.e. after the establishment of profitable
sugar plantations.
Which of the following was NOT a difference between the Spanish approach to colonization
and that of the English and the French?
a. Private investors played a much greater role in the English and the French approach.
b. The English and French did not encounter large, centralized states.c. The English and French viewed the indigenous populations as their equals.
d. The Spanish saw the Americas as a land to exploit rather than one to settle or colonize.
e. Iberian explorers had royal backing.
The term mestizo refers to
a. the coins that were used in the Aztec empire
b. the percentage of sliver that went to the Spanish government.
c. the Spanish plantations on which millions of Central and South Americans
were enslaved.d. the Aztec term for the mysterious
disease that devastated their population.
e. the individual of indigenous and European heritage.
Which of the following statements about the slave trade between 1450 and 1750 is NOT true?
a. By the late 1700s, the slave trade had been abolished in Asian and Islamic nations.
b. In some African nations, slavery strengthened existing monarchies.
c. New crops and agricultural technology improved the diet and health of Africans.
d. New ethnic and racial categories grew as a result of contact among Europeans, Africans, and
Native Americans.e. Inter-tribe warfare in Africa intensified as
slave trade grew.
The African slave trade delivered the majority of slaves to
a. New France.b. the Caribbean islands and
Brazil.c. British America.
d. Mexico.e. the Gold Coast.
Which of the following is an accurate statement about both the Americas and
West Africa before 1500?
a. Sorghum and rye were the main food staples. b.Polytheism was the
dominant belief system. c. Large domesticated animals allowed for
extensive agricultural production.d. Trade in bananas and salt was most
prevalent.e. A written language was in wide use
at the time.
Which of the following best characterizes Africa’s relations with Europe between 1450 and 1700?
a. European powers controlled the entire continent.
b. The European impact on Africa remained minimal during these years.
c. The effects of the Atlantic slave trade were felt only in West Africa.
d. The Europeans’ direct influence was felt mainly on the coasts, while the African interior
remained largely free.e. Only North Africa fell under European
influence.
Vasco da Gama played a central role in the collapse of….
a. the Songhay empire.b. the kingdom of Kanem-Bornu.
c. the Swahili city-states. d. the Mali empire.
e. the Ndongo kingdom.
The Ming dynasty was founded bya. Qinglong.
b. Shihuangdi.c. Yongle.
d. Hongwu. e. Kangxi.
Which of the following was not an action of the Manchus after
conquering China?a. They encouraged intermarriage between Chinese and Manchus.
b. They forbade Chinese from learning the Manchurian language.c. They forced Chinese men to grow
a queue as a sign of submission.d. They did not allow the Chinese to
travel to Manchuria.e. They carefully guarded their own
cultural identity.
China fell behind technologically during the Ming and Qing dynasties becausea. of the collapse of the civil service
examination system.b. the Europeans refused to share their advanced technology with the Chinese.
c. of a massive Qing-forced exile of intellectuals as part of a governmental
crackdown.d. of the efforts of an ingenious Japanese
spy network.e. the governments favored political and
social stability over technological innovation.
Which of the following empires was inspired by its status as an Islamic outpost on the border of
the Christian world?
a. Ottoman b. Safavidc. Mughald. Yuan
e. Umayyad
Which of the following rulers displayed the greatest
amount of religious toleration?
a. Aurangzebb. Akbar
c. Shah Ismaild. Suleyman the Magnificent
e. Charles V
a. the desire to conquer China and India
d. Ferdinand Magellan’s crew.
a. Manila.
e. increased world population because of the
spread of new food crops.
c. Australia.
A. The church’s decision to translate the bible into vernacular languages.
B. the religious fervor of the Renaissance popes.
E. An attempt to make the nobles an active part of the government.
B. promoting the notion that the European nations viewed each other as sovereign
and equal.
A. the Seven Years’ War.
c. many of the subject tribes formed alliances with the Spanish.
c. split Central and South America between Spain and Portugal.
e. after the establishment of profitable sugar plantations.
c. The English and French viewed the indigenous populations as their
equals.
e. the individual of indigenous and European heritage.
a. By the late 1700s, the slave trade had been abolished in Asian and Islamic nations.
b. the Caribbean islands and Brazil.
b. Polytheism was the dominant belief system.
e. increased world population because of the
spread of new food crops.
c. the Swahili city-states.
d. Hongwu.
a. They encouraged intermarriage
between Chinese and Manchus.
e. the governments favored political and social stability over technological
innovation.
a. Ottoman
b. Akbar
1450-1750Before the Columbian voyages, there was no interaction between the eastern and western hemispheres. The world in 1450 was still “divided” into two discrete zones of interaction and, in the eastern hemisphere, Asian and African trade routes and empires were most significant. The western Europeans’ entrance into major oceanic explorations (in order to find sea routes around Africa and therefore access to African and Asian markets), therefore, changed the dynamics of trade and cross-cultural interactions from hemispheric to global ones. THEME: “Origins of Global Interdependency.”
Choose 2 of the following “Gunpowder Empires”
and discuss any similarities or major
differencesOttoman EmpireSafavid EmpireMughal EmpireRussian EmpireMing EmpireQing Empire
Tokugawa Shogunate