Monday we will cover The Renaissance through formal lecture notes, a video and an exit quiz. Any winter/break assignments turned in on Monday will still receive full credit.
Wednesday we will be in the computer lab 219 working on getAfive lessons.
Friday you will be tested over the material in Chapter 13. Here is the Chapter Outline for Chapter 13.
We will resume writing lab (Tuesday and Thursday) next week.
Chapter 13: Political
Transformations: Empires and Encounters, 1450–1750
I. European Empires in the Americas
A. The European Advantage
1. Geography and winds
2. European marginality,
land-hunger, and social drives
3. Organization and technology
4. Local allies
5. Germs
B. The Great Dying
1. 60–80 million people
without immunities
2. Old-World diseases
3. Demographic collapse
C. The Columbian Exchange
1. People brought germs,
plants, and animals
2. Corn and potatoes to
Europe, Africa, and Asia
3. American tobacco and
chocolate, Chinese tea, and Arab coffee
4. Silver, slaves, and
sugar
5. Europe the biggest
winner
II. Comparing Colonial Societies in the Americas
A. In the Land of the Aztecs and the Incas
1. Encomienda, repartimiento,
and hacienda
2. Creoles and peninsulares:
“Purity of blood”
3. Mestizo and castas
4. Indians
B. Colonies of Sugar
1. Portuguese Brazil’s
monopoly (1570–1670)
2. Labor intensive and
an international mass market
3. African slaves and mulattoes
C. Settler Colonies in North America
1. British get the
leftovers
2. British society in
transition
3. Class equality with
gender inequality
4. Pure settler
societies with little racial mixing
5. Protestantism and
weak royal control
III. The Steppes and Siberia: The Making of a Russian Empire
A. Experiencing the Russian Empire
1. Conquest and yasak
2. Settlers put pressure
on pastoralists
B. Russians and Empire
1.
Russia becomes multiethnic
2.
Wealth of empire
3.
Peter the Great (r. 1689–1725) and the West
4.
Contact with China and Islam
5.
What kind of empire?
IV. Asian Empires
A. Making China an Empire
1. Qing expansion in the
West (1680–1760)
2. Colonial?
3. Economic downturn in
Central Asia
B. Muslims and Hindus in the Mughal Empire
1. 20 percent Muslim
2. Akbar (r. 1556–1605)
3. Ahmad Sirhindi
(1564–1624)
4. Aurangzeb (1658–1707)
C. Muslims and Christians in the Ottoman Empire
1. “The Sword of Islam”
2. Decrease in women’s
autonomy yet many rights
3. New importance of
Turkic people in the Islamic World
4. Balkan, Armenian, and
Orthodox Christians
5. Devshirme
6. Fear and admiration
in the Christian West
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