Maritime Empires
Land-Based Empires
Economics and Labor
Society and Technology
Grab-Bag
100

These three factors motivated European explorers to journey to the "New" World.

God, Gold, and Glory

100

The Ottoman Empire established their capital by conquering this city and renaming it.

Constantinople (Istanbul)

100

The transfer of animals, plants, diseases, ideas, and more between the "Old" World and the "New" is known as the...

Columbian Exchange

100

The religious upheaval in the Roman Catholic Church in 1517, which resulted in a denominational splintering, is known as the...

Protestant Reformation

100

The Atlantic System, with its three "points" of Europe, Africa, and the Americas, is also known as...

Triangular Trade

200

This man is credited with launching the Age of Exploration through his development of Portuguese maritime exploration and trade.

Prince Henry the Navigator

200
The Islamic gunpowder empire located in Persia and led by a Shah was the...

Safavid Empire

200

The Ming Dynasty instituted a disastrous policy that forced Chinese people to pay taxes in...

silver

200

During the Scientific Revolution this Englishman discovered and established functional, structural laws of the universe that governed movement and gravity.

Isaac Newton

200

The period of global cooling from 1300 to 1870 that featured a drop in agricultural output is known as the...

Little Ice Age

300

This movement in the Catholic Church, designed to uproot Protestants, Jews, and Muslims from Spanish and Portuguese territories, led to the banning of books, torture, and executions of non-Catholics.

The Inquisition

300
The Russian Empire experienced its biggest growth and largest expansions after being modeled after the Western powers of Europe by this man.

Peter the Great

300

The English and the Dutch used these types of companies to set up colonies around the world.

Charter Companies

300

This belief in Europe stated that rulers were selected by the Christian God and that any challenge to the king was a challenge to God.

The Divine Right of Kings

300
Spanish conquerers were granted large feudal states in the Americas (where they used forced labor from the natives) known as...

enconmiendas

400

The 17th-century conflict began as a war between Catholic and Protestant states, but ultimately ended when France entered to defeat Spain (even though both were Catholic countries).

Thirty Years War

400

Askia the Great was the leader at the height of this African Empire, ruling from Gao and forcing elites to convert to Islam. 

Songhai Dynasty

400

The economic system, along with colonialism, was designed to enrich the mother country (primarily through the exportation of certain finished goods)

Mercantilism

400

The new, emerging class of wealthy merchants, bankers, investors, and landowners in Europe was known as the...

Gentry

400

The Ottoman Sultan established an elite military unit known as the janissaries through this "blood tax" - involving the abduction, castration, and strict training of Christian boys.

Devshirme

500

This West-Central-African kingdom saw its ruler convert to Roman Catholicism in 1491 after contact with the Portuguese, and benefited economically as a major source of slaves for European powers.

Kingdom of the Kongo
500

This Catholic peasant revolt (largely over tax hikes) is the reason why Japan closed itself off from the world - a policy known as sakoku.

Shimabara Rebellion

500

The rise in private property in Europe (and removal of peasants from common land) during the 16th and 17th centuries is known as...

The Enclosure Movement

500

The syncretic blending of Christianity and West African beliefs that occurred due to the slave trade is known as...

Vodun (Voodoo)

500

The Portuguese forced cities and merchants to buy these certificates in order to trade in the Indian Ocean

Cartaz

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