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Potpourri
100

This rising Islamic power reached the height of its expansion in the fifteenth century, ultimately seizing Constantinople and positioning itself as successor to the Roman Empire.

The Ottoman Empire

100

This seafaring Genoese navigator is often credited with "discovering" the Americas.

Christopher Columbus

100

Innovations in this field, also known as map-making, facilitated long-distance travel and supported monarchs' claims to conquered lands.

Cartography

100

In this year, Columbus sailed the ocean blue

1492

100

This is the name given to the period of European history marked by a renewed flourishing, or "rebirth," of classical humanist culture

The Renaissance

200

This Chinese dynasty made a deliberate and concerted effort to eliminate all signs of Mongol rule, including the use of Mongol names, dress, and culture.

The Ming Dynasty

200

This Muslim eunuch captained the largest and most impressive maritime expedition the world had ever seen. By enrolling South Asian peoples and states into the Chinese tributary system, he established Chinese power in the Indian Ocean and exerted Chinese control over foreign trade in the region

Zheng He
200

This innovation, originally invented in China, used magnets to allow explorers to navigate longer distances with greater precision than ever before

The magnetic compass

200
It was in this year that the Ottoman Turks conquered the city of Constantinople

1453

200

This is the name given to the process by which peoples, technologies, diseases, ideas, and crops traversed the Atlantic Ocean world

The Columbian Exchange

300

This Islamic empire famously made the decision to impose a Shia version of Islam as the official religion of the state, in contrast to the Sunni form of the faith that characterized its neighbors.

The Safavid Empire

300

These Spanish monarchs, intent on reconquering the Iberian peninsula under Christian rule, empowered Columbus to seek a westward route to India.

King Ferdinand & Queen Isabela

300
This technology first emerged in medieval China, but innovations undertaken by a German metalworker named Johannes Gutenberg put it on the map and revolutionized both print and the world.

The printing press

300

It was in this decade that Johannes Gutenberg perfected a new type of printing press with moveable type, setting off the "Print Revolution" that transformed the history of our world forever

1450s

300

This city was a major religious center of the Incan Empire in what is now Peru.

Machu Picchu

400

Established in the early sixteenth century, this Islamic empire established unified control over the Indian peninsula through a combination of commercial success and inclusive policies toward Hindus and Christians. 

The Mughal Empire

400

This Ming Emperor sponsored the making of an 11,000 volume Encyclopedia, which compiled all previous writing on such topics as history, geography, ethics, and government.

Emperor Yongle

400

This technological innovation, which first emerged in medieval China, made warfare significantly more lethal but enabled it to be carried out across a greater distance.

Gunpowder

400

This year signaled the end of Zheng He's voyages - and with it, the last oceanic expeditions of the Ming Dynasty in China

1433

400

This is the name given to the American continents by fifteenth- and sixteenth-century European contemporaries

The New World

500

This West African empire rose to power in the second half of the fifteenth century, growing rich off the trans-Saharan trade routes and blossoming into one of the world's foremost centers of Islamic learning and commerce.

The Songhay Empire

500

In "City of Ladies," this Renaissance author, the daughter of a Venetian official, used the power of print to push back against the misogynistic ideas espoused by her contemporaries.

Christine de Pizan

500

This is the name for a small, fast Spanish or Portuguese sailing ship of the 15th–17th centuries.

Caravel

500

In this year, Portuguese mariner Vasco de Gama launched a voyage that took him around the tip of South Africa - the first European ever to navigate around the Cape of Good Hope

1497

500

This Renaissance treatise in political philosophy was written by Niccolo Machiavelli and famously argued that it is better for rulers to be feared by their subjects than loved

The Prince

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