Which places are included in unit 1.1, East Asia?
What are the three networks of exchange from unit 2?
Silk Roads, Sea Roads and Sand Roads
What's the nickname for the empires of unit 3.1?
Gunpowder empires
Which country gave the Statue of Liberty to the US?
France
False - though they did have a tax (jizya) on non-Muslims
What was the main trading city of the Sand Roads?
Timbuktu
Which land based empire used Shia Islam to legitimize their rule?
Safavid
What is the only food that never spoils?
Honey
What is Mr. Mattioli's favorite word from Unit 1?
Vijayanagara
What were the 2 main trading cities of the Silk Roads?
Kashgar and Samarkand
Which Byzantine city did the Ottomans take over and what did they change the name to?
Constantinople. Changed name to Istanbul
How many bones are in the human body?
206
What are the political and economic systems that are associated with Europe from 1200-1450 and how are they different?
Feudalism - focuses on who has power
Manorialism - focuses on labor
Name one technology that helped establish each trading network from the unit
Compass/Astrolabe/Chunk Ships - Sea Roads
Caravanserai/Paper Money/Bank Notes - Silk Roads
Caravans/Saddles - Sand Roads
Babur, the founder of the Mughal Empire descended from who and who?
Timur and Chinggis Khan
What kind of trees grow from acorns?
Oak trees
What is one specific continuity between Unit 1, 2 and 3?
Lack of rights/freedoms for women, technologies advancing trade/helping build empires
What were the positive and negative effects of the Mongol Empire?
Negative - Conquest, plague
Positive - Peace, rights for women
This empire in Unit 3.1 is different from the rest because Islam is limited to the urban elites and not spread throughout the whole population.
Songhay or Songhai Empire
What is the blood type referred to as the universal recipient?
AB