Religion 1450-1750
European Centralization
1450-1750
Ottomans & Japan 1450-1750
Age of Exploration 1450-1750
Early Modern Trade
Economics 1450-1750
Yeah, Science!
100

The spread and acceptance of Hinduism and Buddhism in Southeast Asia is best exemplified by this religious structure. 

Angkor Wat Temple 

100

A political doctrine in defense of monarchical absolutism, which asserted that kings derived their authority from God and could not therefore be held accountable for their actions by any earthly authority such as a parliament.

Divine Right of Kings

100

The official religion of the Ottoman Empire. If conquered by the Ottomans, you were not forced to convert if you paid a tax!

Islam (jizya tax) 

100

The 3 reasons for European exploration.

Gold, Glory, and God

100

The extensive movements of plants, animals, diseases, and peoples between the Old and New Worlds after Columbus made his famous voyage at the end of the 15th century. 

Columbian Exchange

100

the Englishman who formulated the modern laws of motion and mechanics

Sir Isaac Newton

200
Two monotheistic religions that were popularized in Africa by Mansa Musa and the Solomonic Dynasty respectively. 

Islam and Christianity 

200

Built outside of Paris to glorify the French king's rule (Louis XIV) and subdue the nobility. The expenses lead to France being bankrupt.  

Palace of Versailles

200

Soldiers in the Ottoman Empire who had once been Christians, prior to their enslavement and forced service in the Ottoman army.

Janissary 

200

The two most powerful and influential nations during the Age of Exploration. 

Spain, Portugal 

200
The incredible demand for cash crops such as sugar and tobacco lead to these two significant effects.  

African slave trade (Middle Passage) and environmental decline

200

developed an improved telescope

Galileo

300

German priest and theologian (1498-1546) who inaugurated the Protestant Reformation in Europe.

Martin Luther

300

The Tsar (Czar) who "westernized" Russia by implementing technology and trade from Western Europe. 

Peter the Great

300

The final period of traditional Japan, a time of internal peace, political stability, and economic growth under the shogunate (military dictatorship) founded by Tokugawa.

Edo Period

300

European nations were exploring to find the quickest route to here. 

India

300

Large, investor-backed companies that sponsored European exploration and colonization in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, hoping to reap in the profitable rewards. 

Joint-stock companies 

300

resolved “to seek no other knowledge than that which I might find within myself, or perhaps in the book of nature, believed in Dualism

René Descartes

400

The forgiveness of the punishment due for past sins, granted by the Catholic Church authorities in exchange for money. 

Indulgences 

400

A new class of wealthy Europeans, created as a result of commercialization in Europe. 

Gentry

400

The isolationist foreign policy of the Japanese Tokugawa shogunate.

Sakoku 

400

The last king of the Aztecs. 

Montezuma II

400

A new economic system developed in the 15th century  that sought to increase the prosperity and power of a nation through restrictive trade practices. Its goal was to increase the supply of a state's gold and silver with exports rather than to deplete it through imports.

Mercantilism 

400

thinkers shared this belief in the power of knowledge to transform human society. They also shared a satirical, critical style, a commitment to openmindedness and inquiry, and in various degrees a hostility to established political and religious authority

European Enlightenment

500

The unsuccessful attempt by the Roman Catholic Church to eradicate heresies (religious opinions contrary to the Church's dogma) including those of the Protestants. Primarily conceptualized and funded by Spanish monarchy in partnership with the Catholic Church.

Inquisition 

500

The act of concentrating power at the top of an organization or country. Philip II and Louis XIV were two of the most successful European rulers to do this. 

Centralization 

500

Large, multiethnic states in Southwest, Central, and South Asia that relied on firearms to conquer and control territories.

Muslim Gunpowder Empires 

500

Form of imperial dominance based on the control of trade by establishing fortified posts in foreign territory, rather than on control of subjugated peoples.

Trade-Post Empire

500

Two new classes of people created in the Americas as a result of the Atlantic System (there are several, name two).

peninsular, creole, mestizo, mulatto   
500

laid out a complex argument that all life was in constant change, that an endless and competitive struggle for survival over millions of years constantly generated new species of plants and animals

Charles Darwin