People
Places
Specific Historic Examples
Causes
Effect
100

On one voyage he returned with 30 diplomats from various regions who paid tribute to the Chinese emperor.

Zheng He

100

A major destination of the Silk Road caravans, a center of cultural exchange as much as a center for exchanging trade goods.

Samarkand

100

Aloes, resin, camphor, ivory, tin, gold, silver, gems, rice, cotton, sandalwood, nutmeg, cinnamon, pepper were considered _______.

Luxury goods/commodities

100

Spread of Islam along the Swahili Coast

Muslim Merchants/Growth of Abbasid Empire

100

The long-term result of combining navigation techniques invented in Europe with those from the Middle East and Asia.

Rapid expansion of exploration/global trade

200

This explorer enacted policies of forced labor in which natives were put to work for the sake of profits.

Christopher Columbus

200

A strategic point of geography. Control of this body of water granted majority control of the Indian Ocean trade region.

Malacca

200

This type of sail would catch wind on either side of the ship, allowing it to travel in different directions. When combined with the square sail, it allowed travel into large bodies of water (including oceans) for the first time, thus expanding trade routes.

Lateen

200

A reason for Christopher Columbus's search for a new route to India.

Omani-European Rivalry: A trade rivalry between the Muslim traders from Oman and the European Christian traders over the Indian Ocean Trade and trade settlements in Oman.

200

The extensive global trade transformed these countries into what became known as the Maritime Empires.

Britain, France, Spain, Portugal, and Holland (the Dutch).

300

This explorer begged for supplies from his benefactor(s).

Christopher Columbus

300

Deriving from the Persian word for caravan and palace, these were often placed about 100 miles apart.

Caravanserai

300

The dispersion of Africans out of Africa

The African Diaspora

300

This caused the development of The Atlantic System, a transoceanic network made up of Western Europe, Western Africa, and the Americans; involving the movement of goods and people among those regions, unleashing deadly diseases, massive migrations, and new social structures.

The Columbian Exchange

300

The introduction of the Arabian camel allowed for this economic development.

Trans-Saharan Trade Routes established.

400

Muslim king of Mali who established a thriving gold dust trade and monopoly on imported salt and horses.

Sundiata

400

Created by the Indian Ocean trade along the east coast of Africa, referring to the commercial centers of Kilwa, Mombasa who traded with Arab and Chinese merchants.

Swahili Coast

400

The Portuguese were an example of this type of empire, one based on controlling small areas rather than control of large territories.

Trading Post Empire
400

This was a major motivation for European states' exploration and expansion.

The 3 Gs- Gold/Glory/God

Gold (new wealth), Glory (influence/power), God (beliefs that it was Christians' duty to convert people in other lands)

400

Sugar's profitability dramatically increased the number of Africans captured and sold in this economic system

Transatlantic Slave Trade

500

These Spanish soldiers brought smallpox with them to "The New World"

Conquistadores

500

Sugar plantations processed so much sugar that they were referred to as this technological innovation in Portuguese.

Engenhos

500

Santeria, vodun, and candomble are all examples of ___  ____ in the Americas.

Religious Syncretism

500

A nickname for this product, given by Europeans after encountering the good during the Crusades, also led to variety in European diet.

What is "sweet salt"

500

This had far-reaching effects beyond changes in population and diversity - it also contributed to a changing global economy, sometimes with unintended consequences

The Columbian Exchange