Mughal Madness
Chinese Dynasties
Changes in Europe
20th Century
WHAP Legitimacy
100

The Mughals were one of this type of empire, who used the technology to expand, consolidate, and protect their empire.

Gunpowder Empire.

100

This dynasty saw China's economic revolution in its reign from 960 until it fell to the Mongols in 1279.

Song

100

This movement began in 1517, and created a culture of questioning not just religious authority, but political and academic authority as well.

Protestant Reformation

100
This prolonged ideological struggle lasted for the better half of the 20th century and got hot a few times in Korea, Viet Nam, Afghanistan, and other proxy wars.

The Cold War

100

In the Ottoman Empire, legitimacy was often tied to these prinicples, with sultans presenting themselves as protectors and keeping support.

Islam

200

The Mughal Dynasty was founded in India in 1526 by Babur, who practiced this religion, different from the majority Hindu population.

Islam

200

This great Chinese Dynasty sought to make China great again after the Mongols and greatly added to the Great Wall before falling in 1644.

Ming

200

Many of the big shifts in Europe were possible due to this device, which appeared in Europe in the early 1400s?

The Printing Press

200

One of the biggest technological developments of the 20th century is this commodity developing from ARPANET, used by the Department of Defense.

The Internet

200

This was the Confucian principle that both allowed legitimacy for the ruling party, but validated revolt against them.

Mandate of Heaven

300
Widely regarded as the Mughal's greatest leader, this grandson of Babur reigned from 1556 to 1605 and expanded the empire greatly.

Akbar 

300

This set of tests helped select a governmental body made of merit instead of social standing and had various levels from provincial to palace.

Civil Service Examination

300

This movement began in the mid-17th century after applying the same natural laws of the universe to human society, examining human behavior and the relationship between ruler and ruled.

Enlightenment

300

In 1947 with the end of Brtish rule, India was divided up into India for the Hindus and this country, for the Islamic population.

Pakistan

300

This tax on non-Muslims was often prohibited in Islamic dynasties to help consolidate power and support.

Jizya

400

This event in 1857 effectively ended the Mughals when the British formally took control of the subcontinent.

The Indian Rebellion or Sepoy Mutiny

400

The collaspe of the Qing Dynasty came from foreign interference by Europe and internal pressures like the Boxer Rebellion and this rebellion, led by Hong Xiquan.

Taiping Rebellion

400

This man published the Heliocentric Model in 1543, effectively kicking off the Scientific Revolution.

Nicolaus Copernicus

400

This precursor to the United Nations was championed by US President Woodrow Wilson in his 14 points, though the US never joined it.

League of Nations

400

In Europe, people believed that rulers had this principle that allowed them to rule. 

Divine Right

500

This 5th Mughal emperor and father of Aurangzeb was imprisoned to face the Taj Mahal, a monument he had erected for his favorite wife.

Shah Jahan

500

The Qing Dyansty collapsed in 1912 and was replaced by this nationalist party that flet to Real China in 1949.

Koumintang (KMT) or Guomingdang (GMD)

500

This female Enlightenment thinker published A Vindication on the Rights of Woman in 1792, setting the groundwork for the budding feminist movement.

Mary Wollstonecraft

500

The Green Revolution began in this country in the early 1940s and pioneered high-yield varities of crops, synthetic fertilizers, pesticides, and more efficient farming and irrigation methods.

Mexico
500

In the Ottoman Empire, the rulers legitimized their rule through power, often protected by Janissaries, who were enlisted through what tribute system?

Devshirme