Rulers
East Asia
Christianity
Misc
Aristocrats and Officials
100

The Sun King, who ruled from 1643-1715 in France and espoused a theory of divine right, acting as a virtual dictator. He combined the lawmaking and the justice system in his own person. 

Louis XIV

100

A tomb for the wife of Sha Jahan

Taj Mahal

100

The selling of church offices

Simony

100

1555. Allowed each German state to choose whether its ruler would be Catholic or Lutheran. 

Peace of Augsburg

100

Royal Officials-bureaucratic elites sent out to the provinces of France to execute the orders of the central government

Intendants

200

Minister of the French King Louis XIII and moved for greater centralization of the government and development of the system of intendants.

Cardinal Richelieu

200

Overthrew the Yuan dynasty in 1368 and stabalized the East Asian region for nearly 300 years

Ming

200

He broke with the Catholic Church around 1530 and in 1536 authored "The Institutes of the Christian Religion" and helped reform the religious community in Geneva Switzerland.

John Calvin

200

The culmination of the Thirty Years' War which allowed each area of the Holy Roman Empire to select one of three options: Roman Catholicism, Lutheranism, or Calvinism

Peace of Westphalia

200
These landholding aristocrats in Japan had an army of warriors called Samurai, ambition to conquer more territory, and power to rule their fiefdom as they saw fit.

Daimyos

300

He confiscated the lands of his boyar opponents and forced them and their families to move to Moscow. He also established paramilitary force loyal to him called the oprichnina. 

Ivan IV (Ivan the Terrible)

300

In 1644 this powerful group of people from Northern China seized power and established the Qing Dynasty.

Manchu

300

Granted a person absolution from the punishments for sin.

Indulgences

300

The Woman that King Henry VIII married after his break with the Roman Catholic Church. 

Anne Boleyn

300

The Noble Landowning class in Russia who stood at the top of the social pyramid. 

Boyars

400

The most capable of the Mughal rulers who ruled from 1556 to 1605 and defeated Hindu armies and extended his empire southward and westward.

Akbar

400

Set about reorganizing the governance of Japan in order to centralize control. Daimyo were required to maintain residences both in their home terrritory and also in the capital with his family there essentailly as hostages which kept the Daimyo under the control of the Shogunate, reducing them to landlords rather than independent leaders. 

Tokugawa Shogunate

400

Those predestined to go to heaven

Elect

400

An early Scientific Method which insisted upon the collection of data to back up a hypothesis.

Empiricism

400

Officials selected by the landed gentry to maintain peace in the countries of England, even setling some legal matters, and to carry out the monarch's laws.

Justices of the Peace

500

Was known as the Defender of the Orthodoxy. He consolidated power by defeating his half-sister Sophia and her supporters, a boyar-led elite military corps called the Streltsy and reorganized the Russian government by creating provinces. 

Peter I (Peter the Great)

500

The Chinese emperor ruled from 1661 to 1722 as one of CHina's longest reigning emperors and presided ovver a period of stability and expansion during the Qing Dynasty. 

Kangxi

500

Corrected some of hte worst of hte Church's abuses and concentrated on reaffirming the rituals such as marriage and other sacraments improving the education of the priests.

Council of Trent

500
Title for the King or Emperor of the Safavid Dynasty in Iran.

Shah

500

Paid government officials of the Mughal empire who were in charge of specific duties, such as taxation, construction and the water supply. 

Zamindars