Major Empires
Religion & Trade
Renaissance
Protestant Refomation
Counter Ref & Changes
100

The nation known for trading porcelain, silk, the compass, and paper.

China

100

The religion mainly found in India.

Hinduism

100

The meaning of Renaissance.

"Rebirth"

100

The person credited with starting the Protestant Reformation.

Martin Luther.

100

The term used for accepting other religions being practiced.

Religious toleration.

200

The Island nation where King Henry VIII and Queen Elizabeth I are from.

England

200

The major trade route of China during the 1500s.

The Silk Road.

200

The artist known for the Mona Lisa

Leonardo da Vinci.

200

Wanted to get a divorce, so he left the Catholic church.

King Henry VIII

200

The meeting that started the Counter-Reformation.

The Council of Trent.

300

The Empire in found in the North of India.

Mughal Empire

300

The religion spread by Asoka's missionaries.

Buddhism.

300

The man from the Northern Renaissance best known for his sonnets, plays, and essays.

William Shakespeare.

300

The practice of charging extremely high interest rates on loans.

Usury

300

The languages the Bible was translated into.

English, German, and French.

400

The ancient civilization found in the Andes Mountains in South America.

Incan Empire.

400

The type of trade routes found on the Indian Ocean.

Maritime.

400

The direction the Renaissance spread from the Italian city-states.

North.

400

The leader of the Reformation known for having tolerance for dissenters.

Queen Elizabeth I.

400

The group that endorsed Catholic ideas around the world.

The Society of Jesus / Jesuits.

500

Centered in Asia Minor, the capital of this empire is Istanbul. 

Ottoman Empire.

500

The two religions that are centered in the Middle East and Europe.

Christianity and Judaism.

500

The Christian Humanist that wrote In Praise of Folly.

Erasmus.

500

Nobility of these two nations were displeased by the Italians dominating the Catholic Church.

England and Germany.

500

The 2 dissenters prior to Martin Luther.

Jan Huss & John Wycliffe