Chapter 10 Flashcards
It’s hinterlands produced staples for urban consumers, and in return, it’s crafts were exported inland by porters and to North America markets in canoes.
Cahokia
South Africa’s first empire.
Chimú Empire
Developed during the first century of the second millennium in Moche Valley in the Pacific coast.
Chimú Empire
Turkish regime of northern India.
Delhi Sultanate
This regime strengthened the cultural diversity and tolerance that were a hallmark of the Indian social order, which allowed it to bring about political integration without enforcing cultural homogeneity.
Delhi Sultanate
Trading stations at the borders between communities, which made exchange possible among many different partners.
Entrepôts
Where long distance traders could replenish their supplies.
Entrepôts
Letters of exchange first developed by guild in the northwestern Shanxi
Flying cash
Early predecessors of paper cash instead of coins
Flying cash
Special tax that non Muslims were forced to pay their Islamic rulers in return for which they were given security and property and granted cultural autonomy
Jizya
West African empire founded by king Sundiata in the early thirteenth century.
Mali Empire
It facilitated thriving commerce, with route linking the Atlantic Ocean, the Sahara, and beyond
Mali Empire
System in which the manor served as the basic unit of economic power .
Manorialsim
An alternative to feudalism of thinking about the nature of power in Western Europe
Manorialsim
A lords home, it’s associated industry, and surrounding fields
Manor