Unit 1 Flashcards
Global Tapestry (1200-1450)
Song Dynasty government
Confucianism
imperial bureaucracy
Filial piety
Neo-Confucianism
Buddhism
Theravada Buddhism
Mahayana Buddhism
Tibetan Buddhism
free peasant labor
artisanal labor
Song Dynasty cultural
Song dynasty technology
Champa rice
Grand Canal
Steel and iron
Porcelain
Islam
Judaism
Christianity
Abbasid Caliphate
Abbasid Caliphate political/government
Seljuk Empire
Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt
Delhi Sultanate
Sufis
Dar-al-Islam innovations
Nasir al-Din al-Tusi
A’ishah al-Bu’uniyyah
Dar-al-Islam transfers
House of Wisdom
Hinduism
Islam
Buddhism
Bhakti movement
Sufism
Buddhist monasticism
Vijayanagara empire
Srivijaya Empire
Khmer Empire
Majapahit
Sukothai kingdom
Sinhala dynasties
Maya city-states
Mexica
Inca
Chaco
Mesa Verde
Cahokia
Great Zimbabwe
Ethiopia
Hausa kingdoms
Europe political/government
decentralized monarchies
feudalism
manorial system
serfdom
As the Abbasid Caliphate fragmented,
new Islamic political entities emerged, most of which were dominated by Turkish peoples. These states demonstrated continuity, innovation, and diversity
Empire and states in Afro-Eurasia and the Americas demonstrated continuity, innovations, and diversity in the 13th century. This included
the Song Dynasty of China, which utilized traditional methods of Confucianism and an imperial bureaucracy to maintain and justify rule
State formation and development demonstrated continuity, innovation, and diversity, including the new
Hindu and Buddhist states that emerged in South and Southeast Asia
In the Americas, as in Afro-Eurasia, state systems
demonstrated continuity, innovation, and diversity, and expanded in scope and reach
In Africa, as in Eurasia and the Americas, state systems demonstrated
continuity, innovation, and diversity, and expanded in scope and reach