World History



World History Name __________________

1. River Valley Civilizations (Study Civilizations Chart for contributions)

a. Prehistory

b. 5 Key Characteristics of Civilization

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

|Civilization |Location |Government |Religion |Record Keeping |Technology |

| |(Cities/rivers) | | | | |

|Sumer | | | | | |

| | | | | | |

|Phoenicia | | | | | |

|Hebrews (Jews) | | | | | |

|Babylon | | | | | |

|Persia | | | | | |

|Egypt | | | | | |

|Maya | | | | | |

| | | | | | |

| | | | | | |

|Aztec | | | | | |

| | | | | | |

| | | | | | |

|Inca | | | | | |

| | | | | | |

| | | | | | |

|China | | | | | |

| | | | | | |

| | | | | | |

|Japan | | | | | |

c. Mauryan – Asoka

d. Ancient West Africa – Ghana, Mali, and Songhai

i. Gold-salt trade

ii. Mansa Musa

e. China –

i. Mandate of Heaven

ii. Confucius

iii. Tang and Song

f. Mongols

i. Pax Mongolica

ii. Silk Road

iii. Genghis Khan

iv. Kublai Khan

v. Marco Polo

Greece – (Study the timeline chart)

a. Geography

1.

2.

3.

b. Sparta – military

c. Athens

1. Government - __________________

2. Athens Golden Age

Parthenon

Drama

Philosophy

d. Alexander

Hellenism

Rome

a. Accomplishments of Rome

Coliseum

Forum

Road building

The use of the arch

Cement

Aqueducts

b. The Roman Republic

1. Government

Patricians

Plebians

Consul

Senate

Dictator

2. Punic Wars

3. First Triumvirate

Who:

4. Second Triumvirate

Who:

c. The Roman Empire

1. The Formation

2. Pax Romana

3. The beginning of Christianity

4. The Fall of Rome

a. Split empire in half

b. Economic decline

c. military problems

d. Political problems

e. Barbarian Invasions

Byzantine

a. Preservation of Greek and Roman culture

b. Justinian

c. Code of Justinian

d. Hagia Sophia

e. Splitting of Christian Church

Eastern Orthodox

Roman Catholic

Islam

a. Mohammed

b. Mecca

c. The Koran

d. Five Pillars of Islam

e. The Spread of Islam

f. Split between Sunni and Shi’a

Islamic Empires

a. Battle of Tours

b. Seljuk Turks – Saladin and the Crusades

c. Ottoman Empire

i. Suleyman the Lawgiver

ii. Istanbul (Constantinople)

iii. New technology (coming from China)

d. Mughal Empire

Middle Ages (Study Chart that diagrams feudalism and has social changes graph on back)

a. The Early Middle Ages 476-1000

Results of the The Fall of the Roman Empire

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

Feudalism – Draw the social and power structure

Charlemagne

Vikings

Power of the Catholic Church – Gregory VII vs Henry IV (wait in the snow)

b. The Crusades

Changing the conditions

c. The High Middle Ages

Changes in Agricultue

1.

2.

3.

Results of the Crusades

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

Decline in the Power of the Church

Failure of Crusades

Babylonian Captivity (kidnap the Pope)

Great Schism

Reestablishment of Trade

Black Death

Hundred Years War – new weapons

1.

2.

Formation of Nation States (Study Timeline)

a. England

William the Conqueror

Battle of Hastings

Magna Carta

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

Model Parliament

Hundred Years War

War of the Roses

b. France

Joan of Arc

Hundred Years War

c. Spain

Ferdinand and Isabella

Reconquista

Inquisition

The Renaissance

a. Means Rebirth

b. Rediscovery of Greek and Roman Culture

c. Began in Italian City States

d. Humanism

e. Individualism

Leonardo da Vinci

Michelangelo

Shakespeare

Scientific Revolution

a. Heliocentric

b. Galileo

c. Copurnicus

d. Compass

e. Astrolabe

f. Caravel

g. Scientific Method

Exploration – Find new routes to Asia to compete with Italian City State

a. Mercantilism:

b. Henry the Navigator

c. Portugal

First around Africa

d. Spain

Christopher Columbus – America

Reformation (Causes Chart)

a. Martin Luther

Where:

Document:

3 beliefs

1.

2.

3.

Sale of Indulgences

b. John Calvin

Predestination

c. Henry VIII

Divorce

Church of England

Spain

a. Exploration

b. Colonization

c. Mercantilism

d. Royal Fifth

e. Spain’s Golden Age

f. Philip II

g. The Spanish Armada

English Constitutional History (Law Chart and Tudor/Stuart Notes)

a. Norman England

William the Conqueror

Battle of Hastings 1066

b. The Magna Carta 1215

King John

c. Model Parliament 1295

Tudors

d. Henry VIII

Needs Parliament to grant divorce

e. Bloody Mary

Persecution of Protestants

Marriage to Philip II of Spain

f. Elizabeth

Foreign Policy

Exploration

Colonization in America

Defeat of Spanish Armada

Last Tudor Monarch

Stuarts

g. James I

Belief in divine right and absolutism

American colonies

Debt

h. Charles I

Belief in Divine Right and Absolutism

Debt

Petition of Rights

1.

2.

3.

4.

i. English Civil War 1642 - 1649

Cavaliers vs Roundheads

Charles II put on trial and beheaded

John Locke – Natural Rights Theory

j. Commonwealth

Oliver Cromwell – Puritan dictator

k. Restoration of the Monarchy 1660

Stuart Monarchy restored

Charles II

Habeas Corpus

Formation of Political Parties – Whigs and Tories

l. James II

Belief in Divine Right and Absolutism

Catholic

Persecution of Protestants

m. Glorious Revolution

James II overthrown in a bloodless revolution

Parliament invited William and Mary to rule

n. William and Mary

Joint Rulers

English Bill of Rights

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

Constitutional Monarchs

Absolutism – Belief in Divine Right

a. Russia – still feudal, most people serfs

Romanovs

Peter the Great

Tried to Westernize Russia

Wanted a warm water port

St. Petersberg

Catherine the Great

Enlightened Despot

Tried to reform Russia

Added territory

b. Prussia

Hohenzollern

Militaristic

c. Austria

Hapsburg

Pragmatic Sanction

Maria Theresa

d. France

Bourbon

Henry IV (Henry of Navarre) first Bourbon king

Edict of Nantes

Louis XIII

Cardinal Richelieu

Louis XIV – Nicknamed ______________

Versailles

Louis XVI

Enlightenment (Graphic Organizer with Notes on back)

a. John Locke

Natural Rights

Influenced Jefferson when writing the _____________________________

b. Montesquieu

Separation of Powers

c. Voltaire

d. Rousseau

e. Adam Smith – economics

French Revolution

a. Old Regime – 3 Estates (Cartoon)

1.

2.

3.

b. Estates General Called

Debt

c. Storming the Bastille

d. Tennis Court Oath

Promise to write a constitution

e. Declaration of the Rights of Man

f. Reign of Terror – Radical phase

Guillotine

Execution of King and Queen

Robespierre

Committee of Public Safety

g. The Directory

Napoleon

a. Rise to power

b. Emperor

c. Code Napoleon

d. Trafalger

e. Continental System

f. Invasion of Russia

Grand Army

Scorched earth policy

g. Waterloo

Latin America

a. Haiti first Latin American country to gain independence

b. France too involved with Rev and Napoleon to keep colonies

c. Monroe Doctrine

Age of Metternich

a. Congress of Vienna

b. Metternich – Austria

c. Balance of Powers

d. Great Powers

e. Conservatism

f. Liberalism

g. Radicalism

Industrial Revolution

a. Agricultural Revolution

Enclosure Movement

b. Began in Britain

c. Textile Industry

d. Mass production

e. Working Conditions

Labor Unions

Karl Marx

Communism

f. Inventions

Eli Whitney – cotton gin

James Watt – steam engine

Samuel Morse - telegraph

Alexander Graham Bell - telephone

Henry Ford – assembly line

Unification and Nationalism

a. Italy

b. Germany

German Confederation

Bismarck

Blood and Guts

Seven Weeks War

Imperialism

a. Causes of Imperialism

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

b. Scramble for Africa

c. Colossus of Rhodes Cartoon

d. White Man’s Burden by Rudyard Kipling

e. Opium War

f. Spheres of Influence - China

g. Open Door Policy

h. Boxer Rebellion

i. US Commodore Matthew Perry forced Japan open

j. Russo-Japanese War

k. British East India Company

l. Sepoy Mutiny

m. Spanish – American War

n. Monroe Doctrine

o. Roosevelt Corollary

p. Platt Amendment

World War I

a. Causes (MAIN)

1.

2.

3.

4.

b. Industrialization

Machine gun

Trench warfare

Chemical weapons – gas

Tanks

Airplanes

Submarines

Total War

Propaganda

Rationing

c. Events

Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand

Sinking of the Lusitania

Unrestricted submarine warfare of 1917

Zimmerman Telegram

d. Why Peace Led to War

Military Restrictions on Germany

Rhineland

Reparations

Territorial loses

Russian Revolution

a. Still feudal society structure

b. Not industrialized

c. Lost the Russo- Japanese War

d. Losses in World War I

e. Economic problems

f. Abdication of Czar Nicholas II

g. Bolsheviks (communists) seize power

Lenin

Father of Communism

Command Economy under the New Economic Policy

Stalin

Great Purge

Five Year Plans – command economy

h. Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR)

................
................

In order to avoid copyright disputes, this page is only a partial summary.

Google Online Preview   Download