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What do the three have in common?

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Presentation on theme: "What do the three have in common?"— Presentation transcript:

1 What do the three have in common?
Unit 1 and 2 Review What do the three have in common?

2 Zheng He, Ibn Battuta, Marco Polo
All travelers Zhen He and the treasure fleets Ibn Battuta followed the commerce routes Marco Polo made his way from Europe to the court of Kublai Khan

3 Confucianism, Hinduism, European feudalism
All contributed to the development of strict social classes Confucianism: harmony with society Hinduism and the caste system of India the feudal pyramid

4 Great Zimbabwe, Mali, and Venice
All relied on regional and far flung networks of trade Mali: trans-saharan and Indian Ocean Great Zimbabwe: Indian Ocean Venice: Mediterranean

5 Yersina Pestis, Silk, Marco Polo
All traveled along the silk routes opened up by the Mongols

6 Bodhisattva, Female, Emperor during the Tang Dynasty
Wu Zhao

7 Genghis Khan, Seljuk Turks, Xiongnu
Pastoralists Horse cultures from Central Asia

8 Gupta, Han, Rome Classical Age Civilizations

9 Mamluks, Japan, Ming All defeated the Mongols
Mamluks defeated the Mongols in Palestine at the battle of Ain Julat Japan withstood the Mongol amphibious assault with the aid of the kamikaze (“divine wind”) Ming defeated the Mongol Yuan dynasty

10 Mesopotamia, sedentary life, domestication of plants and animals
Agricultural or Neolithic Revolution

11 Alphabet, Carthage, Sea People
Phoenician

12 Sassanians, Alexander the Great, Cyrus the Great
All conquered Persia

13 Assembly lines, foot binding, East Asia
Southern Song

14 Shi Huangdi, Augustus, Charlemagne
All “first” emperors Shi Huangdi: First emperor of China Augustus: First emperor of Rome Charlemagne: crowned emperor of Holy Roman Empire (though many historians argue that the first emperor of the German principalities and kingdoms, which is later termed the Holy Roman Empire, was Otto I)

15 Code of Hammurabi, Sharia, Twelve Tables
Legal codes Hammurabi of ancient Babylon Sharia law of Islam Twelve Tables of Rome

16 Brahmin under the Gupta, Bureaucrats under the Han, Patricians in Rome
Upper classes

17 Hieroglyph, Sanskrit, Uighur
Writings Hieroglyphs of the Egyptians Sanskrit of the Aryan-Dravidians of India Uighur (also a Turkic people) of the Mongols

18 Granada 8th C. Baghdad 12th C. Nicaea 11th C.
All part of Dar al Islam Granada, Spain Baghdad… Nicaea in Anatolia

19 Hyksos, Nubians, Assyrians
All conquered Egypt

20 Mycaneans, Hittites, Egyptians
All attacked by the Sea People


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