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Spicy Quiz
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Instructions With your partner you will smell 8 different spice containers. Column one: Name of Spice Column two: Form of spice prior to grinding (seed, root, bark, berry) What was it before it was ground into the containers you use on your food? Column three: Origin of Spice
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Spices Ginger Pepper Cinnamon Curry Cloves Cumin Turmeric Nutmeg
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Number 1 Name of Spice: Ginger Form of Spice prior to grounding: Root Origin of Spice: Unknown (probably South Asia)
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Number 2 Name of Spice: Cloves Form of Spice prior to grounding: Bud Origin of Spice: Indonesia
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Number 3 Name of Spice: Pepper Form of Spice prior to grounding: Berry Origin of Spice: India
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Number 4 Name of Spice: Cumin Form of Spice prior to grounding: Seed Origin of Spice: Mediterranean
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Number 5 Name of Spice: Cinnamon Form of Spice prior to grounding: Bark Origin of Spice: China/Sri Lanka
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Number 6 Name of Spice: Turmeric Form of Spice prior to grounding: Root Origin of Spice: Southeast Asia/India
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Number 7 Name of Spice: Curry
Form of Spice prior to grounding: Blend of Spices Mixture of Cumin, Turmeric, Chili, and Corriander Origin of Spice: Southern Asia
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Number 8 Name of Spice: Nutmeg Form of Spice prior to grounding: Seed Origin of Spice: Indonesia
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Importance of Spices No refrigerators – need a way to preserve meat Spices allow meat to stay fresh longer Make things more delicious Where are most of these spices coming from? Allow time for responses, should come up with Asia – ask, so were the Europeans hopeless? NO! They trade for this stuff….
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Indian Ocean Trade Pg 58-59 Learning Goal 3: Describe what characteristic of global trade after the European discovery of the western hemisphere and explain the role Ming China played in global trade.
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Ming Dynasty 1368 – 1644 Peasant revolt and uprising drove out the Mongols Ming Dynasty founded by Hong Wu, peasant soldier and Buddhist monk Reestablish Chinese rule and make sure no foreign rule would ever happen again
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Emperor Hong Wu Brought stability to China Rebuilt the infrastructure
Bridges Canals Roads temples
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Ming Government Reinstated the civil service exams
Centralized government and put eunuchs in charge Neo-Confucianism
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Forbidden City Located in Beijing
Surrounded by 40-foot high walls and a moat Highest-ranking civil servants and officials lived in the city Emperor’s palace in very center Only the emperor, his family, and certain officials/eunuchs were allowed in his palace
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Forbidden City
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Ming Society & Religion
Confucianism revived (Neo-Confucianism) Many combined all three traditional beliefs: Daoism, Confucianism, and Buddhism Emperor Hong Wu was a Buddhist monk and he ran the government based on Confucianism
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Background Essay pg As we read the background essay, answer the questions on your half sheet When you are finished you will glue this in on page
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Important terms to know
Eunuch castrated male. Important servants in the Ming government Tribute gifts offered to show respect and admiration Emissary Ambassador or representative sent to another country Colonialism Act of one country taking control of another country or region
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Should we celebrate the voyages of Zheng He?
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Document A
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Document B
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Document C
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Document D
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Document E
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Decline of Ming Emperors would waste money on lavish parties
No foreign trade = no market for Chinese goods No market = no money for producers Political corruption Emperors would waste money on lavish parties Heavy taxes (dynastic cycle is starting!!!) Peasants get mad! Weak → invaded by the Manchus
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Vasco de Gama (1497 – 1499) Portuguese
Sailed from Europe Calicut (India) Motivation: trade and commerce Indian Ocean Trade & Silk Road SPICES!!!!!!!!!!
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Competition Muslims controlled most of the trade routes
China pulled out after the Ming Dynasty Portugal had military advantage Established military bases along coast of Africa, Persian Gulf, India, Southeast Asia, and China “Trading post empire”
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Trading Post Empire Lasted about a century Eventually assimilated into local societies in Asia and Africa Steep decline by 1600 – overextended and competition
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Spain and the Philippines
1565: takeover begins “There is no king and no sole authority in this land; but everyone holds his own view and opinion, and does as he prefers.” Easy and bloodless Major missionary effort Will remain Spanish colonial territory until the Spanish- American War of 1898
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East Indian Companies Dutch and English
Militarily and economically stronger than the Portuguese Organized through private trading companies: British East India Company & Dutch East India Company Both will begin to deal in bulk for a mass market Trading posts will eventually turn into a conventional form of colonization
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Dutch Focused in Indonesia Controlled small spice-producing islands
Banda Islands Dutch killed, enslaved, or left to starve almost the entire population (15,000) and then replaced them with Dutch farmers and slave laborers Would sell nutmeg, mace, and cloves at 14 – 17 times the price they paid in Indonesia Profits soared, but local economy of the Spice Islands was shattered and people were left impoverished
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British Focused on India: Bombay, Calcutta, and Madras
Established trading bases WITH the permission and cooperation from the Mughal Empire Pepper, spices, and cotton textiles
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Silver Trade & Commerce
Silver “went round the world and made the world go round” Bolivia, Japan, Spanish America, and the Philippines Initial demand came from China – population required to pay tax in silver Southeast Asia and China became known as “silver drain”
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Japan Tokugawa shoguns used profits from silver to defeat rival lords and unify country Supported merchant class and developed a market-based economy Invested heavily in agriculture and industry Families took steps to have less children Outcome: flourishing, highly commercialized economy Laid foundation for the 19th century Industrial Revolution
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China Economy became more regionally specialized
To obtain silver, more and more people had to sell something commercial economy Central to world economy American silver was brought to Asia for China’s demand Chinese goods were picked up and sent all around the world
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Russia Fairly new Major source of furs for Western Europe and Ottoman Empire Profits from furs allowed for rapid expansion Tax or tribute imposed on every male between 18 – 50 payable in furs
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