Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Chapter 13. B. Chinese Expansion 1. Ming dynasty (1368-1644) – replaces the Yuan (Mongols) a. Expansionist – Into Mongolia, Korea, Vietnam, Tibet b. State.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Chapter 13. B. Chinese Expansion 1. Ming dynasty (1368-1644) – replaces the Yuan (Mongols) a. Expansionist – Into Mongolia, Korea, Vietnam, Tibet b. State."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 13

2 B. Chinese Expansion 1. Ming dynasty (1368-1644) – replaces the Yuan (Mongols) a. Expansionist – Into Mongolia, Korea, Vietnam, Tibet b. State sponsors commercial ventures to India, Middle East, Africa c. Age of Expansion (1405 – 1423) --Seven major sea expeditions by Zheng He (Zhenghe) --Voyages to India & Africa --Voyages end (1433)

3 d. Chinese return to isolation – back to tradition…internal economy was doing well…saw little need for outside trade --Still trade in Asian area – Philippines, Malaysia, and Indonesia --This opened opportunities for Western traders

4 VI. Western Europe Begins to Awaken A. Began with relative stagnation, 14th, 15th centuries 1. Food supplies insufficient – famines were a constant threat after 1300…no agricultural innovation 2. 1348, Black Death – bubonic plague a. Spread along trade routes…through nomads, sea routes b. 30-40 percent of European population dies; led to labor shortages; pay increases

5 The Black Death “This scourge had implanted so great a terror in the hearts of men and women that brothers abandoned brothers, uncles their nephews, sisters their brothers, and in many cases wives deserted their husbands. But even worse…fathers and mothers refused to nurse and assist their own children.”

6 B. Signs of Rebirth…Decline of Feudalism 1. Feudal monarchies became increasingly centralized, they provided effective government…cities grow a. Power of aristocracy began to decrease 2. Hundred Years War – military innovation…longbows, gunpowder, cannon, peasant armies

7 Battles of Crecy & Agincourt

8 3. Iberia – Spain & Portugal a. Regional monarchs were strengthened through Reconquista – driving out the Muslim occupiers --From 11th cent. military leaders had been fighting --Regional monarchies began to from 1400 --Castile and Aragon allied through marriage in 1469; they undertook a Christian mission to expel Muslims and Jews from the Iberian Peninsula

9 C. European Trade Problems 1. Trade imbalance a. Demand for Asian luxury products led to a gold shortage by 1400…Europeans did not have goods that were in demand in Asia, therefore they had to use gold to acquire the desired Asian goods. b. This gold shortage threatened Europe with economic collapse. 2. Trade was also threatened by the Ottoman Empire a. ****This provided an impetus to find other ways to bypass the Muslim-dominated trade routes**** --This eventually led to European exploration. Contact with Asia came through the Mongol Empire!!!!!!!!!

10 D. Worldly Shift of the Italian Renaissance 1. Italy takes the lead in the 14th century…WHY? a. “Rebirth” of classical thought facilitated by wealth of Italian city-states and contact with Byzantine Empire --Italy led Europe in both trade and banking. 2. Religious art & literature was the focus…becomes secular a. Personal fame for artists, writers more important 3. City-states support new commerce and the arts

11 E. Renaissance Society and Culture 1. Renaissance mostly a cultural, not political, movement 2. Humanism – emphasis on the individual and the human spirit based on the classics

12 3. Painters a. Renaissance artists were patronized by the Church and the wealthy b. Innovations include use of perspective and greater emphasis on the human form c. Great Renaissance artists include Michelangelo, Raphael, and Leonardo da Vinci La Pieta- Michelangelo Sistine Chapel Michelangelo The center of Renaissance art was Florence!

13 The Annunciation- Botticelli Example of Perspective

14 VII. Exploration and Colonization A. Why did Europeans Explore? 1. The Crusades 2. Contact with Mongols 3. Spice trade dominated by Muslims and Venice 4. Last land route vanished with fall of Byzantines. 5. Fear of the Muslims 6. High prices caused Europeans to seek alternate trade routes 7. Compass 8. Astrolabe 9. Development of deep-draft, round-hulled vessels (caravels) allowed greater amounts of cargo to be transported and allowed the use of cannon. New Technology China by way of the Muslims

15 B. 14th century explorers 1. Canary Islands, Madeiras, possibly the Azores 2. Spanish expeditions along west African coast C. Beginnings of Colonization 1. Azores, Madeiras, and Canaries exploited 2. Prince Henry of Portugal led the way a. Land grants offered to colonists 3. Pattern of Development a. Cash crops for European markets --Sugar, Cotton, Tobacco --Slaves used Canary Islands

16 Places Outside the European & Asian World During the Postclassical Era Aztecs & Incas…internal problems created opportunities for external intervention (after 1400) Polynesians migrate to Hawaii!!! Maoris settle in New Zealand…perhaps as early as the 8 th century.

17 Global Connections: 1450 & the World Muslim traders and missionaries continued to be active, but the Mongols introduced a new set of contacts. Global leadership was in question in 1450! The Mongol decline returned attention to trade in the Indian Ocean. African merchants continued to rely on interactions with the Middle East. Western Europe’s position was strengthening. Southeast Asia was increasingly drawn into trade and missionary activity.


Download ppt "Chapter 13. B. Chinese Expansion 1. Ming dynasty (1368-1644) – replaces the Yuan (Mongols) a. Expansionist – Into Mongolia, Korea, Vietnam, Tibet b. State."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google