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Week Eleven (November 1-5) Day 1-Chapter 12 Quiz (GRAPES Mayan, Aztec, Inca Due) Day 2- (GRAPES Mongols, Yuan, Kamakoru Shogunate Due) Week Twelve (November8-9) Day 1 Chapter 13 Quiz Week Thirteen (November 15-19) Day 1- Chapter 14 Quiz (GRAPES Mali, Delhi Sultanate Due) Day 2- Trade Routes Comparison Week Fourteen (November 22-23) Day 1- Unit Exam Chapter 8-14
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Chapter 12
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The Rise of the Mongols 1200– 1260 Nomadic clans –Lead by Khan –Conquered less powerful clans- demanded tribute –Women were important –Religious pluralism –Relied on settled people for certain goods Genghis Khan
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The Mongol Conquests, 1215–1283 Began conquering outward from Mongolia –Golden Horde –Jagadai –Il-khan –Great Khan in Mongolia Khubilai- –caused a civil war among the Khanatates –Starts the Yuan dynasty in China
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Causes and Effects of Conquest Cause –Superior horsemanship, –Better bows –Cavalry charge –New military techniques and technology, –Non-Mongol soldiers into their armies; –Reputation –Took advantage of rivalries among their enemies Effects –Increased Trade –Cosmopolitan period –transfer of knowledge –Plague
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Mongols and Islam, 1260–1500 Constant fighting between the Il-Khans and Muslims –Khan of the Golden Horde was Muslim and fought the Il-Khan –Ended with the Conversion of the Il-Khan Il Khan used tax farming –Over taxation –Il-Khan fell from internal problems- –attacked by Golden Horde Timur the Lame took control of the Jagadai Great advancements in Social sciences, astronomy, and math
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Europe Russia –Novogrod and Moscow became major centers –Ivan III defeated the Golden Horde in 1480— Tsar –Orthodox Christianity Western Europe –Scared by the foreign threat –Began question society and religion because of the plague Eastern Europe –Turkish Ottoman took over Anatolia –Began taking land from the Byzantines
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The Yuan Empire, 1279–1368 Khubilai Khan –Built Beijing –Adopted Chinese customs and traditions –Reunified China Very cosmopolitan Foreigners, merchants, doctors, and non- Confucian scholars became important Trade flourished Construction projects Farmers were brutalized and population declined –Internal rebellions –1368 - Zhu Yuanzhang established the Ming Empire
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The Early Ming Empire, 1368–1500 Capital was Nanjing Anti-foreign (Mongol) pro Confucian –Except Zheng He –Built upon much of the Yuan infrastructure –Closed their borders –Arrogance –Feared technology transfer Practical knowledge decreases –Confucian knowledge grows –Civil Service examination Vast cultural achievements –arts, and poetry
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Korea Koryo surrendered to the Mongols –Intermarried with the Yuan –After the Yuan collapsed so did the Koryo Yi –Anti foreign –Great advancements
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Japan Kamukoru Shogunate –Stopped the Mongols –Unified their power –Expensive foreign defenses caused bankruptcy –Civil War Ashikaga Shogunate –Weak shogun/ Strong Daimyo Warring States period –Onin War of 1477 Tokugawa Shogunate
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