Created by Matt Ronas
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Aim: How would you describe the geography of Africa?
I – African Geography
- The birth place of humanity 200,000 year ago – Homo Sapiens
- Africa is the second largest (Asia is largest) continent (3 continental Unites States’ could fit in it)
- Diverse geography:
- North Africa – Coastal area that borders the Mediterranean sea (e.g. Morocco)
- Nile river (south to north) cuts through Egypt
- Sahara desert – largest desert in the world – Stretches from the Atlantic to the Indian ocean
- Congo basin – Jungle – central Africa
- Rainforests stretch along the equator
- Savannas – Grassland dotted with small trees – Makes up 40% of Africa’s Land (Rain is unpredictable)
Aim: What was the importance of the civilizations of Kush and Axum?
I – Kush
- Egypt controlled Kush
- The Kush broke away from Egypt and became an independent kingdom
- Meroe city became a major trading center
- Kush was located near the Nile river. This gave it easy access to water and trading
- Major exports were ivory, gold, slaves, ebony, iron-ore (Rare precious medals and gems)
II – Axum
- Axum Conquers the Kush
- Located between India and the Mediterranean sea (Modern day Ethiopia)
- King Enzana – Makes Axum a Christian nation
- Axum takes over Kush and uses her trading routes
- Ultimately, Muslim tribes conquer the Axum empire
Aim: How did trade contacts with Arab Muslims affect the development of African culture?
I – Kingdom of Ghana – 700 A.D. – 1200 A.D.
- Located in western Africa
- Led by a powerful king; absolute ruler
- Extremely wealthy trading state. Their exports were gold, ivory and iron-ore
- Salt for gold trade – Ghana sold their gold to Arab Muslim merchants in north Africa for salt
- Salt is valuable because it retains water in your body (prevents dehydration)
- Preservers food, makes it taste better
- Slaves would mine for salt
- Camels, known as fleets of the desert, were used to transport salt
- Chinese called salt white gold
- The salt for gold trade is an example of cultural diffusion. Islam is spread along with their algebra
II – Kingdom of Mali – 1200 A.D. – 1450 A.D.
- Replace kingdom of Ghana
- Sundiata Keita – Founded the kingdom
- Mansa Musa – The most powerful and famous king of Mali – He was a Muslim and he made the Hajj
- On the Hajj, he gave away gold to the people he passed, therefore decreasing the value of it
- Timbuktu becomes the center of Islamic learning and Mali builds Masques and libraries
- Songhai took over
Aim: What were the roles of family relationships, women, and religion in African society?
I – Family Relationships
- Most families lived in small villages
- Extended family parents children, and other relatives living together under one roof
- Extended families combined into larger social units known as “lineage groups” were the building blocks of African society
- Lineage groups made of past present and future generations
II – Women
- Women were inferior to men
- Women could inherit property and be merchants
- Matrilineal – Your lineage group was based on your mother traced
- Man moved into women’s house upon marriage
III – Religion
- Some tribes were polytheistic while other were monotheistic
- Polytheistic – Ashanti tribe
- Monotheistic – Yoruba tribe
- Animism – A religious belief that spirits are present in animals, plants, and natural objects
- Ancestor worship – When a family member dies, he or she goes to their after life where they are close to god
- Divines – Religious people who could communicate with gods
- Ancestors could communicate with the gods
- One must pray, worship, and respect their ancestors
- Africanized Islam – Islam’s beliefs of Allah combined with animism. Because of Africa’s warm climate, less clothing such as the burqa were required to be worn by women.
Aim: How was African culture reflected through art, music, and story telling?
I – Art
- Rock paintings showed history (hunting and trade) from 4000 B.C.
- Metal sculptures were made of bronze and iron during the 13th and 14th century
- Masks were carved from wood (used to link the living with the dead)
II – African Music
- Strong and rhythmic
- Flutes, strings, horns, chanting
- Served a religions purpose
- Dancing – People danced to communicate with sprits of ancestors and god
- Music could tell stories of folktales
III – Stories
- Griots – Storytellers – Held stories for community and could be said to be a “Human Library”. They kept track of history.
Aim: Who were the Mongols and how did they come to power?
I – Mongols – 1100 A.D. 1300 A.D.
- The Mongols were nomadic people from central Asia
- They lived in the Steppe Region – Treeless, dry, flat, area covered with grass
- Pastonalists – Herded animals (sheep and goats)
- Lived in yurts – domed tents – portable
- Temuchin – Organized the warring Mongolian tribes into one fighting force named. Genghis Khan was leader – Universal Ruler
- Genghis Khan – Military leader – 130,00 soldiers, all loyal and fierce warriors – fought with bow and arrows, and daggers on horse back (most skilled horse back riders in history)
- As said by Genghis Khan, “Man’s highest joy is in victory. To conquer one’s enemy, to make their beloved weak, and to embrace their wives and daughter
- Genghis Khan conquers ½ of the world – central Europe to Asia over a 20 year period
- Kublai Khan (Genghis’ grandson) took over after Genghis. He defeated the Song dynasty and created the Yuan dynasty in 1279 A.D.
- He united China
- He made a new capital, Beijing – Khanbaliq used to be the capital
- He expanded trade and helped China to prosper
- Mongolians ruled the Chinese government, but Chinese people ruled at the local level
- Looked to expand and conquer south east Asia, Thailand, Vietnam, and Japan
Aim: How did foot binding develop in China?
I – Foot Binding – “Lotus Style”
- Began in the 11th century in China and lasted until the 20th century
- Used on girls as young as 3 to 5 years old
- Bones in the feet are broken so ultimately, there will be a 3 to 4 inch foot – Prevented the feet from growing
- For Chinese, small feet were considered beautiful and sexy
- Mothers wanted small feet for their daughters in order to get married
- Started off with wealthy families then eventually made its way down to the poor
- Make sure women don’t run away and remain faithful to their husband
Aim: How did Zhang He’s explorations impact China?
I – Zhang He
- Was a famous Chinese explorer
- Was a Muslim boy captured by the Chinese
- Worked as a house servant for a Chinese prince. He helped the prince become emperor, and was then given a job in the navy as an admiral where he explored
- *1405 A.D. – 1433 A.D. – Lead 7 expeditions outside of China
- Largest expedition (Until WWI in 1914) – 300 ships, 28,000 sailors, largest ship was 400 feet long
- Ships were very advanced – Had watertight compartments and a balanced rudder
Chris Columbus – 1492 A.D. – Had 3 ships; largest was Santa Maria at 85 feet long with 90 sailors
- Zhang went to Africa for gold and ivory and India for spices
- By 1450 A.D., China ended its explorations – New emperor refused to allow China’s navy to explore
- Defense
- Afraid of cultural diffusion
- Leaders preferred isolation
Aim: What factors influenced Japanese history?
I – Japanese Geography
- 4 main islands; Hokkaido, Honshu, Kyushu, and Shikkoko (Big time fishers because of the water around them)
- Very mountainous – Mount Fuji is the largest mountain
- 20% of the land is suitable for agriculture
- Homogenous society – Little diversity amongst people (race) because of low immigration rate
- As an island nation, it favored geographic isolation – Believed they were unique and had a special destiny
- Kublai Khan tried to invade Japan with a navy
- A typhoon destroyed the fleet (known as a divine wind – Kamikaze)
II – Rise of Japan
- Japanese borrowed some Chinese culture (e.g. Alphabet and Confucianism)
- Warring Classes (rich vs. poor) – Shotuku Taishi united Japan and created a strong national government
- Shotuku Taishi died and the government could no longer stay strong. The landowners soon took control.
oSocial structure – Showgun; military leaders Daimyo; Wealthy aristocrats (owned land) Samurai; warriors who protect Daimyos Peasants; work land Merchants
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Created by Matt Ronas
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