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Cultural studies

Classical India (World Civilizations, 3rd ed.)

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AP World History Chapter 3: Classic Civilization: India POLITICAL Leaders, Elites State Structure War Diplomacy, Treaties Courts, Laws -Emphasis was based on religion and social structure instead of politics. The political structure was less structured and centralized compared to the Chinese. -Divisions in the civilization made a centralized political unit difficult (greater diversity). 600 B.C.E ? 16 regional states that included monarchies and republics of priests and warriors. -Alexander the Great pushed into the subcontinent and formed Batria in the Hindu Kush.

AP Human Geography – Vocabulary Lists Compiled by Martha Sharma, Hilton Head Completed by WHS-APHG Block 1 2006-07

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I. Geography – Nature & Perspectives Sequent occupance: The notion that successive societies leave their cultural imprints on a place, each contributing to the cumulative cultural landscape. This is an important concept in geography because it symbolizes how humans interact with their surroundings. Cultural landscape: Fashioning of a natural landscape by a cultural group. This is the essence of how humans interact with nature. Arithmetic density: The total number of people divided by the total land area. This is what most people think of as density; how many people per area of land.

Early civilizations in africa

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Early Civilizations in Africa   Land •Sahara is in northern Africa from the atlantic to the indian ocean and is the greatest desert on earth. •The western region or the “hump” of africa is dominated by niger river. •Southern africa is home to some of the worlds richest deposits of minerals •The savannahs are vast grasslands that border the sahara. Exploration •Karl Mauch found the ruins of great zimbabwe •Kenya is the country where prehistoric predecessors of humans first lived. Kush •Initially called Nubia •May have developed an agricultural kingdom before the egyptians •Discovered iron at Meroe which led them to become a significant commercial force in central africa. •Had its own language, government organization, & mercantile success. Axum (Aksum)

AP world history The First Global Civilization: The Rise and Spread of Islam

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Chapter 6 The First Global Civilization: The Rise and Spread of Islam I. Introduction A. Before 7th century – contacts, but not total control of ancient world under one empire 1. Arabia – nomadic land on periphery of major civilizations B. 7th century – followers of Islam “submission” – Muslims – Allah – one God 1. Began conquest and conversion 2. Within decades, Muhammad had empire of Persia, Greece and Egypt C. Later empire spread 1. Merchants, mystics, warriors 2. Empire expanded a. Africa, Asia, southern Europe b. Across steppes to central Asia, western China, south Asia c. Across ocean trade routes to southeast Asia and eastern Africa d. Across overland trade routes, Sahara to western Africa

Continuity of Religion from paleolithic to neolithic to rise of civilizations

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We see the continuity of religion throughout the paleolithic period to the rise of civilizations. in the hunting and gathering society, religion played a key role through rituals such as burying the dead and role of Goddesses was prominent. Women and men had equal contributions in society and this was also representative in religion. As one moved foward, polytheism continued. Gods were used to explain phenomenon of nature as well as reinforce civic loyalty. Progression to river civilizations in Mesopotamia ie babylon and Hammurabi's laws outlined some of these rules in society. If the river god Adad flooded your farm you were exempt from your tax burden to the state.

Unit 2 Classical Civilizations Review

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1.?????? Roman Senate- A council whose members were the heads of wealthy, landowning families. Originally an advisor body to the early kings, in the era of the Roman Republic the Senate effectively governed the Roman State and the growing empire. Under senate leadership, Rome conquered an empire of unprecedented extent in the lands surrounding the Mediterranean Sea. In the first century B.C.E. quarrels among powerful and ambitious senators and failure to address social and economic problems led to civil wars and the emergence of the rule of the emperors. They could veto or add laws. Number of senators corresponded with the number of tribes. Not all senators held equal power.

APWH Chapter One Pg.2-12 Notes

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