Top Banner
Early Modern Period - the Age of Interaction, -the First Global Age) 1450-1750 …the point in history where the balance of power begins to shift.
20

Early Modern Period - the Age of Interaction, -the First Global Age) 1450-1750

Feb 24, 2016

Download

Documents

haven

Early Modern Period - the Age of Interaction, -the First Global Age) 1450-1750. …the point in history where the balance of power begins to shift. Periodization …mostly in line. Analyze the changes and continuities in Western Europe. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Early Modern  Period -  the Age of Interaction,  -the First  Global Age) 1450-1750

Early Modern Period- the Age of Interaction,

-the First Global Age)1450-1750

…the point in history where the balance of power begins to shift.

Page 2: Early Modern  Period -  the Age of Interaction,  -the First  Global Age) 1450-1750
Page 3: Early Modern  Period -  the Age of Interaction,  -the First  Global Age) 1450-1750

Periodization…mostly in line

Page 4: Early Modern  Period -  the Age of Interaction,  -the First  Global Age) 1450-1750

Questions to Consider

Analyze the changes and continuities in Western Europe.

Compare the paths of non-Western societies in Asia, Africa & the Americas.

Characterize the world economy during this period.

Analyze the impact of technology on this period.

Page 5: Early Modern  Period -  the Age of Interaction,  -the First  Global Age) 1450-1750

Themes to Consider (most themes tied heavily into the theme of interaction)

Political organization—Empire BuildingCultural & Intellectual MovementsInteraction & its Consequences

◦Trade◦Demographic Shifts

TechnologyGender Roles

Page 6: Early Modern  Period -  the Age of Interaction,  -the First  Global Age) 1450-1750

Analyze the changes and continuities in Western

Europe.

Page 7: Early Modern  Period -  the Age of Interaction,  -the First  Global Age) 1450-1750

Key Empires emerge at this time as a result of:◦Revolutions in thought and culture◦Exploration◦Commercial Revolution

Page 8: Early Modern  Period -  the Age of Interaction,  -the First  Global Age) 1450-1750

Case Studies: Catholic vs. Protestant Nations, Absolute vs. Limited Monarchies

Similarities? Differences?

Page 9: Early Modern  Period -  the Age of Interaction,  -the First  Global Age) 1450-1750

Changes and Continuities?

ChangesGrowth of citiesMiddle classMarriage and

family structure Questioning spiritWomen’s rolesreligion

Continuities?

Page 11: Early Modern  Period -  the Age of Interaction,  -the First  Global Age) 1450-1750

Don’t forget the outliers…

Tokugawa Japan Aztec/Inca

Page 12: Early Modern  Period -  the Age of Interaction,  -the First  Global Age) 1450-1750

Cultural and Intellectual Movements

Cultural and intellectual developments, Dates

Famous People or Events

Content of Idea or Movement

Diffusion (Where did the ideas spread?)

Scientific Revolution Copernicus Galileo Francis Bacon William Harvey

World could be explained through natural laws rather than superstition Sun was the center of the universe Scientific Method Questions traditional church teachings

Europe/American colonies

Enlightenment John Locke Jean-Jacques Rousseau Thomas Hobbes Voltaire

Natural Rights – life, liberty and property Right of people to revolt and overthrow government Freedom of speech, press, and religion

Europe/American colonies

Neoconfucianism Zhu Xi combine elements of Buddhism and Daoism to make Confucianism more accessible for less literate Chinese

China, Korea, Japan

Exchanges in arts Italian Renaissance paintings Mughal minature paintings Taj Mahal

celebration of beauty focus on individual achievement

Europe and its colonies, South Asia

Page 13: Early Modern  Period -  the Age of Interaction,  -the First  Global Age) 1450-1750

Characterize the world economy during this period.

Page 14: Early Modern  Period -  the Age of Interaction,  -the First  Global Age) 1450-1750

The New World Economy/Trade

Page 15: Early Modern  Period -  the Age of Interaction,  -the First  Global Age) 1450-1750

Demographics: coercive labor

Slave Systems: Coercive or

Forced Labor Locations and Characteristics

Forced Labor's Impact on

Demographic Changes

Treatment of Slaves

Status of Slaves

slave trade (Trans Saharan and East

Africa) East Africa mostly woman part of kinship

plantation slavery (Atlantic Slave

System)

Carribean North America South

America

15 to 25 million slaves transported to the Americas middle passage

silver mining plantations

maroons/work stoppages not much

social mobility

Mamluks/Janissaries Abbasid(Mamluks)Ottoman Empire military service mobility

serfs Eastern Europe Russia

becomes "virtual slavery" some mobility

Page 16: Early Modern  Period -  the Age of Interaction,  -the First  Global Age) 1450-1750

More Demography

Spread of epidemic disease◦ Smallpox,

measles, flu, STD’s

Population decreases dramatically in Americas, leading to the decline of civilizations in Mesoamerica and the Andes.

New racial hierarchies

Page 17: Early Modern  Period -  the Age of Interaction,  -the First  Global Age) 1450-1750

Human Interactions w/Environment

Degradation of New WorldThe Little Ice Age

Page 18: Early Modern  Period -  the Age of Interaction,  -the First  Global Age) 1450-1750

Analyze the impact of technology on this period.

CartographyCompassAstrolabeLateen sailsNew ship

designs

Page 19: Early Modern  Period -  the Age of Interaction,  -the First  Global Age) 1450-1750

Compare the role of women in two premodern societies.

Page 20: Early Modern  Period -  the Age of Interaction,  -the First  Global Age) 1450-1750

Women

Little change from previous period◦Powerful Exceptions: Elizabeth I, Queen Isabella, Nur Jahan◦Still shared power (except Elizabeth)

Impact of Interaction on Women◦Racial miscegenation in Americas◦Changes in trade/production

Europe: nominal impact of Renaissance/ReformationOutside of Europe:

◦Africa matrilineal but impacted by slave trade◦Neoconfucianism in China