Unit 2 Outline: 600 BCE to 600 CE Weeks One and Two: Belief Systems and Earliest Empires (Rome, Han, Gupta, Ghana) Timed Writing: Comparative essay on Rome, Han, Gupta (2010 Exam) Timed Writing: CCOT essay on Rome, Han, Gupta (2006 Exam) Timed Writing: DBQ on Buddhism in China (2004 Exam) Week Three: Trade in Afroeurasia (CCOT essay on trade – 2012) Map Quiz Unit Test (50 Multiple-Choice Questions) Binder, p. 20 Period 2: Organization and Reorganization of Human Societies, c. 600 B.C.E. to c. 600 C.E.
36
Embed
Unit 2 Outline: 600 BCE to 600 CE Weeks One and Two: Belief Systems and Earliest Empires (Rome, Han, Gupta, Ghana) Timed Writing: Comparative essay.
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
Unit 2 Outline: 600 BCE to 600 CE Weeks One and Two: Belief Systems and Earliest Empires (Rome, Han, Gupta,
Ghana) Timed Writing: Comparative essay on Rome, Han, Gupta (2010
Exam) Timed Writing: CCOT essay on Rome, Han, Gupta (2006 Exam) Timed Writing: DBQ on Buddhism in China (2004 Exam) Week Three: Trade in Afroeurasia (CCOT essay on trade – 2012)
Map Quiz Unit Test (50 Multiple-Choice Questions)
Binder, p. 20Period 2: Organization and Reorganization of Human Societies, c. 600 B.C.E. to c. 600 C.E.
Key Concept 2.1. The Development and Codification of Religious and Cultural Traditions
1. Draw the Eastern Hemisphere (AfroEurasia)
from memory. 2. Draw the major trade routes of the 1st
century C.E. 3. Use arrows and labels to indicate the global
processes that promoted trade (spread of religions) or restricted trade (spread of disease).
Mental Map
2.3. Emergence of Trans-regional Networks of Communication and Exchange
CED, pp. 31-33 and Practice Exam, p. 13 Cohen pkt, p. 30 notes on belief systems Vocab quiz, p. 38
How do you teach about belief systems?
What is this? Why was it built?
The Great Wall of China
Big
What words come to mind when you see the Great Wall of China?
• • • • • • • • • total length is 6,700 km (3,948 miles)
Chinese were civilized agricultural peoples and their neighbors were barbaric pastoral nomads
Does your textbook lead students to this conclusion?
The earliest evidence of earthen walls is from the Shang dynasty (1766-1050 BCE) who wanted to dominate the neighboring states.
When and Why Did the Chinese Build the Great Wall?
Oracle inscription carved on turtle shell
Shang Dynasty Border = purple;
Modern border = red
The Qin emperor coerced labor from Chinese peasants to build walls as part of his conquest of the border areas.
He wanted to control the flow of people and tax goods from Central Asia.
The so-called “walls” were actually forts hosting large garrisons of soldiers.
Qin Dynasty (221 – 206 BCE)
Qin Dynasty Border = green; Modern border = red
The Great Wall we see today was built during the 15th century of the Ming dynasty.
The Ming rulers wanted a solid barrier against the Mongols, the rulers of the previous dynasty of China.
Will the real Great Wall stand up?
Ming Empire
The Ming wall stretched some 4,500 miles from the Korean border at Dandong to the city of Jayuguan in the western desert
Watch towers and cannons were placed along the wall
Ming Dynasty, 1368 – 1644 CE
Chinese imperialism prompted military responses by pastoral nomads against an aggressive Chinese state intent on expansion.
Well? So, why did Chinese rulers build the Great Wall?
Does this explanation of the history of the Great Wall affect your view of Chinese history?
How might the way you teach about Chinese history change?
Questions about Unit 2?
Assessment:
Work in a group of 5 to create a sculpture or “scene” that illustrates at least one key concept from periods 1 and 2, using Playdoh.
Curriculum module, pp. 43 – 45◦Read pages to Identify trade and exchange items and
roles of pastoral and agricultural peoples
Map Identify types of evidence Discuss Christian’s argument via jigsaw
interpretations chart on pp. 70-77.
2.3. Emergence of Trans-regional Networks of Communication and Exchange
1. Draw the Eastern Hemisphere (AfroEurasia).
2. Draw the major trade routes of the 1st century C.E.
3. Use arrows and labels to indicate the global processes that promoted trade (spread of religions) or restricted trade (spread of disease).
Mental Map Exercise:
Entrepot groups make table tent sign.
Entrepot groups make trade plans◦ Who will travel and who will stay?◦ What will you plan to sell in each round?◦ What will you plan to buy in each round?◦ How will you keep track of your trade activities?
Process simulation.
Trade Simulation, Cohen pkt, p. 21
Directions: In pairs, decide if the Roman and Han empires prove or disprove the Conrad-Demarest Model for rise of empires.
I. Necessary preconditions for the rise of empires: ◦ state-level government
Rome: republic Han: kept most of Qin centralized government in place
◦ high agricultural potential in the area Rome: wheat, grapes, cattle Han: wheat, millet, pigs
◦ an environmental mosaic Rome: Alps, Mediterranean Sea, forests, Tiber and other rivers, hills Han: Tianshan mountains, Yellow and Yangtze river, loess soil, Pacific Ocean
◦ several small states with no clearly dominant state (power vacuum) Rome and other city-states on Italian peninsula; surrounding states in Mediterranean (Greek states,
Egypt, Judea, Syria, Cyprus, Gaul, Romania, Spain, Sicily, Sardinia, Carthage, etc. Han: Qin empire broken into smaller states
◦ mutual antagonisms among those states Rome: rivalry between pastoralists in hills and agriculturalists in plains Han: Warring States period before Qin unification
◦ adequate military resources Rome: soldiers first recruited only from peasant class on Italian peninsula; population
inexhaustible Han: soldiers recruited from peasant class within the entire empire; population inexhaustible
Conrad-Demarest Model for Classical Empires
II. The primary reason a state succeeded in empire building was ◦ an ideology supporting personal identification with
the state, empire, conquest, and militarism. Rome: "republic" based on citizenship of free men;citizenship
ensured loyalty to state and brought taxes into the state treasury; emperor-dictators had to support the idea of the republic and pretend to follow what the Senate, council of elder wealthy men, decreed. Development of bureaucracy helped run empire.
Han: militaristic Legalism developed by Qin continued, then softened by Confucian system of government based on ethics, meritocracy, and concept of the Mandate of Heaven. Development of bureaucracy helped run empire. Tribute system for foreign relations.
Conrad-Demarest Model, cont.
◦ Directions: Does the Gupta Empire prove or disprove the C-D model?
◦ economic rewards, reaped especially in the early years and redistributed to the elite and often to all levels of the citizenry luxury goods and profits from trade redistributed to
subordinate rulers in regional administrative centers; marriage alliances between the Gupta royal family and subordinate rulers
coined money; expanding trade with Southeast Asia scientists and mathematicians received royal support
-- invention of the concept of zero and “Indian” numbers
support for religious institutions classic form of Hindu temple patterned after mandalas
(cosmic diagrams) and filled with lavish sculptures of Hindu deities
Buddhist monasteries still expanding
◦ population increase, often supported by the government and its ideology marriage ages for girls fell to six or seven years old urban centers grew along with the new temples who
served the increase in pilgrims traveling to sacred sites
III. The major rewards of empire:
◦ the ideology of expansion and conquest fueled attempts at conquest beyond practical limits White Huns, nomadic peoples from central Asia who
occupied Bactria, provoked border wars in the first half of the 5th century.
◦ failure to continue conquest indefinitely and to continue to bring home its economic fruits eroded faith in the ideology that supported the empire Defending the northern border cost more than the
Gupta treasury could afford ◦ revolutions toppled the empire
rebellions by vassal states and challenges from states to the south of the Gupta empire
IV. Empires fall because:
TECHNOLOGY AND NEW IDEAS PASS FROM ONE TIME PERIOD TO THE NEXT…
Hittites, Chariots, and Iron Weapons
Romans, Chariots, and Iron Weapons
Typical Lesson for Teaching Comparison:“Objective: Students compare state building in
Rome, Han, Persia, and Gupta. Students gather evidence about two of these
empires’ techniques of imperial administration to identify the similarities and differences in how the rulers of two classical empires used legal systems and bureaucracies to run their government.”
Strategies for Historical Thinking Skills
CHANGES IN POLITICAL STRUCTURES: RISE OF HUNS
CHANGES IN CULTURE, IDEAS, AND RELIGIONS
Forced Migration of Jews Created Diaspora Communities
Changes in religions: Constantine made Christianity official religion of Roman Empire
CONSTANTINE SEEING VISION OF THE CROSS
CHANGES IN CULTURE, IDEAS, AND RELIGIONS: Syncretism between Mediterranean and Central and South Asia
Spread of Buddhism to Central Asia
Students compare the development of state building in the period of the classical empires of Rome, Han, Persia, and Gupta, by gathering evidence of how the rulers of two classical empires used legal systems and bureaucracies to run their government.
MCQ and quiz correction idea, p. 29
Key Concept 2.2. The Development of States and Empires