World History empires name meanings study guide: Difference between revisions
Line 321: | Line 321: | ||
|Notes: | |Notes: | ||
| | | | ||
* "Caliphate" from "Caliph" which means successor of Muhammad | * "'''Caliphate'''" from "Caliph" which means successor of Muhammad | ||
** literally translated from Arabic = "Successor of the Messenger of God" | |||
** the Caliph was considered ruler of the entire Muslim world (called the "umma" for "follower of Islam") | ** the Caliph was considered ruler of the entire Muslim world (called the "umma" for "follower of Islam") | ||
*** note that "umma" transcends ethnic/ tribal alliances | *** note that "umma" transcends ethnic/ tribal alliances | ||
** Sunni Caliphs were elected or selected by Islamic leaders | |||
* "Islam" means "submit to God" | * "Islam" means "submit to God" | ||
* "Sharia" is the Islamic law | * "Sharia" is the Islamic law | ||
Line 332: | Line 334: | ||
* "Shi'a" or "Shiite" is from "Shi'aat Ali" for "followers of Ali" | * "Shi'a" or "Shiite" is from "Shi'aat Ali" for "followers of Ali" | ||
** Ali was Muhammad's son-in-law and the husband of his daughter, Fatima | ** Ali was Muhammad's son-in-law and the husband of his daughter, Fatima | ||
** Shiites did not recognize the first three Caliphates as legiitimate | |||
| | | | ||
| | | | ||
|[[File:Map of expansion of Caliphate.svg|thumb|Map of expansion of Islamic rule | |||
# Expansion under Muhammad, 622-632 | |||
# Expansion during the Rashidun Caliphate, 632-661 | |||
# Expansion during the Umayyad Caliphate, 661-750 | |||
|alt=Map of expansion of Caliphate.svg|none|250x250px]] | |||
|- | |||
| | | | ||
=== Rashidun Caliphate === | |||
| | | | ||
* "Rashidun" means "rightly guided" | |||
* 1st Caliphate | |||
* established by Abu Bakr, 632, who reunited Arabia under Islam following Muhammad's death | * established by Abu Bakr, 632, who reunited Arabia under Islam following Muhammad's death | ||
** under the idea, "Muhammad dead, Allah alive" | ** under the idea, "Muhammad dead, Allah alive" | ||
** | ** | ||
| | | | ||
|Middle East, North Africa, southwestern Anatolia | |||
| | | | ||
* Abu Bakr conquered Arabia and united all the tribes under "umma" | |||
* did not establish a monarchy, so succession was not hereditary | |||
* all four Rashidun Caliphs were related to Muhammad through marriage | |||
|- | |- | ||
| | | | ||
Line 376: | Line 391: | ||
|- | |- | ||
| | | | ||
=== Ottoman | === Ottoman Caliphate === | ||
| | |||
* the 4th caliphate | |||
|1517–1924 | |||
|see Ottoman Empire | |||
| | | | ||
|- | |||
| | | | ||
=== Ottoman Empire === | |||
| | | | ||
| | | | ||
|Middle East, Anatolia, Southeastern Europe, Greece, North Africa | |||
|[[File:OttomanEmpireMain.png|thumb|The Ottoman Empire in 1683|alt=The Ottoman Empire in 1683|none|250x250px]] | |||
|- | |- | ||
| | | |
Revision as of 19:00, 4 January 2023
Goal of this article is to help students identify context and historical recollection via definitions of historical names and terms
- along with memorizing names, places (map literacy) and dates
- historical knowledge and test-day recollection can be enhanced through etymology, or word origins of key historical places, empires or dynasties
Concepts & notes[edit | edit source]
Cultural Diffusion: are conquerors eventually conquered by the conquered?[edit | edit source]
- a common thread to studies of rise and fall of empires and dynasties is cultural diffusion
- cultural diffusion = the spreading and mixing of cultures, populations, technologies, disease, etc.
- we will see in this review over and over how many conquerors become more like the people and places they conquered than what / who they were at the start of the conquest
Standardization & unity[edit | edit source]
- empires rule and spread rule through the process of standardization
- while we think of standardization as making things the same, it can also mean treating disparate groups equally
- i.e., under legal or political standards of either tolerance or favor
- in such systems, different groups may be treated unequally, but in a standardized system, the law or governance treats them consistently, if not equally
- i.e., Islamic legal distinctions between Muslims and non-Muslims
- different taxes, military service, etc.
- i.e., Islamic legal distinctions between Muslims and non-Muslims
- typical methods of standardization and unity include
- writing / language
- laws
- taxation
- currency/ money
- road & canal building
- official religion and/or religious tolerance
China empires/ dynasties[edit | edit source]
Name | Name definition | Dates | Region | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Chinese dynasties follow four general categories of name origins: |
|
| ||
Yuan Dynasty[edit | edit source] |
|
1271–1368 |
| |
Ming Dynasty[edit | edit source] |
|
1368-1644 |
| |
Qing Dynasty[edit | edit source] |
|
1644–1911 | Manchuria, China |
|
Mongol empires[edit | edit source]
Name | Name definition | Dates | Region | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mongol Empire[edit | edit source] |
|
1206–1368 | Eurasia |
| none |
Yuan Dynasty[edit | edit source] |
see above under China dynasties for Yuan | 1271–1368 | |||
Golden Horde (Mongol)[edit | edit source] |
|
| |||
Chagatai Khanate[edit | edit source] |
|
1242-1347 /
1347-1487 |
| ||
Ilkhanate Khanate[edit | edit source] |
|
1256–1335 | Persia & northern Middle East/ Anatolia |
|
Europe monarchies/ empires[edit | edit source]
Name | Name definition | Dates | Region | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Holy Roman Empire |
|
800-1806
(962 alternative start date) |
|
|
House of Valois (France) | 1328-1589 | |||
House of Bourbon (France) | 1589-1792, 1815-1830, 1830-1848 |
| ||
Napoleon | ||||
Austrian Empire / Hapsburgs |
|
1804–1867 |
|
India empires[edit | edit source]
Name | Name definition | Dates | Region | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Timurid Empire |
|
1370–1507 | Persia (Iran), central Aisa, northern India |
|
Mughal Empire |
|
1526–1857 |
Islamic empires[edit | edit source]
Name | Name definition | Dates | Region | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Notes: |
|
none | |||
Rashidun Caliphate[edit | edit source] |
|
Middle East, North Africa, southwestern Anatolia |
| ||
Umayyad Caliphate[edit | edit source] |
|
| |||
Abbasid Caliphate[edit | edit source] |
|
750-1258 | Lower Middle East |
| |
Turks/ Seljuk Turks | |||||
Ottoman Caliphate[edit | edit source] |
|
1517–1924 | see Ottoman Empire | ||
Ottoman Empire[edit | edit source] |
Middle East, Anatolia, Southeastern Europe, Greece, North Africa | ||||
Safavid Empire[edit | edit source] |
|
1453-1629 | Persia |
|