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AP World History: Modern -- Units, themes, topics & notes
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AP World History: Modern Units general overview[edit | edit source]
Unit
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Time Period
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Time importance
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Places/ Peoples
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Notes
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Unit 1: The Global Tapestry
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c. 1200 to
c. 1450
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- 1200
- growth in worldwide exchange
- rise of states
- 1450: Collapse of Constantinople to Turkish invasion
- consolidation of Islam across Mideast under Turkish empire
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- China
- Song Dynasty
- East Asia
- Confucianism
- Buddhism
- South & Southeast Asia
- Hinduism, Buddhism, Islam
- state formation/ change
- Islam: "Dar al-Islam"
- rise & spread of Islamic states
- fragmentation of Abbasid Caliphate
- Turkic rise (Ottoman)
- Islamic Spain
- Mongol Empire
- trade:
- Silk Road
- Indian Ocean
- Trans-Sahara
- environmental effects, including
- state building in Americas
- state building in Africa
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- state building in Americas
- state building in Africa
- trade:
- types of exchange
- environmental impacts of exchange
- cultural diffusion
- religion, language, ideas, technologies, etc.
- religions
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Unit 2: Networks of Exchange
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c. 1450 to
c. 1750
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- Columbian exchange
- Maritime empires
- Social hierarchies change
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Unit 3: Land-Based Empires
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Unit 4: Transoceanic Interconnections
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Unit 5: Revolutions
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c. 1750 to
c. 1900
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Unit 6: Consequences of Industrialization
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Unit 7: Global Conflict
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1900 to
the present
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Unit 8: Cold War and Decolonization
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Unit 9: Globalization
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Themes
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Unit 1-2
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Culture
- development & interactions
- beliefs, identities
- political, social, and cultural implications
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U1, 1200-1450
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Economics
- development/ change over time
- forms of exchange
- production & consumption of goods and services
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U1, 1200-1450
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Governance
- state formation
- expansion & decline
- administrative institutions & practices
- distribution of power (rise, retention, exercise & decline)
- state purposes
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U1, 1200-1450
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Technology and Innovation
- adaptation & innovation
- advances in efficiency, comfort, and security
- impact on human/ social development and interactions
- intended and unintended consequences.
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U1, 1200-1450
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Unit I: Tapestry, 1200-1450[edit | edit source]
Unit Themes
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Region
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Period/ Empire
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Subtopic
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AP Topics & Objectives
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Other Notes
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Unit 1: The Global Tapestry, c. 1200 to c. 1450[edit | edit source]
Themes:
- Culture
- development & interactions
- beliefs, identities
- political, social, and cultural implications
- Economics
- development/ change over time
- forms of exchange
- production & consumption of goods and services
- Governance
- state formation
- expansion & decline
- administrative institutions & practices
- distribution of power (rise, retention, exercise & decline)
- state purposes
- Technology and Innovation
- adaptation & innovation
- advances in efficiency, comfort, and security
- impact on human/ social development and interactions
- intended and unintended consequences.
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East Asia: China
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Song Dynasty
960-1279
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1.1 Cultural Developments and Interactions[edit | edit source]
LO A: Chinese dynasties and governance over time[edit | edit source]
- 13th century innovation & diversity
- Song neo-Confucianism
- blend of traditional Confucianism
- with imperial bureaucracy
- impact on East Asia (Korea/ Japan)
- Confucian traditions
- filial piety
- role of women
- respect for
- expected deference from
- neo-Confucianism
- in Song Dynasty
- influence on East Asia
Learning Objective B: Chinese cultural traditions and effects on East Asia[edit | edit source]
- continuity/ change in China
- Buddhism
- Chinese literary/ scholarly traditions
- their spread to Korea & Japan
Learning Objective C: Chinese economy & economic innovation over time[edit | edit source]
- economic growth / flourishing
- commercialization
- trade networks:
- continued dependence on:
- peasants (farming)
- artisans (skilled labor)
technologies
- farming
- esp. champa rice (resistant to drought)
- manufactures
- steel & iron
- textiles
- porcelains
Grand canal
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Song China:
- Song blend of Confucianism & imperial bureaucracy
- expansion of Chinese culture
- filial piety
- deference from women
- Chinese literature & spread to Korea & Japan
Confucianism & literature
China trade & technologies
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East & Southeast Asia
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Religions
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Buddhism
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Buddhism spread
- Buddhist schools and practices
- Theraveda
- Mahayana
- Tibetan
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Abrahamic religions
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Judaism
Christianity
Islam
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1.2 Developments in Dar al-Islam from c. 1200 to c. 1450[edit | edit source]
Learning Objective D: Explain how systems of belief and their practices affected society in the period from c. 1200 to c. 1450.[edit | edit source]
- impact on societies in Africa and Asia
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West Asia & North Africa
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Dar al-Islam
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Islam
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Learning Objective E: Explain the causes and effects of the rise of Islamic states over time.[edit | edit source]
- Abbasid Caliphate collapse & fragmentation
- rise of Turkic Islamic states
- administrative units
- general governing policies
- innovation, continuity & diversity
New Islamic political entities:
Dar al-Islam
- "home of Islam"
- = places under Muslim rule
rise of Islamic states
- cause / effects
- internal & external factors
- Abbasid Caliphate collapse
- Seljuk Empire
- Mamluk sultanate of Egypt
- Delhi sultanates
Learning Objective F: Explain the effects of intellectual innovation in Dar al-Islam.[edit | edit source]
Intellectual innovation & spread
- mathematics (Nasir al-Din al Tusi)
- literature
- medical advances
- Greek philosophy:
- Islamic preservation of
- influence/ interpretation on/ by Islamic scholars
- "House of Wisdom" in Abbasid Baghdad
- Islamic culture / scholarship spread to Spain
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"Pax-Islamica"
- dhimmi
- = non-Muslim person
- legal arrangements = "constitutional charters"
- terms of relations between religious groups
- Dar al-'Ahd = non-Muslim places w/ non-aggression agreement
- places at peace with Islamic nation/s
- "house of peace"
- Dar al-harb = non-Muslim places w/o non-aggression agreement or at war
spread of Islam
- Africa
- Spain
- Islamic missionaries
- Sufis
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South & Southeast Asia
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spread of Hinduism
Islam
Buddhism
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1.3 Developments in South and Southeast Asia from c. 1200 to c. 1450[edit | edit source]
Learning Objective G Explain how the various belief systems and practices of South and Southeast Asia affected society over time[edit | edit source]
Learning Objective H Explain how and why various states of South and Southeast Asia developed and maintained power over time.[edit | edit source]
- religions/ belief systems:
- Bhakti movement
- Sufism
- Buddhist monasticism
- Hindu/Buddhist states:
- Vijayanagara Empire
- Srivijaya Empire
- Rajput kingdoms
- Khmer Empire
- Majapahit
- Sukhothai kingdom
- Sinhala dynasties
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Americas
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1.4 State Building in the Americas[edit | edit source]
Learning Objective I Explain how and why states in the Americas developed and changed over time.[edit | edit source]
- states, including:
- Maya city-states
- Mexica
- Inca
- Chaco
- Mesa Verde
- Cahokia
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Africa
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1.5 State Building in Africa[edit | edit source]
Learning Objective J: Explain how and why states in Africa developed and changed over time[edit | edit source]
- African states, including:
- Great Zimbabwe
- Ethiopia
- Hausa kingdom
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Europe
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religion
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1.6 Developments in Europe from c. 1200 to c. 1450[edit | edit source]
Learning Objective K Explain how the beliefs and practices of the predominant religions in Europe affected European society.[edit | edit source]
- Christianity, Judaism and Islam
- social impacts on Europe
Learning Objective L: Explain the causes and consequences of political decentralization in Europe from c. 1200 to c. 1450[edit | edit source]
political fragmentation & decentralization[edit | edit source]
- decentralized monarchies
- feudalism
- manorial system
Learning Objective M: Explain the effects of agriculture on social organization in Europe from c. 1200 to c. 1450.[edit | edit source]
- dominantly agrarian societies
- agricultural structures & systems
- labor
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1.7 Comparison in the Period from c. 1200 to c. 1450[edit | edit source]
- Abbasid Caliphate fragmentation
- new Islamic states
- continuity, innovation, change
- States and empires
- continuity, innovation, expansion, diversity
- esp. Song Dynasty
- also Americas and Africa
- state formation in South and Southeast Asia
- emergence of new Hindua and Buddhist states
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todo: to add
Macuilxochitzin and "gender parallelism" under Aztec and Inca
External sources & resources[edit | edit source]