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Title: POST%20CLASSICAL%20PERIOD%20600-1450


1
POST CLASSICAL PERIOD 600-1450
Trade and Faith Define An Age
2
  • And thus does their Lord answer their prayer
    I shall not lose sight of the work of any of
    you who works (in My way) be it man or woman. You
    are members, one of another.
  • Surah Al-I-Imran 3195
  •  
  • O Prophet, say to thy wives and daughters
  • and the believing women, that they draw
  • their veils close to them so it is likelier
  • they will be known, and not hurt. - Surah 3359
  •  

3
600-1450 Topics
  • Break fall of classical empires
  • Spread of great world religions
  • Medieval world
  • Growth of trade/interaction
  • Renaissance

4
The Bookends
  • 600Great classical empires have fallen
  • 632Coming of Islam
  • 1000Trade increases both by land and sea.
  • 1450Fall of Constantinople and decline of Silk
    Roads
  • 1450Europe looks westward toward the Atlantic

5
600-1450 Chapter Topics
  • 6-8Islam and its spread
  • 8Africa the spread of Islam
  • 9Eastern Europe
  • 10Medieval Europe
  • 11Americas
  • 12Chinese Renaissance
  • 13Japan, Korea and Vietnam
  • 14Mongols
  • 15European Renaissance Exploration

6
600-1450 Themes
  • Questions of periodization
  • Nature and causes of changes in the world history
    framework leading up to 600 C.E.1450 as a period
  • Emergence of new empires and political systems
  • (e.g., Umayyad, Abbasid, Byzantium, Russia,
    Sudanic states, Swahili Coast, Tang, Song, and
    Ming China, Delhi Sultanate, Mongol, Turkish,
    Aztec, Inca)
  • Continuities and breaks within the period
  • (e.g., the effects of the Mongols on
    international contacts and on specific societies)

7
600-1450 Themes
  • The Islamic world
  • The rise and role of Dar al-Islam as a unifying
    cultural and economic force in Eurasia and
    Africa
  • Islamic political structures, notably the
    caliphate
  • Arts, sciences, and technologies

8
600-1450 Themes
  • Interregional networks and contacts
  • Development and shifts in interregional trade,
    technology, and cultural exchange
  • Trans-Sahara trade
  • Indian Ocean trade
  • Silk Roads
  • Economic innovations
  • e.g., Tang, Song, and early Ming China, Swahili
    Coast trade, economic systems in the Americas
  • Missionary outreach of major religions
  • Contacts between major religions, e.g., Islam and
    Buddhism, Christianity and Islam
  • Impact of the Mongol empires

9
600-1450 Themes
  • Political systems and cultural patterns
  • East Asia
  • Chinas expansion
  • Chinese influence on surrounding areas and its
    limits (Japan, Vietnam, and Korea)
  • Change and continuities in Confucianism
  • The Americas
  • Apex and decline of the Maya
  • Rise of the Aztec
  • Rise of the Inca
  • Restructuring of Europe
  • Decentralizationmedieval society
  • Division of Christianity
  • Revival of cities
  • Africa
  • Sudanic empires (Mali, Ghana, Songhay)
  • Swahili coast
  • South Asia and Southeast Asia
  • Delhi Sultanate
  • Vietnam

10
600-1450 Themes
  • Demographic and environmental changes
  • Impact of migrations on Afro-Eurasia and the
    Americas
  • e.g., Aztecs, Mongols, Turks, Vikings, and Arabs
  • Consequences of plague pandemics in the
    fourteenth century
  • Growth and role of cities
  • e.g., the expansion of urban commercial centers
    in Song China and administrative centers in
    Africa and the Americas

11
600-1450 Themes
  • Diverse interpretations
  • What are the issues involved in using cultural
    areas rather than states as units of analysis?
  • What are the sources of change nomadic
    migrations versus urban growth?
  • Was there a world economic network in this
    period?
  • Were there common patterns in the new
    opportunities available to and constraints
    placed on elite women in this period?
  • To what extent was Dar al-Islam a unified
    cultural/political entity?

12
600-1450 Major Comparisons and Analyses Examples
  • Compare the role and function of cities in major
    societies
  • Analyze gender systems and changes, such as the
    effects of Islam
  • Analyze the interactions between Jews,
    Christians, and Muslims
  • Compare developments in political and social
    institutions in both eastern and western Europe
  • Compare Japanese and European feudalism
  • Compare European and sub-Saharan African contacts
    with the Islamic world
  • Analyze the Chinese civil service exam system and
    the rise of meritocracy

13
Development of systematic interactions between
civilizations Trade Contacts
  • 1000 dependable trade routes regular product
    exchange
  • Silk Road benefited from big empires and peace.
  • Islamic Caliphate
  • Mongol empire
  • Indian Ocean trade
  • Trans-Saharan trade
  • Mediterranean trade

14
trade contacts continued
  • Travel increases during this period
  • Ibn Battuta and Marco Polo
  • Americas way behind
  • No disease contact
  • No technological contact
  • No animal exchange
  • Did not use bronze or iron

15
Technology Growth
  • Maritime
  • Compass (south pointing needle)
  • Improved ship building technology (rudders,
    hulls, sails)
  • Overland
  • Camel saddle
  • Stirrup
  • Defense
  • Short bow
  • Gunpowder

16
Movement of peoples
  • Bantu peoples moved along Congo River and further
    south and east in Africa. (Evidence-Bantu
    languages)
  • Vikings moved along rivers and oceans into Europe
    and even the new world. (Viking shipshorses of
    other nomads)
  • Turks and Mongols moved southward and westward
    from the steps of Asia bringing bubonic plague to
    China and Europe.
  • Polynesian migrations with canoes to the islands
    in the Pacific.

17
Development of systematic interactions between
civilizations Spread of World Religions
  • Buddhism, Christianity, Islam (most important in
    the numbers affected)
  • Spread across cultural/political boundaries
    (missionaries, trade)
  • Large numbers convert
  • Syncretic conversion
  • Accept new beliefs but keep some of their own
  • Religious map of Eurasia set

18
Spread of World Religions continued .
  • Christianity spread in Europe and Eastern
    Mediterranean
  • Unifying force during political fragmentation
  • Buddhism spread in Asia
  • Especially SE Asia where islands had a trade
    relationship with India
  • Confucianism spread as Chinas influence grew in
    East and SE Asia
  • Islam spread cultural and religious ideas as it
    expanded under Umayyad and Abbasid caliphates

19
Why convert to new religions?
  • Decline of classical empires
  • More chaos, death rates increase
  • China
  • Buddhism created decline in secular thought
  • Fervency of missionaries
  • Governments used Christianity for power
  • i.e., Vladimir in Russia became Christian

20
Islam
  • Rise of Arab Islam
  • Becomes first world class superpower
  • Before this best was probably India

21
Religions That Were Not Global
  • Hinduism
  • Did not travel well outside of India
  • Needed the Caste System
  • Guptas favored Hinduism within India
  • Daoism
  • No missionary qualities
  • Shintoism (Japan)
  • No missionary qualities

22
Spread of Civilization
  • Spreads to other areas
  • Number of definable civilizations increases
  • Because of disunity of Mediterranean world

23
7 Civilization Areas by 1450
  • Expanded East Asia
  • S. and S.E. Asia
  • W. Asia (Middle East and N. Africa)
  • Sub Saharan Africa
  • Eastern Europe
  • Western Europe
  • Americas

24
3 types of civilization
  • Most developed
  • Middle East, North Africa, India, Byzantine
    Empire
  • Classical past to build on
  • Most trade
  • Centralized politically
  • The developed world

25
3 types of civilization
  • Less developed
  • Japan, Russia, W. Europe, E. Europe, Sub-Saharan
    Africa, S E Asia
  • Some world trade less processed goods
  • More decentralized politically
  • Not as large bureaucracies
  • Active, self-conscious imitators of developed
    civilizations
  • Copied social and cultural things religion,
    alphabets, art

26
less developed continued
  • Copied technology and political structure
  • Didnt do a good job of it
  • What Western Europe copied from Islam
  • Gothic arch was Islamic arch
  • Law
  • Science and math
  • Role of reason

27
Least developed
  • Americas
  • Not in contact with world or world religions
  • Didnt matter until contact occurred
  • Had their own achievements but not as good as
    first and second tier countries

28
Women good and bad
  • Good
  • Spread of world religions Christianity/ Islam /
    Buddhism
  • Men and women share spiritual equality
  • Equality not a belief in Classical society
  • Patriarchal society

29
women continued
  • Bad
  • Politically and economically major
    deterioration in the life of women
  • Veiling originally from Mesopotamia
  • Sati wife on funeral pyre
  • Footbinding (women as ornamental)

30
What IS and ISNT in This Time
  • Religion is in control
  • Politics not as important
  • Not many technological developments
  • Population growth only in some regions

31
Changes and Continuities
  • Change Classic empires have fallen and new ones
    have been created.
  • Change Migrations of nomadic peoples cause major
    international changes and diffusion of ideas and
    diseases
  • Continuity Religion continues to be important
    and continues to spread.
  • Continuity Trade routes continue to grow in
    importance
  • Continuity Societies continue to be patriarchal

32
POST CLASSICAL PERIOD 600-1450
Trade and Faith Define An Age
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