 | 9. 5 Political Powers and Achievements Tom Burns- beacon High School Political powers and achievements: New power arrangements emerged across Eurasia. Political states and empires employed a variety of techniques for expanding and maintaining control 16.95 Kb. 1 | read |
 | Postclassical spice charts Byzantine 476 ce -1453 ce (tip: on a blank map trace the beginning, peak, and decline of the Byzantine) 37.74 Kb. 1 | read |
 | Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200–1500 On his deathbed, Genghis Khan reportedly announced, “If you want to retain your possessions and conquer your enemies, you must make your subjects submit willingly and unite your diverse energies to a single end 74.01 Kb. 1 | read |
 | Vocabulary c. 8,000 B. C. E. 600 C. E Match the term to the definition. To create a better review sheet, write the term instead of the letter 138.84 Kb. 3 | read |
 | Chapter 7 Chapter Outline Constantinople, a unique Christian culture developed known as Byzantium. The Byzantines eventually converted the peoples of Eastern Europe to Christianity and established the Eastern Orthodox Church 90.97 Kb. 1 | read |
 | Exam Review: Chapters 6, 7, & 8 Islam: origins, doctrines, the Five Pillars, relationship w/Judaism & Christianity 8.93 Kb. 1 | read |
 | Century B. C. E. to the 15 Because products had to travel such great distances and thus there were so many middle men, only the very wealthy could partake of the trade. That is why gold and silver were preferred exchange mediums for the trade of silk and other fine 17.1 Kb. 1 | read |
 | When States-Systems Unite: Spatio-Temporal Boundary and Transition Issues What criteria should we use to decide whether, when and where two civilizations/systems of states/world systems have fused to become one? What standards exist against which we can set candidate cases of linkage? 274.8 Kb. 6 | read |
 | Theme: Authority P: The Mongol Art of War Europe to the distant land of China Marco Polo is only one of the best known of these. Well-traveled and relatively well-maintained roads linked lands from the Mediterranean basin to China. The Mongol Empire had negligible influence on 1.02 Mb. 9 | read |