Chapter 11 Networks & Connections

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115 Terms

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syncretism

The overarching theme is ___, the merging of different cultures and religions.

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weather

indian ocean trade is dictated by ___

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salt, gold

Trans-Saharan trade is mostly…

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indian ocean

Silk Rond expands, connects to ___ ___ 

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access to trade; nationalistic reaction

tribute system in China for ___ __ ___; Korea, Vietnam, Japan: subdue neighbors, spread politics/religion/language; this fostered a ___ ___

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donkey; camel caravan

the ___ dominated the silk roads, but ___ ___ were very important (and also prevalent on AP exam)

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diaspora

dispersion of a population from its indigenous territories, or a scattered pop. whose origin lies in a separate geographic locale (ex. jewish and African peoples)

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diasporic merchant communities

communities set up by merchants away from ancestral homelands in cities along important trade routes, where they introduced their traditions into local culture

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trade cities

Central Asia connects empires; ___ ___ emerge

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isolated; commerce; trade

Various communities weren't fully ___/self-sustained; they were tied in varying degrees to networks of connection & interaction; ___ & ___ was most important in creating relationships w/ distant ppls

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consumption habits; working people; communities

trade networks altered ___ ___ - goods more available; silk, jade, etc. allow elites to distinguish themselves from commoners; encouraged ___ ___ to specialize in particular products for distant markets instead of use in own ___

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merchants

___ become distinct social group, gaining immense wealth

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political life

Trade had ability to transform ___ ___: wealth from controlling & taxing trade motivates creation of & sustained new states; vehicle for the spread of religion, tech, disease, plants/animals

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silk road; caravanserai

Most famous network, ___ ___ (named after most famous product), stretched from China to EU, facilitating various goods carried by caravans that stopped @ ___, inns/guesthouses along route, where merchants rested, traded, & resupplied animals; centers of cultural exchange, some developing into major cities

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15

luxuries

Most goods on the silk road were ___ for the elite rather than staple goods - value compensated for transport costs

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silk

China held monopoly on this product, but by 500CE knowledge & tech to make it spread to EA neighbors, BE, ME, India; it was a symbol of elite status & religious piety

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animals; paper; bills; credit

Tech advancements make ___ more effective at transport; New forms of credit & economic exchange: ___ money, ___ of exchange, banking houses/___

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elite; agriculture

Silk Road trade was modest compared to present trade, but still big econ/social impacts; direct impact was limited to ___ class; trickle-down effect on farmers: they gave up ___ to focus on silk, tools, paper, etc. for Silk Road

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large, powerful states

Silk Road prospered most when ___, ___ ___ gave travelers relative security (ex. 200 BE- 200CE, Rome & China; 600-700 BE, Abbasid, & Tang; 1200-1300, Mongols encompassed almost whole route)

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culture; buddhism; voluntary; beneficial

Silk Roads had more important role in spreading ___ than econ; ___ was spread by Indian traders & monks, which especially took root in Central Asian oasis cities, where conversion was ___ but ___: gave spiritual traditions & link to India

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changed; decadence

Buddhism ___ as it spread: oasis town monasteries existed in ___, contrary to the original faith; begging bowls became more symbolic; temples had art, music, parties, merchants' gifts, etc.

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mahayana buddhism

Buddha featured as deity w/bodhisattvas, emphasis on compassion, chance to earn merit; flourished across Silk Roads

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cultures

Buddhism picked up elements of other ___; ppl’s deities become bodhisattvas

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pure land school

Buddhism first entered through the Silk Road; widely accepted by 700s; ___ ___ ___: popular Buddhist expression emphasis on salvation by faith, not study/meditatio

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resistance

the growth of chinese buddhim was also met with ___

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monks; nuns; buddhism

the chinese gov took action against ___ & other foreign religions: 841 - 845, ___ & ___ forced to return to life as taxpaying citizens; temples destroyed or repurposed, land/metals/serfs/money confiscated

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vanish; chan school; dominant

Buddhism didn't ___ despite persecution: ___ ___ of Chinese Buddhism, emphasis meditation, became ___ in Song dynasty & was favored by scholars, officials

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religious; moral standards

Neo-Confucianism rejected ___ aspects of Buddhism (& Daoism) but appreciated high ___ ___ of Buddhist teachings

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lower classes

Buddhism became part of Chinese popular religion amongst ___ ___, along w/ Confucianism & Daoism, which coexisted unlike european christianity

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tribute missions; buddhist; confucianist schools

Korea, Japan, Vietnam borrowed from Chinese culture: ___ ___ from Korea allowed it to model its elite dass after China's; ___ & ___ ___ also took root in Korea

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zen; samurai class; elite

Chan school became ___ in Japan; popular amongst ___ ___; Neo-Confucianism official ideology of Tokugawa in 1600s; Chinese writing system & interest in historical writing/calligraphy/poetry attracted ___ 

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Turks; mongols; iranians/indo-europeans

Central Asia home to 3 major groups: ___ (Huns, Seljuks, Ottomans), ___ (Mongols, Tatars), ___/___-___ (Parthians, Sarmatians, Scythians)

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deliberately; harsh; trade; sedentary societies; borrowed; horse & bow

the central asian nomads moved ___ from place to place, lived ___ lives, and they engaged in ___, took advantage of ___ ___, and ___ elements from other cultures. also used the ___ & ___

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diasporic merchant communities

merchants rarely traveled the entire route; they often stopped at caravanserai or ___ ___ ___, where cultural exchange was prevalent

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islam

some buddhist communities converted to ___ (Monotheism easy to transport)

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Swahili civilization

emerged 8th century ce; set of commercial city-states stretching all along EAfr. coast (Somalia- Mrambique); early ancestors farms & fished, spoke African Bantu & traded w/ Arabian, Greek, Romans

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western india; islam; metals, hides, slaves

growth of Swahiil cities stimulated by commercial life of ___ ___ following rise of ___ - opportunity for wealth & power in growing demand for ___, ___, ___

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merchant class

In response to commercial opportunities, african ___ ___ emerged, villages became towns, chiefs became kings

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farming; pastoral; city-states

Swahili civilization flourished by 1200s, diff. From EAfr. ___ & ___ cultures; population centered in independent ___-___, governed by own kings who competed w/ other cities - not unified by imperial system or larger state; none controlled single chokepoint of trade

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mercantil elite; commoners

african goods navigated coastal waterways, preparing for shipment abroad which generated class-stratified urban societies: sharp distinction between ___ ___ & ___

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syncretism amongst the swahili elite

Many swahili ruling families claimed Arab/Persian origin to bolster prestige; used Chinese & Indian goods

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african; arabic; arab traders; indian ocean

Swahili was a grammatically ___ language but written in ___; Islam was introduced by ___ ___ and voluntarily adopted & spread throughout Swahili world, linking cities to ___ ___ world

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islam

Indian ocean trade extended south of Afr, but not ___

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great zimbabwe

powerful state whose emergence was likely linked to growing gold trade & wealth from cattle herds; demonstrated reach & transforming power of Indian Ocean trade

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banana

Spread through Africa from SEAsia, enhancing agri. productivity, pop- growth, laid economic base for chiefdom & state growth across continent

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maritime expeditions

1400s, china launched series of ___ ___, illustrating the connections operating in the Indian ocean

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private

the Chinese had been major presence in South China Sea & SEAsian ports since 1000, but they were mostly ___ affairs

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emperor yongle; tribute system

___ ___of Ming dynasty commissioned fleet of 300 ships to launch expeditions starting 1405; captained by Muslim eunuch Zheng He & sought to add distant states to ___ ___

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chinese power & prestige; foreign trade; conquer; extensive empire

yongle’s expeditions established ___ ___ & ___ and control over ___ ___ throughout Indian Ocean region; china d liberately didnt see to ___/build ___ ___

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reasons why chinese authorities stopped the maritime expeditions

yongle had died & high-ranking officiers saw it as waste of resources - believed their self-sufficient "middle kingdom" didn’t need much from beyond borders, and if they did, they could get it easily

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merchants; craftsmen; EU

Private Chinese ___/___ continued business w/ neighboring countries, but withdrawal from Indian Ocean allowed for __ entry

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peaceful & multicultural exchange

Indian ocean network is typified by ___ & ___ ___

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monsoon seasons

___ ___ regulated timing of indian ocean trade; nov-march: SEAsia & africa; april-sept: inda

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warehouses; diasporic merchant

result of monsoon-regulated trade: India was place of ___; Indian ocean was place of ___ ___ enclaves

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diverse; specialties

Ocean travel allowed for more ___ goods, but regions had ___: afr: gold, ivory, enslaved ppls; ME: books, rugs; India: pepper, cotton textiles; seasia: spices, sugar, wood; china: silk, porcelain

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population restrictions/advantages

1000CE, avg. dhow carried 100 tons; 1500 CE, avg. dhow carried 400 tons. Song dynasty ships (Junks) carried 1000 tons; size reflected ___ ___/___

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Buddhism; Hinduism; trade routes

Monsoon winds foster long visits & thus greater cultural exchange (ex. ___ moves to SEA islands; ___ in mainland SEA through ___ ___

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Islam; peaceful

___ was key to cultural exchange; mostly ___ conversion (exception: Turkish Muslims attacked northern India for precious gems)

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geography, philosophy of caste system, regional autonomy

India was still the least affected region of Dar al-Islam because of:

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Dar al-Islam

flexibility of Hinduism (Bhaktic cults): takes pieces of ___ __-___ & incorporates it into Hinduism

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poor; Buddhists

Islam gained converts among ___ & ___, but mostly diffused Indian culture ("Arabic" numerals emerge from trade routes into India)

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Southeast Asia

___ ___ was the land of trade & converging influence - Silk Roads expand to ocean, allowing for lots of contact with India & China

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animistic; Hinduism; Buddhism

Southeast Asia had a complex cultural mix: had ___ origins; then classical exposure to ___ & ___

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Khmer; Java; Malay; Sumatra Srivijayan

SEAsia dominated by 3 power zones: Mainland ___ Empire (Hindu); Various kingdoms on ___ (Hindu/Buddhist among elite; animist among masses); ___ Peninsula & ___ ___ Empire (Buddhist among elite; animist among masses)

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power

Islam & Christianity enforce conversion b/c religion = ___ (tithes)

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sand roads

___ ___: long-distance trade routes across Sahara that connected North Africa & Mediterranean w/ peoples in West Africa

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environmental variation

Trans- African trade was rooted in ___ ___: NAfr. coast manufactured cloth, glass, weapons, books, etc; Sahara had deposits of copper & salt; oases produced dates; agricultural peoples in the south grew crops, made textiles, mined gold

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savanna grasslands; forests

Agricultural sub-Sahara was divided into 2 geological zones: ___ ___ (grain crops); ___ (root & tree crops)

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Arabian camel

Major turning point for African commerce: enabled long trans-Saharan treks; NAfr. Arabs carried Islam with them across the desert

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trade; west-african peoples; savanna

Trans-Saharan ___ provided both incentives & resources to build new & larger political structures; ___-___ ___ in ___ were in the best position to take advantage of these opportunities in 600-1600

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Hausa; city-states

___-speaking people created multiple independent ___-___; 1000, created urban & commercial culture & acted as middlemen in WAfr. commerce

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monarchies; taxes; trade

WAfr. city-states were ___ with elaborate court life & various degrees of control over military forces; drew on ___ from wealth of trans-Saharan ___; quickly gained reputations for their wealth

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social; gender

Growing Wafr. integration with the outer world created complex ___ hierarchies; ___ hierarchies emerged too

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matrilineal; male; central; complementary

WAfr. ___ descent was replaced by 1200 & most rulers, merchants, & officials were ___; women seen as dangerous & untrustworthy but still ___ to agriculture, weaving, royal courts, & mythologies portrayed a ___ gender relationship

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servants; concubines; male

Early African slaves were mostly women (domestic ___ & ___); later ___ slaves worked as state officials, porters, craftsmen, miners, agr. workers

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south; wealthy Islamic households

Most African slaves came from non-lslamic/stateless societies in the ___, which were raided during dry seasons by Western states; Trans-Saharan slave trade developed, and most were sent to ___ ___ ___ in NAFr.

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urban centers

West Afr. civ developed substantial ___ ___ where traders congregated & exchanged goods (ex. Timbuktu); some became centers for manufacturing

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diasporic communities

Trans-Saharan commerce was facilitated by ___ ___ (like Indian Ocean basin); NAfr. merchants settled in Mali by mid 1300s; Hausa merchants settled across WAfr commercial network

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islam; trade; muslim traders

As in East Asia, ___ spread with ___ & became an important element of WAfr. urban culture; it was introduced mostly by ___ ___ across the Sahara, not Arab/Turkic invasions

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peaceful; voluntary; merchants; trade partners

Gradual acceptance of Islam in Africa was largely ___ & ___; Provided important links for Afr. ___ to Muslim ___ ___

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literate officials; religious legitimacy; Mecca

For monarchs & courts, Islam offered a source of ___ ___ to assist in state administration, as well as ___ ___, esp. for those who gained prestige through pilgrimage to ___

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Mansa Musa

Mali ruler who undertook hajj (1724) accompanied by huge entourage & sums of gold

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timbuktu; mosques; arabic

By 1500s, many WAfr. cities were major centers of Islamic religious & intellectual life: ___’s schools attracted students across West Afr. & beyond; Monarchs subsidized the construction of ___; ___ was the language at religion, education, admin, & trade, but not dominant in daily life

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Arabic; west africa

There was no massive migration of ___ peoples to ___ ___

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urban elites; convert the masses

Islam stayed amongst ___ ___; didn’t spread much into rural WAfr. until 1800s—many rulers adopted Islam but their people practiced African religions that must be respected to stay in power, so few efforts were made to ___ ___ ___ or govern strictly w/ Islamic law

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Bantu peoples; language; agriculture; iron

A sedentary population that experienced population pressure and was forced to migrate; as a result, they spread ___, ___, & ___; established conditions that allowed for empire-building during Late Postclassical period

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Ethiopia

___ is Africa's exception: they stay who they are throughout history

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Egyptian; Nubia; Ethiopia; Christianity

3 persistent African societies developed early b/c of outside contact: ___ Copts, ___/Kush, ___/Axum; ___ spread to these regions early; not later conquered b/c Christians didn’t want to conquer other Christians

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trade; monsoons; Islamic

East African city-states were strategically located to profit from ___; ___ provide seasonal route and ___ empires intensified Indian ocean trade

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luxury

African exports are ___ items (gold, ivory, etc.), as are imports: those who controlled trade had the money to buy expensive goods

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increase

Africa is a new market w/ new opportunities for trade; Silk Road & Indian ocean wealth ___ b/c of African trade

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Swahili

trade language; mixture of Bantu & Arabic, serves to unite an otherwise diverse region; best represents East Africa during Postclassial Period

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cosmopolitan port cities

highly urbanized, wealthy, luxurious, clean; emerge along Swahili coast; people move from rural farmland to these areas (pull factor)

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sources; muslims

Central Africa (Kongo, Zimbabwe) were the ___ of goods traded in E&W Afr.; no direct contact w/ ___

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islamic; arabic

By 1200, millions shared ___ faith & spoke ___, and the region became a vast trading zone

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reasons for Islamic world becoming a vast trade network

Prime central location in Afro-Eurasia & broke down earlier political barriers between Byzantium & Persia; commerce valued in Islamic teaching (laws for regulation prominent in Sharia), creating the framework for cross-cultural exchange

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Pilgimarge to mecca; urbanization; urban elites; merchants

___ __ ___ & ___ fostered by Islamic growth; ___ ___ stimulated demand for luxury goods; Muslim ___ became big/sometimes dominant players in Med Sea, Silk Roads, Sahara, & Indian Ocean

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Islamic Green revolution

crops circulated & spread throughout Afro-Eurasia, water-management practices (reservoirs, irrigation systems) spread, increased food production, pop. growth, urbanization, industrial dev.

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rockets & papermaking; books & written culture; oral

China’s ___ & ____ techniques improved upon by islamic world, the latter of which strengthened bureaucratic gov & passed through EU, ME, India, spurring the rise of ___ & ___ ___ @ expense of earlier ___ traditions

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jewish; christian; persia; persian; science

islamic ideas drew on ___ & ___ precedents; ___ contributed in bureaucratic/court customs; ___ became major literary language; Greek, Hellenistic, & Indian ___ translated into Arabic

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