To a large degree, the Classical Era set the stage -- it introduced cultural trends, the major religious beliefs systems for many major regions and started inter-regional trade patterns.  What happens, though, when all the largest empires fall? Welcome to the Post-classical time period . . . When Muslims and Mongols take center stage.  There are some reconstituted empires from previous time periods (think Byzantines and Tangs), and some Feudal developments in Europe and Japan and some empires worth discussing in the Americas (i.e. the Aztecs and Incas) but Islam dominates the imperial and trade aspects of the Postclassical time period. The Indian Ocean is also super important in a way that we will call "Southernization" -- the world becoming more "Eastern".  The Postclassical time period accounts for 20% of the AP Exam, so pay close attention to the following . . .

Unit III in Maps

Postclassical Major Empires and Cities

PostClassical Civilizations (6oo CE to 1450 CE)

PostClassical Era Trade Routes (by 1450 CE)

Postclassical Religious Diasporas

Europe in the Postclassical Time period

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Unit III Key Concepts

The Postclassical Era =>  Regional and Transregional Interactions ca 600 C.E. to 1450 C.E.

KEY CONCEPT 3.1: EXPANSION & INTENSIFICATION of COMMUNICATION & EXCHANGE NETWORKS
Although Afro-Eurasia and the Americas remained separate from one another, this era witnessed a deepening and widening of old and new networks of human interaction within and across regions. The results were unprecedented concentrations of wealth and the intensification of cross-cultural exchanges. Innovations in transportation, state policies, and mercantile practices contributed to the expansion and development of commercial networks, which in turn served as conduits for cultural, technological, and biological diffusion within and between various societies. Pastoral or nomadic groups played a key role in creating and sustaining these networks. Expanding networks fostered greater interregional borrowing, while at the same time sustaining regional diversity. The prophet Muhammad promoted Islam, a new major monotheistic religion at the start of this period. It spread quickly through practices of trade, warfare, and diffusion characteristic of this period. (2012 CONTINUITIES & CHANGE ESSAY)

1. Improved transportation technologies and commercial practices led to an increased volume of trade, and expanded the geographical range of existing and newly active trade networks.

In which John Green teaches you the history of the Indian Ocean Trade. John weaves a tale of swashbuckling adventure, replete with trade in books, ivory, and timber. Along the way, John manages to cover advances in seafaring technology, just how the monsoons work, and there's even a disembowelment for you Fangoria fans.

  • The growth of inter-regional trade in luxury goods (silk and cotton textiles, porcelain, spices, precious metals and gems, slaves, exotic animals)

  • Trade was encouraged by significant innovations in previously existing transportation and commercial technologies, including more sophisticated caravan organization (Caravanserai, Camel saddles);

  •  larger ship designs in sea travel; and new forms of credit and monetization (Bills of exchange, Credit, Checks, Banking houses).

  • Commercial growth was also facilitated by state practices (Minting of coins, use of paper money)
  • Trading organizations  (HANSEATIC LEAGUE) and State-sponsored commercial infrastructures like the Grand Canal in China.

  • The expansion of EMPIRES facilitated Trans-Eurasian trade and communication as new peoples were drawn into their conquerors' economies and trade networks.  Required examples of empires :

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*** The Following are NOT required but important . . . .*****

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2. The movement of peoples caused environmental and linguistic effects.

  • The expansion and intensification of long-distance trade routes often depended on environmental knowledge and technological adaptations to it
  • Some migrations had a significant environmental impact. Required examples of migration and their environmental impact

The migration of Bantu-speaking peoples who facilitated transmission of iron technologies and agricultural techniques in Sub-Saharan Africa.  The maritime migrations of the Polynesian peoples who cultivated transplanted foods and domesticated animals as they moved to new islands (See the video below for the Polynesian story)

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Proof Positive that the Polynesians had found and were trading with the Americas hundreds of years before Columbus.

See the film, starring Dwayne The Rock Johnson & Auliʻi Cravalho, available digitally now! The Moana soundtrack is available now: Download: http://disneymusic.co/MVOSndtrk Streaming: http://disneymusic.co/MVOSndtrkWS Sheet Music: http://bit.ly/2hgBcVs Follow Disney Music: http://facebook.com/disneymusic http://twitter.com/disneymusic http://instagram.com/disneymusic http://snapchat.com/add/disneymusic Follow Moana: http://disney.com/moana http://facebook.com/disneymoana http://twitter.com/disneymoana http://instagram.com/disneyanimation Music video by Lin-Manuel Miranda, Opetaia Foa'i performing We Know The Way.

  • Some migrations and commercial contacts led to the diffusion of languages (spread of Bantu languages including Swahili, Spread of Turkic and Arabic languages)throughout a new region or the emergence of new languages.

Crash Course World History is now available on DVD! Visit http://store.dftba.com/products/crashcourse-world-history-the-complete-series-dvd-set to buy a set for your home or classroom. You can directly support Crash Course at http://www.patreon.com/crashcourse Subscribe for as little as $0 to keep up with everything we're doing.

  • In key places along important trade routes, merchants set up diasporic communities (Muslim merchant communities in the Indian Ocean region, Chinese merchant communities in Southeast Asia, Sogdian merchant communities throughout Central Asia, Jewish communities in the Mediterranean, Indian Ocean Basin, or along the silk roads)where they introduced their own cultural traditions into the indigenous culture.

  • The writings of certain interregional travelers (Ibn Battuta, Marco Polo, Xuanzang)illustrate both the extent and the limitations of intercultural knowledge and understanding.

  • Increased cross-cultural interactions also resulted in the diffusion of scientific and technological traditions (Greek and Indian mathematics on Muslim scholars, return of Greek science and philosophy to Western Europe via Muslim al-Andalus in Iberia, Spread of printing and gunpowder technologies from East Asia into the Islamic empires and Western Europe).

4. There was continued diffusion of crops and pathogens throughout the Eastern Hemisphere along the trade routes.

  • The spread of epidemic diseases, including the Black Death, followed the well established paths of trade and military conquest.

KEY CONCEPT 3.2:  CONTINUITY & INNOVATION IN STATE FORMS & THEIR INTERACTIONS


State formation in this era demonstrated remarkable continuity, innovation and diversity in various regions. In Afro-Eurasia, some states attempted, with differing degrees of success, to preserve or revive imperial structures, while smaller, less centralized states continued to develop. The expansion of Islam introduced a new concept — the Caliphate— to Afro-Eurasian statecraft. Pastoral peoples in Eurasia built powerful and distinctive empires that integrated people and institutions from both the pastoral and agrarian worlds. In the Americas, powerful states developed in both Meso-America and the Andean region.

1. Empires collapsed and were reconstituted; in some regions new state forms emerged. (2011 COMPARE-CONTRAST ESSAY TOPIC) (2014 COMPARE CONTRAST ESSAY)

  • Following the collapse of empires, most reconstituted governments, including the Byzantine Empire and the Chinese dynasties — Sui, Tang, and Song — combined traditional sources of power and legitimacy (Patriarchy, Religion, Land-owning elites) with innovations (New methods of taxation, Tributary systems, Adaptation of Religious Institutions) better suited to the current circumstances. (SEE BELOW)

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  • In some places, new forms of governance emerged, including those developed in various Islamic states (Abassids, Muslim Iberia, Dehli Sultanates), the Mongol Khanates,city-states (Italian Peninsula, East Africa, Southeast Asia, Americas), and decentralized government (feudalism) in Europe and Japan.

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  • In the Americas, as in Afro-Eurasia, state systems expanded in scope and reach: Networks of city-states flourished in the Maya region and, at the end ofthis period, imperial systems were created by the Mexica ("Aztecs") and Inca.

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2. Inter-regional contacts and conflicts between states and empires encouraged significant technological and cultural transfers.

  • Between Tang China and the Abbasids

  • During the Crusades

In which John Green teaches you about the Crusades embarked upon by European Christians in the 12th and 13th centuries. Our traditional perception of the Crusades as European Colonization thinly veiled in religion isn't quite right. John covers the First through the Fourth Crusades, telling you which were successful, which were well-intentioned yet ultimately destructive, and which were just plain crazy.

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KEY CONCEPT 3.3: INCREASED ECONOMIC PRODUCTIVE CAPACITY & ITS CONSEQUENCES


Changes in trade networks resulted from and stimulated increasing productive capacity, with important implications for social and gender structures and environmental processes. Productivity rose in both agriculture and industry. Rising productivity supported population growth and urbanization but also strained environmental resources and at times caused dramatic demographic swings. Shifts in production and the increased volume of trade also stimulated new labor practices, including adaptation of existing patterns of free and coerced labor. Social and gender structures evolved in response to these changes.

1. Innovations stimulated agricultural and industrial production in many regions.

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Agricultural production increased significantly due to technological innovations (Champa rice varieties, chinampa field systems, Waru waru agricultural techniques in the Andean areas, Improved terracing techniques, horse collar)

  • In response to increasing demand in Afro-Eurasia for foreign luxury goods, crops were transported from their indigenous homelands to equivalent climates in other regions.
  • Chinese, Persian, and Indian artisans and merchants expanded their production of textiles and porcelains for export; industrial production of iron and steel expanded in China.

2. The fate of cities varied greatly, with periods of significant decline, and with periods of increased urbanization buoyed by rising productivity and expanding trade networks.

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While cities in general continued to play the roles they had played in the past as governmental, religious, and commercial centers, many older cities declined at the same time that numerous new cities emerged to take on these established roles.

Students should be able to explain the cultural, religious, commercial and governmental function of at least two major cities.

In which John Green teaches you about the Little Ice Age. The Little Ice Age was a period of global cooling that occurred from the 13th to the 19th centuries. This cooling was likely caused by a number of factors, including unusual solar activity and volcanic eruptions.

The Little Ice Age is tied directly to the decline in urban population.

In which John Green teaches you about Vikings! That's right, one of our most requested subjects, the Vikings, right here on Crash Course. So what's the deal with Vikings? Well, the stuff you've heard about them may not be true. The Vikings weren't just pagan raiders striking terror into the hearts of defenseless European Christendom.

3. Despite significant continuities in social structures and in methods of production, there were also some important changes in labor management and in the effect of religious conversion on gender relations and family life.

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A. As in the previous period, there were many forms of labor organization. Required examples of forms of labor organization

-Free peasant agriculture

-Nomadic pastoralism

-Craft production and guild organization

-Various forms of coerced and unfree labor

-Government-imposed labor taxes

-Military obligations

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B. As in the previous period, social structures were largely shaped by class and caste hierarchies, although patriarchy persisted.

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C. Free peasants resisted attempts to raise dues and taxes by staging revolts. The demand for slaves for both military and domestic purposes increased, particularly in central Eurasia, parts of Africa, and the eastern Mediterranean.  One illustrative example of regions where free peasants revolted either from the list below or an example of your choice:

- China

-The Byzantine Empire

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  1. EDICT on BUDDHISM, c. 845, Emperor Wuzong, (CHINA)
  2. CHARTER of FEALTY, 1110, Monk John (FRANCE)
  3. 1,001 ARABIAN NIGHTS, c. 1200, (ARABIA)
  4. EPIC of SUNDIATA, c. 1300 (MALI)
  5. TRAVELS in AFRICA & ASIA, 1354, Ibn Battuta (MOROCCO)

Videos and Links

Crash Course World History is now available on DVD! Visit http://store.dftba.com/products/crashcourse-world-history-the-complete-series-dvd-set to buy a set for your home or classroom. You can directly support Crash Course at http://www.patreon.com/crashcourse Subscribe for as little as $0 to keep up with everything we're doing.

Crash Course World History is now available on DVD! Visit http://store.dftba.com/products/crashcourse-world-history-the-complete-series-dvd-set to buy a set for your home or classroom. You can directly support Crash Course at http://www.patreon.com/crashcourse Subscribe for as little as $0 to keep up with everything we're doing.

In which John Green teaches you about the Crusades embarked upon by European Christians in the 12th and 13th centuries. Our traditional perception of the Crusades as European Colonization thinly veiled in religion isn't quite right. John covers the First through the Fourth Crusades, telling you which were successful, which were well-intentioned yet ultimately destructive, and which were just plain crazy.

In which John Green teaches you about Sub-Saharan Africa! So, what exactly was going on there? It turns out, it was a lot of trade, converting to Islam, visits from Ibn Battuta, trade, beautiful women, trade, some impressive architecture, and several empires.

Crash Course World History is now available on DVD! Visit http://store.dftba.com/products/crashcourse-world-history-the-complete-series-dvd-set to buy a set for your home or classroom. You can directly support Crash Course at http://www.patreon.com/crashcourse Subscribe for as little as $0 to keep up with everything we're doing.

In which John Green teaches you the history of the Indian Ocean Trade. John weaves a tale of swashbuckling adventure, replete with trade in books, ivory, and timber. Along the way, John manages to cover advances in seafaring technology, just how the monsoons work, and there's even a disembowelment for you Fangoria fans.

In which John Green discusses the strange and mutually beneficial relationship between a republic, the citystate of Venice, and an Empire, the Ottomans--and how studying history can help you to be a better boyfriend and/or girlfriend.

In which John Green teaches you how Russia evolved from a loose amalgamation of medieval principalities known as the Kievan Rus into the thriving democracy we know today. As you can imagine, there were a few bumps along the road. It turns out, our old friends the Mongols had quite a lot to do with unifying Russia.

In which John Green teaches you about disease, and the effects that disease has had in human history. Disease has been with man since the beginning, and it has shaped the way humans operate in a lot of ways. John will teach you about the Black Death, the Great Dying, and the modern medical revolution that has changed the world.

In which John Green teaches you about how Islam has interacted with politics during it's history, and how it continues to do so today. Islamist movements are in the news a lot lately, but how did that happen. John will point out that Islam has alway been tied to political movements.

In which John Green teaches you about Vikings! That's right, one of our most requested subjects, the Vikings, right here on Crash Course. So what's the deal with Vikings? Well, the stuff you've heard about them may not be true. The Vikings weren't just pagan raiders striking terror into the hearts of defenseless European Christendom.

View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/history-vs-genghis-khan-alex-gendler He was one of the most fearsome warlords who ever lived, waging an unstoppable conquest across the Eurasian continent. But was Genghis Khan a vicious barbarian or a unifier who paved the way for the modern world? Alex Gendler puts this controversial figure on trial in History vs Genghis Khan.

When an Aztec priest removed a person's heart during human sacrifice, would it still be beating? HISTORY®, now reaching more than 98 million homes, is the leading destination for award-winning original series and specials that connect viewers with history in an informative, immersive, and entertaining manner across all platforms. The network's all-original programming slate features a roster of hit series, epic miniseries, and scripted event programming.

Xcaret - Pok-ta-Pok - Mayan ball game

Learn more about TED-Ed Clubs here: https://ed.ted.com/clubs Visit the TED-Ed Clubs YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCskU_g7t6b5ecsA1CTS3y9Q View full lesson: https://ed.ted.com/lessons/how-did-polynesian-wayfinders-navigate-the-pacific-ocean-alan-tamayose-and-shantell-de-silva Imagine setting sail from Hawaii in a canoe. Your target is a small island thousands of kilometers away in the middle of the Pacific Ocean - a body of water that covers more than 160 million square kilometers.

View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/who-built-great-zimbabwe-and-why-breeanna-elliott Stretched across a tree-peppered expanse in Southern Africa lies the ruins of Great Zimbabwe, a medieval stone city of astounding wealth. Located in the present-day country of Zimbabwe, it's the site of the second largest settlement ruins in Africa.

In which John Green teaches you about what westerners call the middle ages and the lives of the aristocracy...in Japan. The Heian period in Japan lasted from 794CE to 1185CE, and it was an interesting time in Japan.

In our increasingly globalized world, a single infected person can board a plane and spread a virus across continents. Mark Honigsbaum describes the history of pandemics and how that knowledge can help halt future outbreaks.

View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/it-s-a-church-it-s-a-mosque-it-s-hagia-sophia-kelly-wall If walls could talk, Turkey's Hagia Sophia would have an abundance of stories to tell. Once a church, then a mosque, and now a museum, this world marvel has stood the test of time and war, surviving centuries of conquest by some of history's greatest empires.

View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/the-deadly-irony-of-gunpowder-eric-rosado In the mid-ninth century, Chinese chemists, hard at work on an immortality potion, instead invented gunpowder. They soon found that this highly inflammable powder was far from an elixir of life -- they put it to use in bombs against Mongol invaders, and the rest was history.

View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/the-past-present-and-future-of-the-bubonic-plague-sharon-n-dewitte The bubonic plague, which killed around 1/5 of the world's population in the 14th century, is still around today -- but it now claims only a few thousand lives each year. How did that number shrink so drastically? Sharon N.

View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/mansa-musa-one-of-the-wealthiest-people-who-ever-lived-jessica-smith Mansa Musa, the 14th century African king of the Mali Empire, is said to have amassed a fortune that possibly made him one of the wealthiest people who ever lived. Jessica Smith tells the story of how Mansa Musa literally put his empire - and himself - on the map.

An animated timeline from the book 'Science: a Discovery in Comics' by Margreet de Heer. More information: http://margreetdeheer.com/eng/science.html There's also an animated timeline of the History of the Earth: http://youtu.be/8qnnoePeHlk

The Following sites and materials are useful in reviewing the content of this unit

Freemanpedia => Unit III Review materials

Download these review materials and more HERE  at Freemanpedia's site