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History of the Ancient and Medieval World

History of the Ancient and Medieval World. Beyond Europe. Walsingham Academy Mrs. McArthur Room 111. Nationalism. Indigenous Peoples. The Reformation. The Renaissance. The Voyages Of Discovery. The Scientific Revolution. Whose viewpoint?. More Views. Assignment 1 : due Wed. 5/4 .

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History of the Ancient and Medieval World

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  1. History of the Ancient and Medieval World Beyond Europe Walsingham Academy Mrs. McArthur Room 111

  2. Nationalism Indigenous Peoples The Reformation The Renaissance The Voyages Of Discovery The Scientific Revolution

  3. Whose viewpoint?

  4. More Views

  5. Assignment 1:due Wed. 5/4 • Study slides 2-4 and anticipate the questions. • Read photocopies: • The Search for Spices • Conquest in the Americas • Spanish and Portuguese Colonies • Using complete sentences, answer 6 Review Questions • Follow link and read. Astrolabe: Paris Observatory (A School Project: Made by 16-year-old)

  6. Assignment 2:due Thurs., 5/5 • Read text, pp. 477-481 • Complete Graphic Organizers: Spanish Colonies in America, Empires in the Americas. A Missionary Protests How does the painting of the mine (pp. 477) at Potosí reinforce Las Casas’s view?

  7. Assignment 3: due Fri. 5/6 • Read photocopies: • Turbulent Centuries in Africa • Struggle for North America • Changes in Europe • Using complete sentences, • answer 6 Review Questions Native village (North Carolina) as seen by artist John White of Sir Walter Raleigh’s expedition, 1585

  8. Choose: Exploration and Empires-1400-1600

  9. Disease Exchange

  10. Assignment 4:due Mon. 5/9 • Read text, pp. 491-497 • Define mercantilism, capitalism. • Complete Graphic Organizers: Recognize Sequence. • Explain how Tulipmania reflected the economic changes of its time. Uniting the World How do the visuals on pp 491 reinforce the idea that Smith expresses?

  11. TULIPMANIA was a period in the Dutch Golden Age during which contract prices for bulbs of the recently introduced tulip reached extraordinarily high levels and then suddenly collapsed. At the peak of tulip mania in February 1637, some single tulip bulbs sold for more than 10 times the annual income of a skilled craftsman. It is generally considered the first recorded speculative bubble (or economic bubble), The term "tulip mania" is now often used metaphorically to refer to any large economic bubble (when asset prices deviate from intrinsic values). A tulip, known as "the Viceroy", displayed in a 1637 Dutch catalog. Its bulb cost between 3000 and 4200 florins depending on size. A skilled craftsman at the time earned about 300 florins a year

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