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END OF THE OLD ORDER. Collapse of Post-Classical statesByzantinesFollowing 2nd Crusade, slow declineConquered 1453 by the Ottoman TurksAbbassid CaliphateWeakened by sectionalismUnder control of Turkish clansMongols and TimurlaneConquered all major Eurasian statesMuslim cities destroyedNew
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1. THE WEST AND THECHANGING WORLD BALANCE CHAPTER 15:
THE END OF
POST-CLASSICAL
AGE
2. END OF THE OLD ORDER Collapse of Post-Classical states
Byzantines
Following 2nd Crusade, slow decline
Conquered 1453 by the Ottoman Turks
Abbassid Caliphate
Weakened by sectionalism
Under control of Turkish clans
Mongols and Timurlane
Conquered all major Eurasian states
Muslim cities destroyed
New routes and cities arose due to Mongols
3. SOUTH WEST ASIA Muslim religious leaders began to exert control
Rationalism opposed by religious conservatives
Mysticism, Islamic legalist traditions in favor
Pursuit of science declines
Landlords exercised greater authority
Peasants reduced to borderline slavery, serfdom
Agricultural productivity declined
Tax revenue
Europeans challenged Arabs
Mediterranean, rise of Aragon, Castile, Venice, France
Merchants began to replace Muslim merchants
No total collapse of Islamic civilization
Arabs lost power, old Abbassid realm fragments
Ottoman Turks rapidly took over most of area
4. INTERNATIONAL POWER VACUUM Ottoman Empire
Sultans did not restore Muslims to same level
Ottomans not center of international trade
Science and philosophy stagnated.
Result was power vacuum in Islamic world
Rise of Rivals to Ottomans
India
Persia
Egypt
Mongols provided alternative framework
Redirected land trade away from Muslims
Land routes turned attention to sea routes.
5. THE CHINESE Ming dynasty drove out the Mongols in 1368
China was best placed to control Eurasian trade
Ming emperors sought expansion
Extending the borders of the empire
Reviving the tribute system
Initiating state-sponsored maritime expeditions.
Voyages reached India, the Middle East, and Africa
Ming emperors ordered the voyages to cease in 1433.
Costs of voyages hurt infrastructure
Scholar-gentry opposed voyages
China's decision reflected traditional Confucianism
Concentration on internal improvements
Cultural isolation
Economic expansion did not depend on foreign trade
China's withdrawal from world
Cleared the path for the emergence of Europeans
China began long stagnation
6. HERE COME THE EUROPEANS By 15th century
West began to expand its world contacts
Important changes taking place in Europe
Church Under attack
Great Schism saw up to three rival popes
Wealth led to reformers, who were condemned
Hus in Holy Roman Empire
Wycliffe in England
Western philosophy and creativity stagnate
Political organization of feudalism not effective
Feudal monarchs acquire new powers, wealth
Introduction of cannons, new weaponry
Death of nobles led to rise of citizen armies under kings
Impact of the Black Death,
Carried off almost one-third of Europe's population
Hit Italy and France worst
Hit merchants and urban elites including clergy heavily
7. LATE MEDIEVAL VITALITY New States Arose
More powerful and centralized nations arose
Developed in aftermath of 100 Years' War.
France, England, Castile, Aragon, Sweden
New forms of military organization
Made greater centralization possible
Improvements in metallurgical technology
Construction and use of guns and munitions.
Capitalism became more evident
Arose simultaneously in Netherlands, Italy
Based on cities, non-nobles, banking, trade
Increased urbanization
Especially true in Italy, Netherlands
Often associated with trade
8. WESTERN EUROPE GROWS Overall trend between 1000/1700
Rapid population expansion
Black Death only slowed trend
Europeans acquire Asian technology
Western technology equal to Eurasian
Europeans adapt, improve on ideas
Europeans invent new ideas
Europeans apply technology
Adapted science to practical
Used technology in trade, navigation, war
9. RENAISSANCE & SECULARISM Began in Italy
At the beginning of the 14th century
Turned away from the medieval cultural
More secular outlook in art and literature
Wealth of Italian cities patronized the arts
Typical political unit of Italian peninsula
City-state
Florence, Milan, Venice, Rome and Naples
Cities competed for land, accomplishments
Administrative, economic innovations
10. RENAISSANCE VALUES Age of cultural innovation and individualism.
Artists abandoned medieval formalism
Concentration in arts, music, literature (humanities)
Embrace more realistic and secular styles
Classical architectural forms replaced Gothic
Tended to idealize Greece and Rome
Initially Renaissance largely limited to Italy
Even there its style was not accepted everywhere
Spread to France, England, Netherlands, Germany
Called Northern Renaissance
Bible, Hebrew more important as themes
Science, math, theology of equal importance
Italian commercial and shipping techniques
Laid the foundation for Western expansion
The "Renaissance spirit"
Encouraged a sense of innovation and discovery.
11. IBERIA Castile, Aragon, Portugal are lead states
Christian Reconquista began 714
Castile, Aragon united by marriage, 1469
Drove Muslims out of Iberia by 1492
The Church Militant
Constant warfare = powerful, trained armies
Defense, expansion of Christianity a duty
Church worked closely with Iberian states
Encouraged sense of religious mission
Expansion abroad
Attack Muslims
Conquer lands for Christianity
Break their trade monopolies
12. EARLY EXPANSION Began in the 13th century
Early discoveries = promise of colonialism
Early Explorations
Vivaldi brothers of Genoa explore Atlantic
In 14th century, Genoese discovered Canary Islands
Ships from Barcelona explore Atlantic African coast
Development of new technology
More sea-worthy vessels
Compass
Astrolabe
European discoverers
Generally dominated by Portugal
King supported a navy
Built school under Prince Henry, sent out ships
Penetrate even farther into the Atlantic
Along the African shore
13. COLONIAL PATTERNS Colonization followed exploration
Spanish and Portuguese
Settlers established agricultural estates
European diseases killed off natives
Europeans tried to enslave natives
Europeans established feudal model for estates
Designed to produce commercial crops
Sugar, cotton, and tobacco became popular crops
Iberian settlers imported African slaves
Commercial ventures were successful
Stimulate further colonization
Plantation model of exploitation
14. OUTSIDE THE NETWORK Areas not part of this global network
The Americas
Polynesia
Most of sub-Saharan Africa
Remained unaffected by early expansion
Eventually brought into European system
Some experienced difficulties
Vulnerable to European expansion
15. POLITICAL AMERICAS Aztec/Inca empires of the Americas
In disarray prior to arrival of Europeans
Both had internal, external opposition
Aztecs hated
Incas divided between family, clans
If Americas had continued in isolation
Other cultures would have risen
Iroquois, Moundbuilders in US
16. Expansion, Migration, and Conquest in Polynesia Between 7th and 15th centuries
Migrations
From Society Islands to Polynesia
From Polynesia to Hawaii
Settlement of Hawaii and New Zealand
To Hawaiian islands
An agricultural society developed
Hawaii had regional kingdoms
Stratified societies
Dominated by priests and nobles
Hawaii lacked metallurgy, system of writing
17. NEW ZEALAND 2ND migration to New Zealand
Maori culture of New Zealand
Warlike
Dominated by priests and nobles
Lacked metallurgy
Concentrated on use of indigenous species
All of these developments occurred in total isolation from other civilizations.
18. THE CHANGES The 15th century was an era of critical transitions involving world trade and the relative power of civilizations.
As in the 20th century, newly dynamic civilizations challenged those that had previously dominated. Technology played a key role.
19. GLOBAL CONNECTIONS This period saw change and continuity in global networks. Old trade networks, like Middle Eastern Muslim networks, took place in a new context, such as the Mongol empire, which emphasized new land-based routes. Mongol decline shifted attention to sea-based routes. New states arose using new or diffused technologies. Social structures were changing, too.
The key continuity was the interest and dependence of many regions on interregional trade.