Middle Ages Part 3 Review
Directions: Under each complete the phrase, answer the question
Describe how the Crusades started:
Answer: The Christian wanted to gain control of Jerusalem back from the Muslim.
Describe what happened during the Crusades:
Answer: They were unprepared and had trouble picking a leader.
Describe how the Crusades Ended:
Answer: Ended in truce with the Kurds keeping Jerusalem but allowing Christians pilgrimage to visit.
Describe the Changes in Farming during the middle Ages:
Answer: Earth warmed allowing farmers to use new farming techniques.
Describe what a Guild is:
Answer: Organizations that developed in Europe.
Describe the Commercial Revolution:
Answer: Increases availability of trade goods.
Describe the new emphasis on learning:
Answer: Jewish Scholars translated Greek into Latin language.
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
Bell ringer 2-24-10
1. Get alot of money, jewels, and precious objects.
2. The advantages were they got to be safer at home.But the disadvantages was they could have been secretly robbed.
2. The advantages were they got to be safer at home.But the disadvantages was they could have been secretly robbed.
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
European Changes Web Quest Words
European Changes Web Quest Words
1.Charlemagne - Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire
2.Fief - a fee or feud held of a feudal lord; a tenure of land subject to feudal obligations.
3.Vassal - a person granted the use of land, in return for rendering homage, fealty, and usually military serviceor its equivalent to a lord or other superior; feudal tenant.
4.Serf - a person in a condition of servitude, required to render services to a lord, commonly attached to the lord's land and transferredwith it from one owner to another.
5.Canon law - the body of codified ecclesiastical law, esp. of the Roman Catholic Church as promulgated in ecclesiastical councils and bythe pope.
6.Thomas Aquinas - a major theologian of the Roman Catholic Church.
7.Magna Carta - any fundamental constitution or law guaranteeing rights and liberties.
8.Estates General - assembly of the estates of all France
9.Great Schisim - a period of division in the Roman Catholic Church
10.Hundred Years War - the series of wars between England and France,
11.Renaissance - the activity, spirit, or time of the great revival of art, literature, and learning in Europe
12.Michelangelo - Italian sculptor, painter, architect, and poet.
13.Leonardo Da Vinci - Italian painter, sculptor, architect, musician, engineer, mathematician, and scientist.
14.The Divine Comedy - An epic poem written by Dante in the early fourteenth century, describing the author's journey through the afterlife
15.Cosmo De Medici - was the first of the Medici political dynasty
16.Donatello - Italian sculptor renowned as a pioneer of the Renaissance style with his natural, lifelike figures, such as the bronze statue
17.Raphael - Italian painter whose works, including religious subjects, portraits, and frescoes, exemplify the ideals of the High Renaissance.
18.indulgence - a partial remission of the temporal punishment, esp. purgatorial atonement
19.usury - the lending or practice of lending money at an exorbitant interest.
20.95 Thesis -
21.Lutheran Church -
22.Anglican Church -
23.Inquisition -
24.Jesuits -
25.Martin Luther -
26.John Calvin -
27.Guttenberg -
28.Henry VIII -
29.Ignatius -
30.Diet of Worms -
31.John Knox -
32.conquistador -
33.Columbian Exchange -
34.mercantilism -
35.triangular trade -
36.Da Gamma -
37.Columbus -
38.Cortez -
39.Pizarro -
40.Magellan -
41.Drake -
42.Cartier -
43.Dias -
44.Vespucci -
45.NW Passage -
46.Champlain -
47.Jamestown -
48.De Soto -
1.Charlemagne - Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire
2.Fief - a fee or feud held of a feudal lord; a tenure of land subject to feudal obligations.
3.Vassal - a person granted the use of land, in return for rendering homage, fealty, and usually military serviceor its equivalent to a lord or other superior; feudal tenant.
4.Serf - a person in a condition of servitude, required to render services to a lord, commonly attached to the lord's land and transferredwith it from one owner to another.
5.Canon law - the body of codified ecclesiastical law, esp. of the Roman Catholic Church as promulgated in ecclesiastical councils and bythe pope.
6.Thomas Aquinas - a major theologian of the Roman Catholic Church.
7.Magna Carta - any fundamental constitution or law guaranteeing rights and liberties.
8.Estates General - assembly of the estates of all France
9.Great Schisim - a period of division in the Roman Catholic Church
10.Hundred Years War - the series of wars between England and France,
11.Renaissance - the activity, spirit, or time of the great revival of art, literature, and learning in Europe
12.Michelangelo - Italian sculptor, painter, architect, and poet.
13.Leonardo Da Vinci - Italian painter, sculptor, architect, musician, engineer, mathematician, and scientist.
14.The Divine Comedy - An epic poem written by Dante in the early fourteenth century, describing the author's journey through the afterlife
15.Cosmo De Medici - was the first of the Medici political dynasty
16.Donatello - Italian sculptor renowned as a pioneer of the Renaissance style with his natural, lifelike figures, such as the bronze statue
17.Raphael - Italian painter whose works, including religious subjects, portraits, and frescoes, exemplify the ideals of the High Renaissance.
18.indulgence - a partial remission of the temporal punishment, esp. purgatorial atonement
19.usury - the lending or practice of lending money at an exorbitant interest.
20.95 Thesis -
21.Lutheran Church -
22.Anglican Church -
23.Inquisition -
24.Jesuits -
25.Martin Luther -
26.John Calvin -
27.Guttenberg -
28.Henry VIII -
29.Ignatius -
30.Diet of Worms -
31.John Knox -
32.conquistador -
33.Columbian Exchange -
34.mercantilism -
35.triangular trade -
36.Da Gamma -
37.Columbus -
38.Cortez -
39.Pizarro -
40.Magellan -
41.Drake -
42.Cartier -
43.Dias -
44.Vespucci -
45.NW Passage -
46.Champlain -
47.Jamestown -
48.De Soto -
Thursday, February 18, 2010
European Empires Webquest Words
European Empires Webquest Words
1.Mycenaean - Of or pertaining to the ancient city of Mycenae.
2.Trojan War - a ten-year war waged by the confederated Greeks under Agamemnon against the Trojans to avenge the abduction of Helen, wife of Menelaus, by Paris, son of the Trojan king Priam, and ending in the plundering and burning of Troy.
3.Homer - a Hebrew unit of capacity equal to ten baths in liquid measure or ten ephahs in dry measure.
4.Polis - an ancient Greek city-state.
5.Helot - a member of the lowest class in ancient Laconia, constituting a body of serfs who were bound to the land and were owned by the state.
6.Phalanx - a group of heavily armed infantry formed in ranks and files close and deep, with shields joined and long spears overlapping.
7.Persian War - were a series of conflicts between the Achaemenid Empire of Persia
8.Peloponnesian War - a war between Athens and Sparta, 431–404 b.c., that resulted in the transfer of hegemony in Greece from Athens to Sparta.
9.Socrates -Athenian philosopher
10.Plato - Greek philosopher. A follower of Socrates.
11.Aristotle - Greek philosopher: pupil of Plato; tutor of Alexander the Great.
12.Alexander the Great - king of Macedonia 336–323: conqueror of Greek city-states and of the Persian empire from Asia Minor and Egypt to India.
13.Republic - a philosophical dialogue (4th century b.c.) by Plato dealing with the composition and structure of the ideal state.
14.Patrician - a member of the original senatorial aristocracy in ancient Rome.
15.Plebeian - of pertaining to, or belonging to the ancient Roman plebs.
16.Punic Wars - the three wars waged by Rome against Carthage,
17.Hannibal - Carthaginian general who crossed the Alps and invaded Italy
18.Julius Caesar - Roman general, statesman, and historian who invaded Britain, crushed the army of his political enemy Pompey
19.Triumvirate - the office or magistracy of a triumvir.
20.Augustus - Also called Octavian, first Roman emperor reformer, patron of arts and literature; heir and successor to Julius Caesar.
21.Jesus - the source of the Christian religion.
22.Constantine - Roman emperor named Constantinople as the new capital; legally sanctioned Christian worship.
23.Constantinople - the Eastern Roman Empire after the fall of the Western Empire
24.Attila - king of the Huns who invaded Europe: defeated by the Romans and Visigoths in 451 at Châlons-sur-Marne in France.
25.Justinian - Byzantine emperor who held the eastern frontier of his empire against the Persians.
26.Hagia Sophia - a 6th century masterpiece of Byzantine architecture in Istanbul; built as a Christian church
27.Gengis Khan - Mongol conqueror of most of Asia and of E Europe to the Dnieper River.
28.Kublai Khan - Founder of the Mongol dynasty in China (grandson of Genghis Khan).
1.Mycenaean - Of or pertaining to the ancient city of Mycenae.
2.Trojan War - a ten-year war waged by the confederated Greeks under Agamemnon against the Trojans to avenge the abduction of Helen, wife of Menelaus, by Paris, son of the Trojan king Priam, and ending in the plundering and burning of Troy.
3.Homer - a Hebrew unit of capacity equal to ten baths in liquid measure or ten ephahs in dry measure.
4.Polis - an ancient Greek city-state.
5.Helot - a member of the lowest class in ancient Laconia, constituting a body of serfs who were bound to the land and were owned by the state.
6.Phalanx - a group of heavily armed infantry formed in ranks and files close and deep, with shields joined and long spears overlapping.
7.Persian War - were a series of conflicts between the Achaemenid Empire of Persia
8.Peloponnesian War - a war between Athens and Sparta, 431–404 b.c., that resulted in the transfer of hegemony in Greece from Athens to Sparta.
9.Socrates -Athenian philosopher
10.Plato - Greek philosopher. A follower of Socrates.
11.Aristotle - Greek philosopher: pupil of Plato; tutor of Alexander the Great.
12.Alexander the Great - king of Macedonia 336–323: conqueror of Greek city-states and of the Persian empire from Asia Minor and Egypt to India.
13.Republic - a philosophical dialogue (4th century b.c.) by Plato dealing with the composition and structure of the ideal state.
14.Patrician - a member of the original senatorial aristocracy in ancient Rome.
15.Plebeian - of pertaining to, or belonging to the ancient Roman plebs.
16.Punic Wars - the three wars waged by Rome against Carthage,
17.Hannibal - Carthaginian general who crossed the Alps and invaded Italy
18.Julius Caesar - Roman general, statesman, and historian who invaded Britain, crushed the army of his political enemy Pompey
19.Triumvirate - the office or magistracy of a triumvir.
20.Augustus - Also called Octavian, first Roman emperor reformer, patron of arts and literature; heir and successor to Julius Caesar.
21.Jesus - the source of the Christian religion.
22.Constantine - Roman emperor named Constantinople as the new capital; legally sanctioned Christian worship.
23.Constantinople - the Eastern Roman Empire after the fall of the Western Empire
24.Attila - king of the Huns who invaded Europe: defeated by the Romans and Visigoths in 451 at Châlons-sur-Marne in France.
25.Justinian - Byzantine emperor who held the eastern frontier of his empire against the Persians.
26.Hagia Sophia - a 6th century masterpiece of Byzantine architecture in Istanbul; built as a Christian church
27.Gengis Khan - Mongol conqueror of most of Asia and of E Europe to the Dnieper River.
28.Kublai Khan - Founder of the Mongol dynasty in China (grandson of Genghis Khan).
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Unit 1 Terms
1.Fertile Crescent - An arc of rich farmland in Southwest Asia, between the Persian Gulf and the Mediterranean Sea.
2.Mesopotamia - An ancient region in west Asia between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, now part of Iraq.
3.City- state – A city and its surrounding lands functioning as an independent political unit.
4.Dynasty – A series of rulers from a single family.
5. Cultural diffusion – The spreading of ideas or products from one culture to another.
6.Polytheism – A doctrine of or belief in more than one god or in many gods.
7. Empire – A political unit in which a number of peoples or countries are controlled by a single ruler.
8.Hammurabi - 18th century B.C. or earlier, king of Babylonia.
9.Delta – A marshy region formed by deposits of silt at the mouth of a river.
10.Pharaoh – a title of an ancient Egyptian king.
11.Theocracy – a form of government in which God or a deity is recognized as the supreme civil ruler, the God's or deity's laws being interpreted by the ecclesiastical authorities.
12.Pyramid – a quadrilateral masonry mass having smooth, steeply sloping sides meeting at an apex, used as a tomb.
13.Mummification – to make (a dead body) into a mummy, as by embalming and drying.
14.Hieroglyphics – designating or pertaining to a pictographic script, particularly that of the ancient Egyptians, in which many of the symbols are conventionalized, recognizable pictures of the things represented.
15.Papyrus – an ancient document, manuscript, or scroll written on this material.
16.Hyksos – a nomadic people who conquered and ruled ancient Egypt between the 13th and 18th dynasties, c1700–1580 b.c.: believed to have been a Semitic people that originally migrated into Egypt from Asia.
17.New Kingdom – the period in the history of ancient Egypt, 1580–1085 b.c.,
comprising the 18th to 20th dynasties, characterized by the predominance of Thebes.
18.Hatshepsut – 1495–75 B.C., queen of Egypt.
19.Thutmose III – 1475 b.c., Egyptian ruler: conqueror of the Middle East.
20.Nubia – a region in S Egypt and the Sudan, N of Khartoum, extending from the Nile to the Red Sea.
21.Ramses II – 1292–1225 b.c., king of ancient Egypt.
22.Kush –an area mentioned in the Bible, sometimes identified with Upper Egypt.
23.Piankhi – was the hereditary ruler of the kingdom of Cush on the Upper Nile in what is now the northern Sudan.
24.Meroe – a ruined city in Sudan, on the Nile, NE of Khartoum: a capital of ancient Ethiopia that was destroyed
25.Palestine – Also called holy land. Biblical name, Cannaan an ancient country.
26.Torah – the Pentateuch, being the first of the three Jewish divisions of the Old Testament.
27.Abraham – the first of the great Biblical patriarchs, father of Isaac, and traditional founder of the ancient Hebrew nation.
28.Monotheism – The doctrine or belief that there is only one God.
29.Covenant – an agreement, usually formal, between two or more persons to do or not do something specified.
30.Moses – the Hebrew prophet who led the Israelites out of Egypt and delivered the Law during their years of wandering in the wilderness.
31.Judah – the Biblical kingdom of the Hebrews in S Palestine, including the tribes of Judah and Benjamin.
32.Phoenicians – a native or inhabitant of Phoenicia.
33.Monsoon – the seasonal wind of the Indian Ocean and southern Asia, blowing from the southwest in summer and from the northeast in winter.
34.Harappan Civilization – This culture existed along the Indus River in present day Pakistan.
35.Reincarnation – the belief that the soul, upon death of the body, comes back to earth in another body or form.
36.Karma – Hinduism, Buddhism. action, seen as bringing upon oneself inevitable results, good or bad, either in this life or in a reincarnation.
37.Siddhartha Gautama – Was given the name buddah (the awakening) and also was the son of a Nepalese Rajah.
38.Enlightenment – the state of being enlightened.
39.Nirvana – a place or state characterized by freedom from or oblivion to pain, worry, and the external world.
40.Mandate of heaven – a political theory of ancient China in which those in power were given the right to rule from a divine source.
41.Feudalism – the feudal system, or its principles and practices.
42.Confucius – Chinese philosopher and teacher.
43.Filial piety – in Confucian thought, one of the virtues to be cultivated, a love and respect for one's parents and ancestors.
44.Bureaucracy – government by many bureaus, administrators, and petty officials.
45.Daoism – philosophical system developed by Lao-tzu and Chuang-tzu advocating a simple honest life and noninterference with the course of natural events.
46.Legalism – strict adherence, or the principle of strict adherence, to law or prescription, especially to the letter rather than the spirit.
47.I Ching – an ancient Chinese book of divination, in which 64 pairs of trigrams are shown with various interpretations.
48.Yin and yang – ) two principles, one negative, dark, and feminine (yin), and one positive, bright, and masculine (yang), whose interaction influences the destinies of creatures and things.
49.Qin Dynasty – the Chinese dynasty (from 246 BC to 206 BC) that established the first centralized imperial government and built much of the Great Wall
50.Autocracy – government in which one person has uncontrolled or unlimited authority over others; the government or power of an absolute monarch.
51.Allah – the Supreme Being; God.
52.Muhammad – founder of Islam
53.Islam – the religious faith of Muslims, based on the words and religious system founded by the prophet Muhammad and taught by the Koran, the basic principle of which is absolute submission to a unique and personal god, Allah.
54.Hijrah – the flight of Muhammad from Mecca to Medina to escape persecution a.d. 622: regarded as the beginning of the Muslim Era.
55.Mosque – a Muslim temple or place of public worship.
56.Hajj – the pilgrimage to Mecca, which every adult Muslim is supposed to make at least once in his or her lifetime: the fifth of the Pillars of Islam.
57.Qur’an – the sacred text of Islam, divided into 114 chapters, or suras: revered as the word of God, dictated to Muhammad by the archangel Gabriel, and accepted as the foundation of Islamic law, religion, culture, and politics.
2.Mesopotamia - An ancient region in west Asia between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, now part of Iraq.
3.City- state – A city and its surrounding lands functioning as an independent political unit.
4.Dynasty – A series of rulers from a single family.
5. Cultural diffusion – The spreading of ideas or products from one culture to another.
6.Polytheism – A doctrine of or belief in more than one god or in many gods.
7. Empire – A political unit in which a number of peoples or countries are controlled by a single ruler.
8.Hammurabi - 18th century B.C. or earlier, king of Babylonia.
9.Delta – A marshy region formed by deposits of silt at the mouth of a river.
10.Pharaoh – a title of an ancient Egyptian king.
11.Theocracy – a form of government in which God or a deity is recognized as the supreme civil ruler, the God's or deity's laws being interpreted by the ecclesiastical authorities.
12.Pyramid – a quadrilateral masonry mass having smooth, steeply sloping sides meeting at an apex, used as a tomb.
13.Mummification – to make (a dead body) into a mummy, as by embalming and drying.
14.Hieroglyphics – designating or pertaining to a pictographic script, particularly that of the ancient Egyptians, in which many of the symbols are conventionalized, recognizable pictures of the things represented.
15.Papyrus – an ancient document, manuscript, or scroll written on this material.
16.Hyksos – a nomadic people who conquered and ruled ancient Egypt between the 13th and 18th dynasties, c1700–1580 b.c.: believed to have been a Semitic people that originally migrated into Egypt from Asia.
17.New Kingdom – the period in the history of ancient Egypt, 1580–1085 b.c.,
comprising the 18th to 20th dynasties, characterized by the predominance of Thebes.
18.Hatshepsut – 1495–75 B.C., queen of Egypt.
19.Thutmose III – 1475 b.c., Egyptian ruler: conqueror of the Middle East.
20.Nubia – a region in S Egypt and the Sudan, N of Khartoum, extending from the Nile to the Red Sea.
21.Ramses II – 1292–1225 b.c., king of ancient Egypt.
22.Kush –an area mentioned in the Bible, sometimes identified with Upper Egypt.
23.Piankhi – was the hereditary ruler of the kingdom of Cush on the Upper Nile in what is now the northern Sudan.
24.Meroe – a ruined city in Sudan, on the Nile, NE of Khartoum: a capital of ancient Ethiopia that was destroyed
25.Palestine – Also called holy land. Biblical name, Cannaan an ancient country.
26.Torah – the Pentateuch, being the first of the three Jewish divisions of the Old Testament.
27.Abraham – the first of the great Biblical patriarchs, father of Isaac, and traditional founder of the ancient Hebrew nation.
28.Monotheism – The doctrine or belief that there is only one God.
29.Covenant – an agreement, usually formal, between two or more persons to do or not do something specified.
30.Moses – the Hebrew prophet who led the Israelites out of Egypt and delivered the Law during their years of wandering in the wilderness.
31.Judah – the Biblical kingdom of the Hebrews in S Palestine, including the tribes of Judah and Benjamin.
32.Phoenicians – a native or inhabitant of Phoenicia.
33.Monsoon – the seasonal wind of the Indian Ocean and southern Asia, blowing from the southwest in summer and from the northeast in winter.
34.Harappan Civilization – This culture existed along the Indus River in present day Pakistan.
35.Reincarnation – the belief that the soul, upon death of the body, comes back to earth in another body or form.
36.Karma – Hinduism, Buddhism. action, seen as bringing upon oneself inevitable results, good or bad, either in this life or in a reincarnation.
37.Siddhartha Gautama – Was given the name buddah (the awakening) and also was the son of a Nepalese Rajah.
38.Enlightenment – the state of being enlightened.
39.Nirvana – a place or state characterized by freedom from or oblivion to pain, worry, and the external world.
40.Mandate of heaven – a political theory of ancient China in which those in power were given the right to rule from a divine source.
41.Feudalism – the feudal system, or its principles and practices.
42.Confucius – Chinese philosopher and teacher.
43.Filial piety – in Confucian thought, one of the virtues to be cultivated, a love and respect for one's parents and ancestors.
44.Bureaucracy – government by many bureaus, administrators, and petty officials.
45.Daoism – philosophical system developed by Lao-tzu and Chuang-tzu advocating a simple honest life and noninterference with the course of natural events.
46.Legalism – strict adherence, or the principle of strict adherence, to law or prescription, especially to the letter rather than the spirit.
47.I Ching – an ancient Chinese book of divination, in which 64 pairs of trigrams are shown with various interpretations.
48.Yin and yang – ) two principles, one negative, dark, and feminine (yin), and one positive, bright, and masculine (yang), whose interaction influences the destinies of creatures and things.
49.Qin Dynasty – the Chinese dynasty (from 246 BC to 206 BC) that established the first centralized imperial government and built much of the Great Wall
50.Autocracy – government in which one person has uncontrolled or unlimited authority over others; the government or power of an absolute monarch.
51.Allah – the Supreme Being; God.
52.Muhammad – founder of Islam
53.Islam – the religious faith of Muslims, based on the words and religious system founded by the prophet Muhammad and taught by the Koran, the basic principle of which is absolute submission to a unique and personal god, Allah.
54.Hijrah – the flight of Muhammad from Mecca to Medina to escape persecution a.d. 622: regarded as the beginning of the Muslim Era.
55.Mosque – a Muslim temple or place of public worship.
56.Hajj – the pilgrimage to Mecca, which every adult Muslim is supposed to make at least once in his or her lifetime: the fifth of the Pillars of Islam.
57.Qur’an – the sacred text of Islam, divided into 114 chapters, or suras: revered as the word of God, dictated to Muhammad by the archangel Gabriel, and accepted as the foundation of Islamic law, religion, culture, and politics.
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
African Empires Review
African Empires Review
Directions: Under each complete the phrase, answer the question
Describe the Empire of Ghana:
Answer: Was gettin rich off of taxing goods that were coming through.
Describe the Islamic Influence in Ghana:
Answer: Islam spreaded through trade.
Describe the Empire of Mali:
Answer: Turmoil in ghana and the founding of gold in the east meant power shifted to Mali.
Describe Mansa Musa:
Answer: Mansa took power with military. He put down every rebellion and expanded empire.
Describe the Songhai Empire:
Answer: Build up military and extend empire to east.
Describe the East Coast trade Cities and the Influence of Islam on them:
Answer: Villiages on the east coast became important trade cities. Muslims introduced islam to the africa's east coast. The growth of commerce caused a religion to spread.
Describe Great Zimbabwe:
Answer: Stood near a great trade route. Which linked to gold fields. Gained control of these routes and became a thriving city.
Describe the Mutapa Empire:
Answer: Used army to dominate areas and forced people to make payments.
Directions: Under each complete the phrase, answer the question
Describe the Empire of Ghana:
Answer: Was gettin rich off of taxing goods that were coming through.
Describe the Islamic Influence in Ghana:
Answer: Islam spreaded through trade.
Describe the Empire of Mali:
Answer: Turmoil in ghana and the founding of gold in the east meant power shifted to Mali.
Describe Mansa Musa:
Answer: Mansa took power with military. He put down every rebellion and expanded empire.
Describe the Songhai Empire:
Answer: Build up military and extend empire to east.
Describe the East Coast trade Cities and the Influence of Islam on them:
Answer: Villiages on the east coast became important trade cities. Muslims introduced islam to the africa's east coast. The growth of commerce caused a religion to spread.
Describe Great Zimbabwe:
Answer: Stood near a great trade route. Which linked to gold fields. Gained control of these routes and became a thriving city.
Describe the Mutapa Empire:
Answer: Used army to dominate areas and forced people to make payments.
The Mongol Review
Mongol Review
Directions: Under each complete the phrase, answer the question
Describe the Rise of Genghis Khan:
Answer: He fought his rivals and defeated them one by one.
Describe why Genghis was successful:
Answer: He was a brilliant organizer. A gifted strategist, and usesd cruelty as a weaspon.
Describe what happens to the Mongol Empire after Genghis Death:
Answer: His successors still conquerer and conquer form china. Divided their empires into four refgions called khantes.
Describe the Mongol Peace:
Answer: The mongols imposed stability and law and order process. The Mongols guaranteeded safe passage of traders, travelers, and missionaries from one empire to another.
Describe the rise of Kublai Khan:
Answer: Khan started a dynasty with unites china for the first time in 300 years. Opened china to great trades and foreighn contacts. Build new capital and moves there at modern dat beijing
Describe Khan’s invasion of Japan:
Answer: Sends huge fleets against japan. Second attack was the largest sea attack un will World war II.
Describe How Khan rules in China:
Answer: Mongols and chinese lived seprately. Khan was a capable leader building roads and canals ensuring supplies got all over china.
Describe the foreign influence on Khan:
Answer: The monogol peace meant trade rountes were open and traders could carry chinese supplies to Europe. Khan also invited foreign to visi.
Describe the fall of the Mongol Empire:
Answer: Khan dies and his dynasty is overthrown.
Directions: Under each complete the phrase, answer the question
Describe the Rise of Genghis Khan:
Answer: He fought his rivals and defeated them one by one.
Describe why Genghis was successful:
Answer: He was a brilliant organizer. A gifted strategist, and usesd cruelty as a weaspon.
Describe what happens to the Mongol Empire after Genghis Death:
Answer: His successors still conquerer and conquer form china. Divided their empires into four refgions called khantes.
Describe the Mongol Peace:
Answer: The mongols imposed stability and law and order process. The Mongols guaranteeded safe passage of traders, travelers, and missionaries from one empire to another.
Describe the rise of Kublai Khan:
Answer: Khan started a dynasty with unites china for the first time in 300 years. Opened china to great trades and foreighn contacts. Build new capital and moves there at modern dat beijing
Describe Khan’s invasion of Japan:
Answer: Sends huge fleets against japan. Second attack was the largest sea attack un will World war II.
Describe How Khan rules in China:
Answer: Mongols and chinese lived seprately. Khan was a capable leader building roads and canals ensuring supplies got all over china.
Describe the foreign influence on Khan:
Answer: The monogol peace meant trade rountes were open and traders could carry chinese supplies to Europe. Khan also invited foreign to visi.
Describe the fall of the Mongol Empire:
Answer: Khan dies and his dynasty is overthrown.
Monday, February 8, 2010
Bell Ringer 2-8-10
1. 30 years, Looks like a desert.
2. Botch sides contain desert, rainforest, savanna, and mediterranean.
2. Botch sides contain desert, rainforest, savanna, and mediterranean.
Friday, February 5, 2010
Bell Ringer 2-5-10
1. They had 10,000 soldier.
2. Women to take care of them.
3. They had many weapons.
2. Women to take care of them.
3. They had many weapons.
Thursday, February 4, 2010
Rome: Julius Caesar Movie Questions
1. Riots, violence, murder
2.Glory and Leadership.
3.Strength.
4. Hispania.
5. Popularity.
6. Consul.
7. People liked him also he was a good speaker.
8. Wanted change, cared for poor.
9. Sell slaves.
10. Marries his daughter to Pompey.
11. Triumvirate
12.
13. Helvetian's.
14. Took a Few risk.
15. They thought he would take over.
16. In love with Caesars daughter.
17. Post in one of the Eastern Provinces.
18. Areolvistas.
19. Forcing the barbarians to fight.
20. Germany and Britian.
21. To justify his actions.
22. Elected to the consul.
23. Caesars daughter dies in child birth.
24. Riots and violence in the streets.
25. Mark Anthony.
26. Defeats Gauls.
27. Release his army, He refuses.
28. Flocked to him lik a god.
29. Greece.
30. A civil war breaks out.
31. He is murdered and beheaded
32. Caesar has total power in rome.
33. Changes rome into a dictatorship.
34. stabbed to death by members of the senate, led by Brutus.
2.Glory and Leadership.
3.Strength.
4. Hispania.
5. Popularity.
6. Consul.
7. People liked him also he was a good speaker.
8. Wanted change, cared for poor.
9. Sell slaves.
10. Marries his daughter to Pompey.
11. Triumvirate
12.
13. Helvetian's.
14. Took a Few risk.
15. They thought he would take over.
16. In love with Caesars daughter.
17. Post in one of the Eastern Provinces.
18. Areolvistas.
19. Forcing the barbarians to fight.
20. Germany and Britian.
21. To justify his actions.
22. Elected to the consul.
23. Caesars daughter dies in child birth.
24. Riots and violence in the streets.
25. Mark Anthony.
26. Defeats Gauls.
27. Release his army, He refuses.
28. Flocked to him lik a god.
29. Greece.
30. A civil war breaks out.
31. He is murdered and beheaded
32. Caesar has total power in rome.
33. Changes rome into a dictatorship.
34. stabbed to death by members of the senate, led by Brutus.
Byzantine Empire Review
Byzantine Empire Review
Directions: Under each complete the phrase, answer the question, fill in the blank, or define the definition.
Describe how the Byzantines established their empire:
Answer: Roman leaders broke up the empire in 395, but rulers in the east continued to see themselves as emperors of Rome.
Describe the challenges Byzantine rule faced:
Answer: Emperors lived under constant threat of assasination.
Describe Life in the Byzantine Empire:
Answer: They lived by code called "Justinian Code"
Describe Life in Constantinople:
Answer: The main street running throught Constantinople was lined with merchant stalls. Citizens enjoy free chariot races and other performaces at the "Hippodrome"
Describe the fall of the Byzantine Empire:
Answer: Thousands of people were dying from bubonic plague.
Describe the Split of the Catholic Church:
Answer: Due to largely lack of contact between Rome and Eastern Empire.
Directions: Under each complete the phrase, answer the question, fill in the blank, or define the definition.
Describe how the Byzantines established their empire:
Answer: Roman leaders broke up the empire in 395, but rulers in the east continued to see themselves as emperors of Rome.
Describe the challenges Byzantine rule faced:
Answer: Emperors lived under constant threat of assasination.
Describe Life in the Byzantine Empire:
Answer: They lived by code called "Justinian Code"
Describe Life in Constantinople:
Answer: The main street running throught Constantinople was lined with merchant stalls. Citizens enjoy free chariot races and other performaces at the "Hippodrome"
Describe the fall of the Byzantine Empire:
Answer: Thousands of people were dying from bubonic plague.
Describe the Split of the Catholic Church:
Answer: Due to largely lack of contact between Rome and Eastern Empire.
Bell Ringer 2-4-10
1. Mostly i think because of the divorce situation.
2. No until they agree on certain things.
2. No until they agree on certain things.
Wednesday, February 3, 2010
Rome Part 3 Review
1. Most people lived in countryside and worked on farms
2. Most slaves were conquered people brought back after wars.
3. Tied with spirits over the gov and eventually the emperor being worshiped.
4.Provided free games, races, mock battles and gladiator contests.
5. He preached, taught, did good works, and performed miricales.
6. The Apostle Paul preached that Jesus died.
7. Thousands being crucified, burned, or killed by wild animals in the area.
8. The roads the romans had set up so that traveling would be easy. This could make it easier to spread christianity easier.
2. Most slaves were conquered people brought back after wars.
3. Tied with spirits over the gov and eventually the emperor being worshiped.
4.Provided free games, races, mock battles and gladiator contests.
5. He preached, taught, did good works, and performed miricales.
6. The Apostle Paul preached that Jesus died.
7. Thousands being crucified, burned, or killed by wild animals in the area.
8. The roads the romans had set up so that traveling would be easy. This could make it easier to spread christianity easier.
Monday, February 1, 2010
Hinduism / Buddhism Review
Hinduism / Buddhism Review
Directions: Under each complete the phrase, answer the question, fill in the blank, or define the definition.
Describe How Hinduism Began:
Answer: Hinduism was a collection of religious beliefs that developed over time.
Describe the Religious teachings of Hinduism:
Liberating the soul from illusions, disappointments, and mistakes of everyday experience.
How has Hinduism changed over time?
Answer: Brahma split into 3 gods and eventually fading while the forms of the devil and the mother goddess became more important.
Describe Hindu culture:
Ideas about karma and reincarnation strengthen the caste system.
Describe Jainism:
They believed everything in the universe had a soul and should not be harmed.
Describe the founding of Buddhism:
The founder Siddhartha Gautama exhibited marks of great man from birth.
Describe the Religious Beliefs of Buddhism:
Religious life is the only way to gain refuge from life's suffering.
Describe the Similarities and Differences between Buddhism and Hinduism:
They have different religious beliefs
Directions: Under each complete the phrase, answer the question, fill in the blank, or define the definition.
Describe How Hinduism Began:
Answer: Hinduism was a collection of religious beliefs that developed over time.
Describe the Religious teachings of Hinduism:
Liberating the soul from illusions, disappointments, and mistakes of everyday experience.
How has Hinduism changed over time?
Answer: Brahma split into 3 gods and eventually fading while the forms of the devil and the mother goddess became more important.
Describe Hindu culture:
Ideas about karma and reincarnation strengthen the caste system.
Describe Jainism:
They believed everything in the universe had a soul and should not be harmed.
Describe the founding of Buddhism:
The founder Siddhartha Gautama exhibited marks of great man from birth.
Describe the Religious Beliefs of Buddhism:
Religious life is the only way to gain refuge from life's suffering.
Describe the Similarities and Differences between Buddhism and Hinduism:
They have different religious beliefs
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