| Chapter 13: Political Transformations: Empires and
Encounters, 1450–1750 |
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I. |
European Empires
in the
Americas |
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A. |
The European
Advantage |
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1. |
Geography and winds |
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2. |
European marginality,
land-hunger, and social drives |
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3. |
Organization and technology |
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4. |
Local allies |
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5. |
Germs |
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B. |
The Great Dying |
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1. |
60–80 million people without
immunities |
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2. |
Old-World diseases |
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3. |
Demographic collapse |
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C. |
The Columbian
Exchange |
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1. |
People brought germs, plants,
and animals |
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2. |
Corn and potatoes to Europe,
Africa, and
Asia |
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3. |
American tobacco and
chocolate, Chinese tea, and Arab coffee |
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4. |
Silver, slaves, and sugar |
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5. |
Europe
the biggest winner |
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II. |
Comparing
Colonial Societies in the
Americas |
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A. |
In the Land of
the Aztecs and the Incas |
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1. |
Encomienda, repartimiento, and hacienda |
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2. |
Creoles and peninsulares: “Purity of blood” |
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3. |
Mestizo and castas |
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4. |
Indians |
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B. |
Colonies of Sugar |
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1. |
Portuguese Brazil’s monopoly
(1570–1670) |
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2. |
Labor intensive and an
international mass market |
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3. |
African slaves and mulattoes |
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C. |
Settler Colonies
in
North America |
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1. |
British get the leftovers |
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2. |
British society in transition |
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3. |
Class equality with gender
inequality |
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4. |
Pure settler societies with
little racial mixing |
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5. |
Protestantism and weak royal
control |
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IV. |
Asian Empires |
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A. |
Making China
an Empire |
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1. |
Qing expansion in the West
(1680–1760) |
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2. |
Colonial? |
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3. |
Economic downturn in
Central Asia |
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B. |
Muslims and
Hindus in the Mughal Empire |
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1. |
20 percent Muslim |
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2. |
Akbar (r. 1556–1605) |
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3. |
Ahmad Sirhindi (1564–1624) |
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4. |
Aurangzeb (1658–1707) |
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C. |
Muslims and
Christians in the
Ottoman Empire |
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1. |
“The Sword of Islam” |
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2. |
Decrease in women’s autonomy
yet many rights |
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3. |
New importance of Turkic
people in the Islamic World |
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4. |
Balkan, Armenian, and
Orthodox Christians |
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5. |
Devshirme |
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6. |
Fear and admiration in the
Christian West |