AP World History Assignments

Chapter 22: Reaching Out: Cross-Cultural Interactions

After reading Chapter 22, you will be able to:

Compare the travels of Ibn Battuta and Marco Polo

Identify major trading cities of both the silk roads and Indian Ocean sea routes

Explain the impact of Mongol control of the silk roads and Chinese economy

Explain how the Ming Dynasty restored Chinese economy and central government

Explain how the Americas and Oceanic society became incorporated into the global world system

Explain how sugar plantations created a new form of slave labor

Explain both the spread of the Bubonic Plague and its impact on the economies of China and Europe

As you read Chapter 22, take notes on the following terms and concepts: Who, what, where, why, when, how, so what?

Chapter 22: Reaching Out: Cross-Cultural Interactions

On provided maps under Downloads tab, locate the following places:

Europe
Genoa
Venice
Constantinople
Moscow
Baghdad
Jerusalem
Siraf
Cairo
Medina
Mecca
Mogadishu
Malindi
Mombasa
Kilwa
Madagascar
Fez
Timbuktu
Mali
Sahara
Africa
Black Sea
Red Sea


Arabian Sea
Persian Gulf
Atlantic Ocean
Maldive Islands
Celon
Indus River
Ganges River
Bay of Bengal
Delhi
India
Melaka
Sumatra
Java
Indian Ocean
South China Sea
Pacific Ocean
Karakorum
Khanbaliq
Hangzhou
Quangzhou
Guangzhou
Yellow River (Huang He)
Yangzi River (Chang Jiang)


Yellow Sea
East China Sea
Sea of Japan
Mongol Empires
Marco Polo's travels
Ibn Battuta's travels
Mediterranean Sea
Cuba
San Salvador
Hispaniola
Azores
Lisbon
Seville
Granada
Ceuta
Canary Island
Cape Verde Islands
Cape of Good Hope
Sofala
Siraf
Arabian Sea
Calicut
Strait of Melaka
Antarctica

Chapter 22: Reaching Out: Cross-Cultural Interactions

As you read Chapter 22, take notes on the following terms and concepts: Who, what, where, why, when, how, so what?

Ibn Battuta (565; 566; 568; 59; 571;572
qadi (565; 571)
Muhammad ibn Tughluq (565)
Bunbonic Plague (566; 577; 578; 579; 580)
Trade, diplomacy, and missionary activity (566)
silk roads' goods (566)
sea-lanes' goods (566)
Trading Cities (566)
Melaka (567)
Mongol conquests (567)
Marco Polo (565; 566; 567; 568; 569; 570)
Khubilai Khan (567; 569; 570)
Mongol-Christian Diplomacy (570)
Rabban Sauma (570)
sharia (591)
Sufi Missionaries (571)
Christian Missionaries (571)
John of Montecorvino (573)
(Cross-)Cultural Exchanges (573-574)
troubadours of western Europe (573)
European scientists (573)
magnetic compass (573)
Spread of Crops (574-575)
cotton textiles (575)
Sugarcane (575)
Muslim Merchants (575)
Slave laborers (575)
Gunpowder Technologies (575-576)
The Little Ice Age (577)
Origins of Epidemic Bubonic Plague (577)
Spread of Plague (577)
Social and Economic Effects (of Bubonic Plague)(578)

Sources from the Past:
Ibn Battuta on Customs in the Mali Empire (572)



Hongwu (579)
Ming Centralization (579)
Mandarians and Eunuchs (579)
Cultural Revival (in China) (580)
Holy roman Empire (580)
Hundred Years' War (1337-1543)
Taxes and Armies (581)
Italian States (581)
France and England (581)
Spain (581)
Russia (581)
Novgorod (582)
Hanseatic League...(582)
Tsar(582)
renaissance (582-583)
Italian Renaissance Art (583)
Renaissance Architecture (583)
The Humanists (583)
Humanist Moral Thought (584)
Renaissance Europe and the Larger World (584)
Zheng He's Expeditions (585)
Chinese Naval Power (586)
End of the (Ming) Voyages (586)
Portuguese Exploration (586)
Colonization of the Atlantic Islands (587)
Slave Trade (587)
Indian Ocean Trade (587)
Zheng He's voyages (587-588)
Dias's Voyage (587-588)
Da Gama's voyage (587-588)
Columbus's voyage (587-588)
Chistopher Columbus (590)

Sources from the Past:
John of Montecorvino on His Mission in China (574)










Chapter 22: Reaching Out: Cross-Cultural Interactions

Word document or pdf document of map locations and Chapter 22 terms; labeled map for Travels of Marco Polo and Ibn Battuta. Part A and Part B; blank map for Travels of Marco Polo and Ibn Battuta. Part A and Part B. labeled map for Chinese and European voyages of exploration, 1405-1498. Part A and Part B; blank map for Chinese and European voyages of exploration, 1405-1498. Part A and Part B.