To the Present By Rahul Francis, Jialin Ke, Sabrina Sun, Noah Amick, Anika Husain, and Stella Ma Pd....
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Transcript of To the Present By Rahul Francis, Jialin Ke, Sabrina Sun, Noah Amick, Anika Husain, and Stella Ma Pd....
The Americas
to the Present
By Rahul Francis, Jialin Ke, Sabrina Sun, Noah Amick, Anika Husain, and Stella
MaPd. 3 – AP World History – Mr. Trainor
Period 1: to 600 B.C.E.
Technological and EnvironmentalTransformations
Archeological evidence indicates that during the
Paleolithic era, hunting-foraging bands of humans gradually migrated from their origin in East Africa to the Americas, adapting their technology and cultures to new climate regions.
Humans used fire in new ways: to aid hunting and foraging, to protect against predators, and to adapt to cold environments.
Humans developed a wider range of tools specially adapted to different environments from tropics to tundra.
Economic structures focused on small kinship groups of hunting-foraging bands that could make what they needed to survive. However, not all groups were self-sufficient; they exchanged people, ideas, and goods.
Key Concept 1.1. Big Geography and the Peopling
of the Earth
Beginning about 10,000 years ago, the Neolithic
Revolution led to the development of new and more complex economic and social systems.
Possibly as a response to climatic change, permanent agricultural villages emerged in Mesoamerica and the Andes.
Agriculture led to more reliable food supplies, which increased the population As a result, these surpluses led to labor specialization and development of elites.
Increased technology also led to increase wealth and trade, which created more hierarchical social structures and promoted patrilineal societies.
Key Concept 1.2. The Neolithic Revolution and Early Agricultural
Societies
Core and foundational civilizations developed
in a variety of geographical and environmental settings where agriculture flourished. Olmecs in Mesoamerica and Chavin in Andes
The first states developed in core civilizations Culture played a significant role in unifying states through laws, language, literature, religion, myths, and monumental art.
In the Americas, monumental architecture, urban planning and record keeping all began to develop.
Key Concept 1.3. The Development and Interactions of Early Agricultural, Pastoral,
and Urban Societies
Period 2: 600 B.C.E. – 600 C.E.
Organization and Reorganization of Human Societies
Codifications and further developments of
existing religious traditions provided a bond among the people and an ethical code to live by. Most Mesoamerican and Andean religions were polytheistic.
Artistic expressions, including literature and drama, architecture, and sculpture, show distinctive cultural developments. Mesoamerica developed a distinct architectural
style.
Key Concept 2.1. The Development and Codification of Religious and Cultural
Traditions
The number and size of key states and empires grew
dramatically by imposing political unity on areas where previously there had been competing states.
Teotihuacan and the Mayan city-states (Mesoamerica)
Moche (Andean South American)
Empires and states developed new techniques of imperial administration based, in part, on the success of earlier political forms.
Administrative institutions such as central governments and bureaucracies were created. These institutions also projected military power over larger areas through diplomacy, supply lines, defense and fortification, and the creation of a military or soldier class.
Key Concept 2.2. The Development of States and
Empires
New technologies facilitated long-distance
communication and exchange. The invention of things such as the yoke, saddle,
and stirrup made the use of pack animals (particular llamas in the Americas) possible and practical.
Alongside the trade in goods, the exchange of people, technology, religious and cultural beliefs, food crops, domesticated animals, and disease pathogens developed across far-flung networks of communication and exchange.
Key Concept 2.3. Emergence of Transregional Networks of Communication
and Exchange
Period 3: 600 C.E. – 1450 C.E.
Regional and Transregional Interactions
Improved transportation technologies
and commercial practices led to an increased volume of trade, and expanded the geographical range of existing and newly active trade networks.
Trading cities began to be formed such as Tenochtitlan in Mesoamerica and Cahokia in North America
Rulers imported luxury goods for public performances and for their upscale lifestyle
Teotihuacan was a state that was also one of the main producers of tools and jewelry
Teotihuacan’s economy and religious impact attracted many pilgrims from far off lands and prompted them to become permanent citizens
Key Concept 3.1. Expansion and Intensification of Communication
and Exchange Networks
Empires collapsed and were reconstituted; in
some regions new state forms emerged. Toltec’s militarized the empire Warriors were very important and many pieces of
artwork depicted warfare After the fall of Toltec’s, Aztec empire rose Aztec’s did not have a two leader empire like the
Toltec, they had one supreme ruler Tribute system was added by the Aztecs Defeated states weren’t conquered, but instead
forced to pay tribute
Key Concept 3.2. Continuity and Innovation of State Forms and Their
Interactions
Innovations stimulated agricultural and industrial
production in many regions. Mainly agricultural because elites forced peasants onto
farms so they could produce food to support the large population
Built irrigation systems and terraces to support influx in agriculture
Chinampas (raised fields created along lake shores) became a popular tool because it resisted frost and allowed for year round agriculture
Did not discover the wheel for a very long time and utilized pulleys to create buildings instead
Key Concept 3.3. Increased Economic Productive Capacity and
Its Consequences
Period 4: 1450 C.E. – 1750 C.E.
Global Interactions
Technological developments in cartography, navigation,
and ship-building made transoceanic crossings possible. Northern Atlantic crossings for fishing and settlements continued
and spurred European searches for multiple routes to Asia. The new global circulation of goods was facilitated by royal
chartered European monopoly companies that took silver from Spanish colonies in the Americas to purchase Asian goods for the Atlantic markets.
The Atlantic system involved the movement of goods, wealth, and free and unfree laborers, and the mixing of African, American, and European cultures and peoples.
European colonization led to the spread of disease and vermin in the Americas which killed large amounts of the native populations.
American foods became staples across the Atlantic and plantations with forced labor began to arise.
Afro-Eurasian crops, animals, and slaves were brought to the Americas.
Key Concept 4.1. Globalizing Networks of Communication and
Exchange
Traditional peasant agriculture increased and changed,
plantations expanded, and demand for labor increased. These changes both fed and responded to growing global demand for raw materials and finished products.
The growth of the plantation economy in America increased the demand for coerced labor such as African slaves, the hacienda and encomienda systems, the Spanish adaptation of the Inca mit’a, etc.
As new social and political elites changed, they also restructured new ethnic, racial, and gender hierarchies. e.g. The Creole elites in Spanish America
The massive demographic changes in the Americas resulted in new ethnic and racial classifications.
Key Concept 4.2. New Forms of Social Organization and Modes of
Production
Rulers used a variety of methods to legitimize and
consolidate their power. This included religious ideas (e.g. human sacrifice
practiced by the Mexicas/Aztecs). States treated different ethnic and religious groups in ways that
utilized their economic contributions while limiting their ability to challenge the authority of the state.
The Spanish created a separate “República de Indios” for the native population.
Imperial expansion relied on the increased use of gunpowder, cannons, and armed trade to establish large empires in the Western Hemisphere. The Portuguese, Spanish, Dutch, French, and British all began
to establish maritime empires in the New World. Competition over trade routes, state rivalries, and local resistance
all provided significant challenges to state consolidation and expansion. Piracy in the Caribbean is an example
Key Concept 4.3. State Consolidation and Imperial
Expansion
Religion began to be introduced through
foreign conquests. Catholicism was introduced during colonization
and some early colonists practiced forced conversion of native people to Catholicism.
Throughout this period in time, religion continued to play a huge role in the cultural aspect of society. Over time, it also began to intertwine with
government affairs.
Changes and Continuities Over Time: 1450 C.E. –
1750 C.E.
Period 5:1750 C.E -1900 C.E.
Industrialization and Global Integration
New patterns of trade and production developed and
further integrated the global economy as industrialists sought raw material and new markets for the increasing amount and array of goods produced in their factories.
The need for raw materials for the factories and increased food supplies for the growing population in urban centers led to the growth of export economies around the world that specialized in mass producing single natural resources.
The rapid increases in productivity caused by industrial production encouraged industrialized states to seek out new consumer markets for their finished goods. Latin America became important market for European and American consumer goods
Key Concept 5.1: Industrialization and Global
Capitalism
Industrialized states (particularly America) practiced
economic imperialism on Latin American countries. The 1808 ban against the international slave trade in
America as well as the anti-slavery movement stopped most American-African trade and caused plantations to fail.
The decline of plantations required the United States to turn elsewhere for crops and raw materials, particularly Latin America. The U.S. began a form of economic imperialism that resulted in many foreign interests monopolizing Latin American economies. Examples include the United Fruit Company and the U.S. control of Cuban sugar.
New ideas about nationalism, race, gender, class, and culture also developed that facilitated the spread of transoceanic empires, as well as justified anti-imperial resistance and the formation of new national identities.
Key Concept 5.2: Imperialism and Nation State Formation
Increasing discontent with imperial rule propelled
reformist and revolutionary movements. The American Revolution - taxes and no representation In 1804, Haiti was the first Latin American country to
be independent. Slaves and the gens de couleur (led by Toussaint) rose up against the white planters who has abused them.
Increasing questions about political authority and growing nationalism contributed to anticolonial movements. Napoleon's conquest of Spain triggered the revolutions
that ensued. Feeling no loyalty to a French king, the creoles (led by Bolivar and San Martin) broke away and freed Spanish colonies.
Key Concept 5.3: Nationalism, Revolution, Reform
Migration in many cases was influenced by changes in
demography in both industrialized and unindustrialized societies that presented challenges to existing patterns of living European and Asian immigration to Latin America (particulary
Argentina, Chile, Brazil) increased dramatically because of indentured servitutde, which had replaced slavery.
Receiving societies did not always embrace immigrants, as seen in the various degrees of ethnic and racial prejudice and the ways states attempted to regulate the increased flow of people across their borders. Asians were more often discriminated against than Europeans.
Europeans were also stereotyped. People blamed immigrants for causing hardships for native
workers by accpeting low wages and threatened national culture by resisting assimiltion.
Key Concept 5.4: Global Migrations
Period 6: 1900 C.E. - Present
Accelerating Global Change and Realignments
Researchers made rapid advances in science that spread
throughout the world, assisted by the development of new technology. Modern communication and transportation eliminated the problem
of global distance.
The Green Revolution produced food for the growing global population as it changed agricultural methods.
Medical innovations eradicated diseases that plagued poorer nations in Latin America.
Oil and nuclear power raised productivity and production. Humans exploited natural resources.
Effects include deforestation, global warming, and pollution.
Improved military technology meant that larger amounts of people died in attacks.
Key Concept 6.1. Science and the Environment
Movements to redistribute land and resources developed within
states in Latin America, sometimes advocating communism and socialism.
World War I and World War II were the first “total wars.” Governments used ideologies, including fascism, nationalism and communism, to mobilize all of their state’s resources, including peoples, both in the home countries and the colonies or former colonies, for the purpose of waging war.
The shift of global political and economic balance after World War II led to the emergence of the U.S. and Soviet Union as superpowers. The Cold War broke out as an ideological struggle between capitalism and communism New military alliances (NATO and Warsaw Pact) led to proxy
wars in Latin America as the U.S. and the Soviet Union fought to ally with smaller nations.
Key Concept 6.2. Global Conflicts and their
Consequences
At the beginning of the century in the United States, the
government played a minimal role in their national economy. With the onset of the Great Depression, governments began to take a more active role in economic life.
At the end of the twentieth century, many governments encouraged free market economic policies and promoted economic liberalization. e.g. The U.S. under Reagan, Chile under Pinochet
States, communities, and individuals became increasingly interdependent, a process facilitated by the growth of institutions of global governance. Formation of the United Nations, NAFTA, WHO, WTO…
Popular and consumer culture became global.
Key Concept 6.3. New Conceptualizations of Global Economy,
Society, and Culture
Global trade slowed down during the Great Depression,
with nearly a 62% decrease. North American multinational corporations began to
have foreign interests in Latin America with the decline of cheap labor in the U.S. Examples include the U.S. control of Cuban sugar and the United
Fruit Company in Guatemala This oppressive foreign presence created a large gap
between the rich and the poor and angered many peasants in Latin America. This led to revolutions (many of them Communist/socialist)
in Latin America, such as Fidel Castro’s Cuban revolution. Despite this, many nations in the Americas continued to
export many important goods Europe, Asia, and Africa.
Changes and Continuities Over Time: 1900 C.E. -
Present
Works Cited
AP World History Course and Exam Description. Publication. CollegeBoard, n.d. Web. 10 May 2014.
Eddins, O. Ned. Alternate Pre-Historic Indian Routes - Anthropik Network. Digital image. Paleo-Indian Migration of North and South America. N.p., 2002. Web.
Latin America, 1800-1850. Digital image. Student Atlas. Rand McNally, 2005. Web.
McDougal, Holt. World History: Patterns of Interaction. Evanston, I.L.: Holt McDougal, 2010. Print.
Olson-Raymer, Gayle. Missile Crisis 1962. Digital image. The Cold War in the International Arena. Humboldt State University, 10 May 2014. Web.
Ropp, Lydia. A map of the Americas showing the three major Mesoamerican civilizations of the Middle Ages. Digital image. The Americas. Skyline High School, 28 July 2000. Web.
Topographical map illustrating 3000 years of Meso-America beginning with the Olmec Chiefdoms followed by the Mayans and then eventually the Aztecs. Digital image. Mesoamerican Civilizations and Sustainability. Museum of the City, n.d. Web. 10 May 2014
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