π Overview of World History
World History explores the development of human civilizations across all continents and time periods. From the first civilizations in Mesopotamia to the interconnected global society of today, studying world history helps us understand how cultures, ideas, and events have shaped our modern world.
Major Periods of World History
- Prehistory: Before written records (~3000 BCE)
- Ancient History: First civilizations to fall of Rome (~3000 BCE - 500 CE)
- Medieval/Middle Ages: ~500 - 1500 CE
- Early Modern Period: ~1500 - 1800 CE
- Modern Period: ~1800 - 1945
- Contemporary Period: 1945 - Present
ποΈ Ancient World (~3000 BCE - 500 CE)
River Valley Civilizations
| Civilization | Location | River | Key Contributions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mesopotamia | Iraq | Tigris & Euphrates | Writing (cuneiform), wheel, law codes |
| Egypt | Egypt | Nile | Pyramids, hieroglyphics, mummification |
| Indus Valley | India/Pakistan | Indus | Urban planning, plumbing, standardized weights |
| China | China | Yellow (Huang He) | Silk, paper, philosophy, Great Wall |
Classical Civilizations
- Democracy: Athens developed first democracy (citizen participation)
- Philosophy: Socrates, Plato, Aristotle
- Art & Architecture: Parthenon, sculptures, theater
- Olympics: First games in 776 BCE
- Alexander the Great: Conquered vast empire, spread Hellenistic culture
- Republic β Empire: From elected officials to emperors
- Law: Twelve Tables, innocent until proven guilty
- Engineering: Roads, aqueducts, Colosseum
- Latin: Basis for Romance languages
- Christianity: Spread throughout empire, became official religion
- Fall (476 CE): Invasions, economic troubles, overexpansion
Other Ancient Empires
- Persia: Largest ancient empire, tolerance of diverse cultures
- Maurya (India): Ashoka spread Buddhism
- Han Dynasty (China): Silk Road trade, civil service exams
βοΈ Medieval Era (~500 - 1500 CE)
Medieval Europe
Feudalism
A hierarchical system organizing medieval society:
- King: Owned all land, granted fiefs to lords
- Nobles/Lords: Controlled land, provided military service
- Knights: Trained warriors, served lords
- Peasants/Serfs: Worked the land, bound to manors
The Catholic Church
- Most powerful institution in medieval Europe
- Pope held both spiritual and political power
- Monasteries preserved learning and literacy
- Crusades (1095-1291): Religious wars for the Holy Land
Other Medieval Civilizations
| Civilization | Region | Key Features |
|---|---|---|
| Byzantine Empire | Eastern Mediterranean | Preserved Roman/Greek learning, Orthodox Christianity |
| Islamic Caliphates | Middle East, N. Africa, Spain | Golden Age of science, math, medicine |
| Tang/Song China | East Asia | Gunpowder, printing, compass, porcelain |
| Mongol Empire | Central Asia to Europe | Largest land empire, Pax Mongolica trade |
| Mali Empire | West Africa | Gold trade, Mansa Musa, Timbuktu |
π’ Early Modern Period (~1500 - 1800)
Renaissance (~1350 - 1600)
- Origin: Italy (Florence, Venice, Rome)
- Humanism: Focus on human potential and achievement
- Art: Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, Raphael
- Literature: Shakespeare, Machiavelli, Dante
- Science: Copernicus, Galileo challenged old ideas
- Printing Press (1450s): Gutenberg revolutionized knowledge spread
Age of Exploration (~1400s - 1600s)
| Explorer | Country | Achievement | Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| Columbus | Spain | Reached Americas | 1492 |
| Vasco da Gama | Portugal | Sea route to India | 1498 |
| Magellan | Spain | First circumnavigation | 1519-1522 |
Columbian Exchange
The transfer of plants, animals, diseases, and ideas between Old and New Worlds:
- To Americas: Horses, cattle, wheat, diseases (smallpox)
- To Europe: Potatoes, corn, tomatoes, chocolate, tobacco
Major Revolutions
Protestant Reformation (1517)
- Martin Luther: 95 Theses criticizing Catholic Church
- Key Ideas: Salvation by faith alone, Bible as authority
- Result: Protestant churches (Lutheran, Calvinist, Anglican)
Scientific Revolution (1500s-1700s)
- Copernicus: Heliocentric theory (sun-centered)
- Galileo: Telescope observations supported Copernicus
- Newton: Laws of motion and gravity
- Scientific Method: Observation, hypothesis, experimentation
Enlightenment (1700s)
- Key Ideas: Reason, natural rights, social contract
- Locke: Life, liberty, property; consent of governed
- Montesquieu: Separation of powers
- Rousseau: Popular sovereignty
- Impact: Inspired American and French Revolutions
π 20th Century & Beyond
Industrial Revolution
Key Changes (~1750-1900)
- Origin: Britain (textiles, coal, iron)
- Inventions: Steam engine, spinning jenny, railways
- Urbanization: People moved from farms to cities
- Social Changes: New middle class, labor movements
- Problems: Child labor, pollution, poor working conditions
World Wars
- Causes: MAIN - Militarism, Alliances, Imperialism, Nationalism
- Spark: Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand
- Sides: Allies (Britain, France, Russia, USA) vs. Central Powers (Germany, Austria-Hungary, Ottoman Empire)
- New Weapons: Machine guns, tanks, poison gas, planes
- Result: Treaty of Versailles, League of Nations, empires collapse
- Causes: Treaty of Versailles, Great Depression, rise of fascism
- Key Figures: Hitler (Germany), Mussolini (Italy), Hirohito (Japan), FDR/Churchill/Stalin (Allies)
- Holocaust: Nazi genocide of 6 million Jews and millions of others
- Key Events: Pearl Harbor, D-Day, Atomic bombs on Hiroshima/Nagasaki
- Result: United Nations, Cold War begins, decolonization
Cold War Era (1945-1991)
Key Features
- Sides: USA (capitalism, democracy) vs. USSR (communism)
- Nuclear Arms Race: Both sides built massive arsenals
- Proxy Wars: Korea, Vietnam, Afghanistan
- Space Race: Sputnik (1957), Moon landing (1969)
- End: Fall of Berlin Wall (1989), Soviet collapse (1991)
Decolonization & Modern World
βοΈ Practice Questions
π‘ Tips & Tricks
Geography shapes history! Visualize where events happened to understand why they happened (trade routes, natural borders, resources).
World history is interconnected. Ask: How did events in one region affect others? (e.g., Mongols connected East and West; Columbian Exchange changed both hemispheres)
Create comparison charts: How did different civilizations handle government, religion, economy, and social structure?
Focus on turning points: 476 (Rome falls), 1453 (Constantinople falls), 1492 (Columbus), 1789 (French Revolution), 1914 (WWI), 1945 (WWII ends)
β οΈ Common Mistakes to Avoid
Don't focus only on Europe! Asia, Africa, and the Americas had advanced civilizations and important historical developments too.
Major events like wars rarely have a single cause. Look for multiple factors: political, economic, social, and cultural.
Remember that different regions developed at different rates. When Rome fell, China's Tang Dynasty was flourishing.
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