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THE MUSLIM EMPIRES OF ASIA & NORTHERN EURASIA; 1500-1750 Mr. Ermer AP World History Miami Beach Senior High School

T HE M USLIM E MPIRES OF A SIA & N ORTHERN E URASIA ; 1500-1750 Mr. Ermer AP World History Miami Beach Senior High School

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Page 1: T HE M USLIM E MPIRES OF A SIA & N ORTHERN E URASIA ; 1500-1750 Mr. Ermer AP World History Miami Beach Senior High School

THE MUSLIM EMPIRES OF ASIA & NORTHERN EURASIA; 1500-1750Mr. Ermer

AP World History

Miami Beach Senior High School

Page 2: T HE M USLIM E MPIRES OF A SIA & N ORTHERN E URASIA ; 1500-1750 Mr. Ermer AP World History Miami Beach Senior High School

RISE OF THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE

Strongest post-Mongol Muslim empire Osman’s dynasty’s adept rule Control of trade routes Hybrid military blending traditional skill with new

tech Defeat Mamluks in Syria and Egypt (Selim I) 1453: Conquer Constantinople/Istanbul (Mehmet

II) Defeat Serbians at Battle of Kosovo Stopped Safavid expansion Suleiman the Magnificent & the Balkans

Page 3: T HE M USLIM E MPIRES OF A SIA & N ORTHERN E URASIA ; 1500-1750 Mr. Ermer AP World History Miami Beach Senior High School
Page 4: T HE M USLIM E MPIRES OF A SIA & N ORTHERN E URASIA ; 1500-1750 Mr. Ermer AP World History Miami Beach Senior High School

OTTOMAN INSTITUTIONS

Turkish horsemen, European slaves= military Christian military slaves were called janissaries Devshirme, practice of using European children

taken from home, taught Turkish and Islam, as janissaries

Social Structure: askeri “military class”/raya “flock”

Highly centralized, powerful empire Urban centers are heavily Muslim, sha’riah law Non-Muslims, rural people look to own religious

leaders for guidance

Page 5: T HE M USLIM E MPIRES OF A SIA & N ORTHERN E URASIA ; 1500-1750 Mr. Ermer AP World History Miami Beach Senior High School

CRISIS OF THE MILITARY STATE, 1585-1650

Military technology and firearms improve Janissary corps grows, cavalry shrinks Cavalrymen restive in rural Anatolia

Inflation caused by cheap silver from New World

Religious law prohibits tax reform Wars and revolts/rebellions Janissaries gain in influence/power

Lifting of lifestyle prohibitions like marriage Janissaries decrease in number over time

Page 6: T HE M USLIM E MPIRES OF A SIA & N ORTHERN E URASIA ; 1500-1750 Mr. Ermer AP World History Miami Beach Senior High School
Page 7: T HE M USLIM E MPIRES OF A SIA & N ORTHERN E URASIA ; 1500-1750 Mr. Ermer AP World History Miami Beach Senior High School

THE NEW OTTOMAN MODEL 1650-1750

Slow period of declining international power Sultan no longer military leader, secluded in

palace Sultan’s mother & chief eunuch run palace/royalty Grand Vizier runs government

Janissaries become hereditary Less military, more interested in business and politics

Central control of gov’t declines, provinces grow rich

Adoption of European ways causes religiously charged rebellions Muhamad ibn Abd al-Wahhab (Sunni), Patrona Halil

Some multiethnic port cities prosper

Page 8: T HE M USLIM E MPIRES OF A SIA & N ORTHERN E URASIA ; 1500-1750 Mr. Ermer AP World History Miami Beach Senior High School

THE SAFAVIDS

Ottoman Similarities: Land grants for cavalry Land rather than sea power Similar social structure/interactions

Ismail=Safavid Shah Shi’ite Islam

Set Iran apart from neighbors Builds strong ties to Muslims in India Hidden Imam: all shahs are stand ins for 12th

descendent of Ali Economy based on silk and Persian rugs No navy to speak of, Gulf trade diminished Similar economic decline to that of Ottomans

Page 9: T HE M USLIM E MPIRES OF A SIA & N ORTHERN E URASIA ; 1500-1750 Mr. Ermer AP World History Miami Beach Senior High School

THE MOGHAL EMPIRE 1526-1761

Muslims ruling over India’s Hindu majority Descends from the Mongols, Timur, Babur conquers Akbar’s dynasty rules most of India

Social classes ranked as mansabs Cotton trade booms, exchanged for (inflated) silver Rajputs: Hindu soldiers from the north (15% of

army) Akbar fosters good Muslim-Hindu relations

Marries Rajput princess, fathers half breed heir Lifts non-Muslim head-tax Sikhism stages strong opposition to Moghals

Central government decays and collapses, enter British

Page 10: T HE M USLIM E MPIRES OF A SIA & N ORTHERN E URASIA ; 1500-1750 Mr. Ermer AP World History Miami Beach Senior High School
Page 11: T HE M USLIM E MPIRES OF A SIA & N ORTHERN E URASIA ; 1500-1750 Mr. Ermer AP World History Miami Beach Senior High School

JAPANESE REUNIFICATION Japanese emperor in Kyoto has little power Daimyo: Feudal lords with power, armies, land

Samurai: feudal knight-vassals of lords Shogun: hereditary commander of armies with loose

command of daimyo and armies Warlord Hideyoshi unites Japan, invades Korea

Korean invasion fails, but weakens Chinese force in Manchuria

1603: Tokugawa Shogunate, defused military state Move capital to Edo (Tokyo) Samurai adapt to bureaucratic role (educate, conspicuous

consumption, etiquette) Merchants become important players in modernization

Forge close ties to daimyo and shogun

Page 12: T HE M USLIM E MPIRES OF A SIA & N ORTHERN E URASIA ; 1500-1750 Mr. Ermer AP World History Miami Beach Senior High School
Page 13: T HE M USLIM E MPIRES OF A SIA & N ORTHERN E URASIA ; 1500-1750 Mr. Ermer AP World History Miami Beach Senior High School

JAPAN & EUROPEANS

Government closely regulates trade with Europe Fr. Francis Xavier (Catholic missionary)

Poor impressed with faith, elite inclined to oppose upsetting order

Shogun outlaws Christianity, Europeans Only the Dutch can trade, restricted to small island off

Nag. Economic growth outpaces population growth

Decentralized government limited regulatory oversight Merchant class grows despite lack of gov’t support

Kabuki theater, printed clothing/wookblock, restaurants

“Forty-Seven Ronin” values vs. order Ronin outlawed, made to commit seppuku

Tokugawa gov’t=traditional, society=moderizing

Page 14: T HE M USLIM E MPIRES OF A SIA & N ORTHERN E URASIA ; 1500-1750 Mr. Ermer AP World History Miami Beach Senior High School
Page 15: T HE M USLIM E MPIRES OF A SIA & N ORTHERN E URASIA ; 1500-1750 Mr. Ermer AP World History Miami Beach Senior High School

CHINA: THE MING EMPIRE Early Ming success: int’l demand for Chinese

goods, expanded trade, bureaucratic efficiency, rural wealth Sharp decline in mid to late Ming Dynasty

Climate change causes rural uprisings Inflation caused by too much silver Weak government caused economic problems Fighting Mongols, Manchu, & Japan weakens

state Manchus defeat Ming Dynasty—est. Qing

Empire Europeans traded with China via island bases

Portuguese/Macao, Spain/Manila, Dutch/Taiwan Catholic missionaries have greater success than

in Japan, poor and elites convert, Jesuits in gov’t office

Page 16: T HE M USLIM E MPIRES OF A SIA & N ORTHERN E URASIA ; 1500-1750 Mr. Ermer AP World History Miami Beach Senior High School
Page 17: T HE M USLIM E MPIRES OF A SIA & N ORTHERN E URASIA ; 1500-1750 Mr. Ermer AP World History Miami Beach Senior High School

QING CHINA Qing Emperors Kangxi & Qianlong restore greatness

Built economic infrastructure Reestablish overland trade/communication Conquer new lands from Mongols & Russians Southeast Asian tribute states contribute to economy Qing emperors sour on Christian missionaries, expel

Qing influences on Europe use “variolation” as smallpox vaccine Wallpaper Market for Chinese products Admiration for Qing imperial “wisdom” and culture

Europeans traders allowed only at Canton/“Can. System” British E. India Co. traded silver for tea Macartney Mission fails, China remains closed to Europe

Page 18: T HE M USLIM E MPIRES OF A SIA & N ORTHERN E URASIA ; 1500-1750 Mr. Ermer AP World History Miami Beach Senior High School