World Civilizations

Alharbi333
CORE133BecomingtheWorld.pptx

Becoming the World

1000-1300 ce

al-Idrisi’s world map (1154) Bodleian Library, Oxford

Focus Questions

What factors led to the explosion of global trading between 1000 and 1300?

How did trade and migration affect sub-Saharan Africa between 1000 and 1300?

How did trade, conversion, and migration affect the Islamic world between 1000 and 1300?

In what ways did India remain a “cultural mosaic”?

What transformations in communication, education, and commerce promoted a distinct Chinese identity during this era?

How did Mongol conquests affect cross-cultural contacts and regional development in Afro-Eurasia?

Commercial Connections

Revolutions at Sea

Commercial Contacts

Global Commercial Hubs

The Egyptian Anchorage

The Anchorage of Quanzhou

Melaka as Crossroads of Afro-Eurasia

The Tip of India as Nerve Center of Maritime Trade

Modern dhow in harbor of Zanzibar displays characteristic triangle sail

Afro-Eurasian Trade, 1000-1300

Sub-Saharan Africa Comes Together

West-Africa and the Mande-Speaking Peoples

The Empire of Mali

East Africa and the India Ocean

The Trans-Saharan and Indian Ocean Slave Trade

Depiction of slave market in Baghdad, connected to trans-Saharan Indian Ocean slave trade, ca. 1300

Trans-Saharan Trade in Africa, ~1300

Musa I of Mali on his throne, surrounded by images of gold (1375)

Islam in a Time of Political Fragmentation

Becoming the Middle East

Afro-Eurasian Merchants

Diversity and Uniformity in Islam

Political Integration and Disintegration

What was Islam?

Whirling dervishes from Sufi cultural festival – understood as an important means of reaching union with God

The Medieval Islamic World

India as “Cultural Mosaic”

Rajas and Sultans

Invasions and Consolidations

What was India?

Lodi Gardens – Lodi Dynasty was the last Delhi sultan dynasty, 1451-1526

South Asia and Central Eurasia, 1200

Song China: Insiders versus Outsiders

China’s Economic Progress

Money and Inflation

New Elites

Negotiating with Neighbors

What was China?

Song Dynasty painting attributed to Li Guanglin of the great Tang Dynasty General Guo Ziyi receiving the submission of Uighur soldiers.

East and Southeast Asia, 1200

The Mongol Transformation of Afro-Eurasia

Who were the Mongols?

Military Skills

Conquest and Empire

Mongols in China

Mongol Reverberations in Southeast Asia

The Fall of Baghdad

Mongol cavalry archery from Rashid-al-Din Hamadani's Universal History using the Mongol bow

Mongol Campaigns and Conquests, 1200-1300

Conclusions

Between 1000 and 1300 ce, Afro-Eurasia formed large trade and migration spheres, which led to cultural integration and the first truly “global” world (absent integration of Americas)

Merchants, scholars, and travelers became commercial and cultural intermediaries (cosmopolitan identity), or new classes of people

Many of the contemporary borders and geographic boundaries of the world were formed during this period

Mongol political integration brought evidence of new cross-cultural exchanges of “global” world to ordinary people’s lives

Key terms: Delhi Sultanate; dhows; entrepôts; karim; Kubilai Khan; Mongols; rajas; Sufism