The Bantu migrations had a vast influence on the development of Africa. The Bantu peoples passed on many concepts to the rest of Sub-Saharan Africa. Originating from Nigeria in the Niger River Valley‚ the Bantu migrated south and then spread to both the east and west. The Bantu laid the foundation for Sub-Saharan African societies. They spread agriculture‚ animal domestication‚ iron metallurgy‚ and cultural development throughout southern Africa. Various forms of government have developed as a result
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strengthened patriarchies in China’s Song Dynasty‚ Japan’s Tokugawa Period‚ Korea’s Yi Dynasty and Vietnam’s Tran and Viet dynasties.) 11. The era of 600-1450 was marked by different forms of treatment of women and the different roles they played in society. Choose two different cultures below and compare and contrast the role and treatment of women in them. Western Europe Sub-Saharan Africa 12• Compare and contrast Japanese and European feudalism in terms of economic‚ cultural‚ social
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are still in working conditions). Paved roads led to the towns. With well developed agriculture‚ handicraft production was also promoted. Big part of the urban population consisted of merchants and artisans. The wealthy merchants controlled the caravan-trade in the country‚ conducted trade-transactions and directed the merchant-organizations. To protect their rights artisans united in guilds. There were brick-layers‚ stone-masons‚ carpenters‚ cabinet-makers‚ casters‚ potters‚ glass-blowers‚ goldsmiths
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is‚ why did Islam spread so quickly? Islam spread quickly because of flourishing trade routes‚ military conquests out of Mecca‚ and the appeal of its central ideology. One of the biggest reasons that Islam spread so quickly was because of the connecting trade routes. Mecca was a very prosperous and important city‚ that was the crossroads of a caravan trade. The city of Mecca was the center of the trade routes that connected to other prosperous cities such as Jerusalem‚ Constantinople‚ Medina‚ and
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Robert Sangen 1. Archaeology- the scientific study of historic or prehistoric peoples and their cultures by analysis of their artifacts‚ inscriptions‚ monuments‚ and other such remains‚ especially those that have been excavated. 2. Neolithic Revolution- The Neolithic Revolution was a fundamental change in the way people lived. The shift from hunting & gathering to agriculture led to permanent settlements‚ the establishment of social classes‚ and the eventual rise of civilizations. The Neolithic
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"Silk Roads or Steppe Roads? The Silk Roads in World History" The main focus‚ or thesis‚ of this article was similar to the likes of Andre Gunder Frank and Barry Gills; that the trans-civilizational and‚ less understood‚ trans-ecological exchanges along the Silk Road linked all regions of the Afro-Eurasian landmass- agrarian civilizations‚ the woodland communities to the north and steppe pastoralists- into a single "world-system" of trade that is several millennia old. Among these exchanges across
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catalyst for the spreading of disease. Over the course of humankind‚ a time period that spreads thousands of years‚ as the world has become increasingly global‚ every transmittable disease has followed in the footsteps. Trade routes carried smallpox‚ caravan routes spread the measles‚ equestrians transmitted the bubonic plague‚ and a single flight attendant was possibly responsible for the spread of HIV to the western world. These are just a few isolated examples. It is typically implied that
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CS470 Network Engineering and Management Instructor: Dr. Howard Liu howard@mail.npu.edu Introduction 1-1 Chapter 1 Introduction A note on the use of these ppt slides: We re making these slides freely available to all (faculty‚ students‚ readers). They re in PowerPoint form so you can add‚ modify‚ and delete slides (including this one) and slide content to suit your needs. They obviously represent a lot of work on our part. In return for use‚ we only ask the following: q If you use
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The Biography of Ibn- Battuta By: Samantharina Contents Front page........................................ Page.1 Contents page...................................Page.2 Introduction.....................................Page.3 Ibn Battuta.......................................Page.4 His First Trip on Hajj........................Page.5 His Travels........................................Page.6 Maps.................................................Page.7 His Journey
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1. History of road By about 30.000 BC convenient routes were being well used by human travelers. The first human pathways would have developed for very specific purposes leading to campsites‚ food‚ water‚ ford across streams‚ passes trough mountains and routes through swamps and past dangerous area. The first record is of a cobblestone paving in Assyria in about 4000 BC. The oldest extant road was constructed trough the mountains of Crete‚ from Knossus to Leben in about 2000 BC. It could have
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