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AMSCO 2.5 Cultural Consequences of Connectivity Notes

1 min readjune 18, 2024

Topic 2.5

📍Topic 2.5 Cultural Consequences of Connectivity

📖 AMSCO p.111 - p.117

Main Idea

Key Timeline

2.5 AP World Timeline.png

Image Courtesy of Rashmi Korukonda

Things to Know

AfroEurasian Networks of Exchange

  • Extensive trade and cultural interactions occurred between 1200 and 1450.
  • Reasons for exchange included stability and protection from the Mongol Empire.
  • Trade led to diffusion of technologies, such as gunpowder and paper.
  • Cultural exchanges and technological innovations were documented by travelers, such as Marco Polo and Ibn Battuta.

Cultural Fusion and Spread

  • New religions and languages often unified and influenced local cultures.
  • Religious merging
    • Buddhism from India merged with China’s Daoist principles to form Chan Buddhism.
    • Neo-Confucianism was created by the blending of rational thought with Daoism and Buddhism.
  • Language merging
    • Swahili in Africa was a blend of Arabic and Bantu.
    • Urdu was derived from Sanskrit-based Hindi, along with the languages Arabic and Farsi (a Persian language).
  • The spread of Hinduism and Buddhism
    • Religions spread through Southeast Asia via trade.
    • Sri Lanka’s Sinhala dynasties became centers of Buddhist study.
    • Buddhism influenced styles of governance and art.
  • The spread of Islam
    • Islam spread through trade, missions, and conquests.
    • It influenced languages, cultures, and architecture in regions such as Africa, South Asia, and Southeast Asia.

Scientific and Technological Innovations

  • Islamic scholars translated Ancient Greek works into Arabic, allowing their knowledge to be preserved.
  • Advancements in medicine and paper-making
  • Crops, like Champa rice, improved agricultural efficiency.
  • Printing technology and papermaking increased literacy rates.
  • Seafaring technology, such as lateen sails and the magnetic compass

Cities’ Growth and Decline

  • Cities grew because of political stability, commerce, safe transportation, and increased agricultural output.
    • Hangzhou and Kashgar in China, Novgorod in Russia, Timbuktu in Mali, Calicutn (modern-day Kozhikode) in India, and Samarkand in Uzbekistan prospered.
  • Cities decline due to political instability, disease, and agricultural reduction.
    • Kashgar soon declined, as well as Constantinople.

Aftermath of Crusades

  • Crusaders encountered Byzantine and Islamic cultures, increasing demand for Eastern goods in Europe.
  • Significant population decline because of the Black Death’s spread through trade routes.
  • Labor shortage impacted the feudal system.

Travelers and Their Tales

  • Marco Polo: Italian traveler from Venice.
    • He visited Kublai Khan’s court in the late 13th century, impressing him.
    • Many people doubted his grandiose descriptions of China included in his travel book, until other Europeans traveled there and agreed with Polo.
  • Ibn Battuta: Muslim scholar from Morocco.
    • He traveled extensively through Central Asia, Southeast Asia, South Asia, China, Spain, North Africa and Mali, primarily in Muslim lands.
    • His book on his travels detailed his visited locations and their cultures, as well as Islam’s role in them.
  • Margery Kempe: English mystic.
    • She wrote a book on her pilgrimages to Jerusalem, Rome, Germany, and Spain as a medieval woman.
    • Her perspective was unique in it’s depiction of the challenges and spirituality of a woman in the 14th century.

Terms to Remember

TermDefinition + Significance
Black DeathA plague that devastated much of Europe’s population and had lasting effects on the feudal system.
Samarkand and KashgarKey trade route cities, which were centers of Islamic scholarship and trade.
Khmer EmpireA kingdom in present-day Cambodia, known for its cultural influences from Hinduism and Buddhism.
Chan BuddhismA faith that was created through the merging of Daoism and Buddhism.
Neo-ConfucianismA faith originating in China, which blended rational thought with Daoism and Buddhism.