a world divided: western kingdoms, byzantine...
TRANSCRIPT
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A WORLD DIVIDED: WESTERN KINGDOMS, BYZANTINE EMPIRE, AND THE ISLAMIC WORLD P17
Western Kingdoms P-17The Byzantine Empire P-18
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY P.6: The Expansion of Islam to 750 P-19
Founding of Islam P-19The Spread of Islam P-20
MEDIEVAL EUROPE P20Charlemagne’s Empire P-20
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT P.2: Charlemagne Promotes Educational Reforms P-21
Dissolution of Charlemagne’s Empire P-21Manors and Feudal Ties P-22
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY P.7: Medieval France, England, and Germany, Tenth through Fourteenth Centuries P-23
The High Middle Ages P-23Church Architecture and Universities P-24Growth of Centralized Monarchies P-24The Imperial Papacy and the Crusades P-24
LOOKING BACK & MOVING FORWARD P25
BEYOND THE CLASSROOM P27
CHAPTER 9
THE WEST STRUGGLES AND EASTERN EMPIRES FLOURISH: THE LATE MIDDLE AGES, CA. 13001500 265ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL MISERY 266
Famine 266The Black Death: A Pandemic Strikes 266
PROLOGUE
THE WEST BEFORE 1300: THE ANCIENT MIDDLE EAST AND EUROPE TO 1300 P3THE ROOTS OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION P4
The Fertile Crescent: Mesopotamia and the Mediterranean Coast, ca. 3000–1000 B.C.E. P-4
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY P.1: Mesopotamia and Egypt, ca. 2000 B.C.E. P-5
Rule of the God-King: Ancient Egypt, ca. 3100–1000 B.C.E. P-6
The Growth of Empires, 1200–500 B.C.E. P-6
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY P.2: The Persian Empire, ca. 500 B.C.E. P-7
THE GREEK CONTRIBUTIONS P8
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY P.3: The World of the Greeks P-8
Origins of Science and Politics P-9Athens and the Classical Age P-9Peloponnesian War and Destruction P-9Beginnings of Philosophy P-10Spread of Greek Culture: Hellenistic World P-10
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY P.4: The Successor States After the Death of Alexander, ca. 240 B.C.E. P-11
The Successor Kingdoms P-11
ROME: FROM REPUBLIC TO EMPIRE P12The Republic P-12Conquering the Mediterranean P-12
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY P.5: Italy, 265 B.C.E. P-13
Fall of the Republic P-13
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT P.1: Conspirators Assassinate Julius Caesar P-14
The Roman Empire P-15Judaism and the Rise of Christianity P-15Crisis and Transformation of the Empire,
192–ca. 400 C.E. P-17Did Rome “Fall”? P-17
CO
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x CO N T E N T S
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 9.1: The Spread of the Black Death 267
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 9.1: Agnolo the Fat Survives the Plague 268
Peasants and Townspeople Revolt 269
IMPERIAL PAPACY BESIEGED 271Popes Move to Avignon 271Things Get Worse: The Great Schism 271
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 9.2: The Great Schism, 1378–1417 272
The Conciliar Movement 273New Critics of the Church 273
MORE DESTRUCTION: THE HUNDRED YEARS’ WAR, 13371453 274
England vs. France 274
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 9.3: The Hundred Years’ War, 1337–1453 275
Joan of Arc 276
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 9.2: Joan of Arc Is Defi ant 277
Results of the War 277
RESPONSES TO THE DISRUPTION OF MEDIEVAL ORDER 278
William of Ockham Reconsiders Scholasticism 278New Literary Giants 278
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: VISUALS: Illumination from a Book of Hours, Fifteenth Century 280
A New View: Jan van Eyck 281
EMPIRES IN THE EAST 281
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 9.4: The Mongol Empire, ca. 1300 282
Eastern Universalism: The Mongols 282
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 9.3: A Franciscan Missionary Goes to China 283
The Ottoman Empire, 1300–1566 284
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 9.5: The Ottoman Empire,1300–1566 285
Russia: The Third Rome 285
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 9.6: The Rise of Moscow, 1325–1533 286
BIOGRAPHY: Vlad III Dracula (the Impaler), King of Wallachia (1431–1476) 287
LOOKING BACK & MOVING FORWARD 288
CHAPTER 10
A NEW SPIRIT IN THE WEST: THE RENAISSANCE, CA. 13001640 291A NEW SPIRIT EMERGES: INDIVIDUALISM, REALISM, AND ACTIVISM 292
The Renaissance: A Controversial Idea 292Why Italy? 293A Multifaceted Movement 293Humanism: The Path to Self-Improvement 294The Generosity of Patrons: Supporting
New Ideas 295
BIOGRAPHY: Isabella d’Este (1474–1539) 296
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 10.1: Isabella d’Este Implores Leonardo da Vinci to Paint for Her 297
The Invention of the Printing Press: Spreading New Ideas 297
THINKING ABOUT SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY: An Information Revolution: The Printing Press 298
THE POLITICS OF INDIVIDUAL EFFORT 298The Italian City-States 298
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 10.1: Italy in 1454 299
Florence: Birthplace of the Renaissance 299Venice: The Serene Republic? 300
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CO N T E N T S xi
CHAPTER 11
“ALONE BEFORE GOD”: RELIGIOUS REFORM AND WARFARE, 15001648 323THE CLASH OF DYNASTIES, 15151555 324
Land-Hungry Monarchs 324The Changing Rules of Warfare 324
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 11.1: Europe in 1526—Habsburg-Valois Wars 325
THINKING ABOUT SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY: Destruction and Amusement: The Development and Uses of Gunpowder 326
Winners and Losers 327
BIOGRAPHY: Martin Guerre (1524–1594) 328The Habsburg-Valois Wars, 1521–1544 329
A TIDE OF RELIGIOUS REFORM 329The Best Path to Salvation? 329Desiderius Erasmus: “Prince of Humanists” 330Luther’s Revolution 330
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 11.1: Germans Rage Against Papal Exploitation 331
Protestant Religious Ideas 332The Reformed Church Takes Root in Germany 333Bringing Reform to the States in Switzerland 334Anabaptists: The Radical Reformers 335Calvinism and the Growing Middle Class 335
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 11.2: Marie Dentière Defends Reformation Women’s Rights 336
Henry VIII and the English Church 337
THE CATHOLIC REFORMATION 340The Stirring of Reform in Spain 340
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 11.2: Religions in Europe, ca. 1600 341
The Society of Jesus 342
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 11.3: Ignatius Loyola Argues for Education as a Solution 343
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 10.2: Friar Savonarola Ignites a “Bonfi re of the Vanities” 301
Milan and Naples: Two Principalities 301
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 10.2: The Venetian Empire in the Fifteenth Century 302
The Papal States 303The Art of Diplomacy 304
INDIVIDUALISM AS SELFINTEREST: LIFE DURING THE RENAISSANCE 305
Growing Intolerance 305Economic Boom Times 305Slavery Revived 306Finding Comfort in Family 307Children’s Lives 308
AN AGE OF TALENT AND BEAUTY: RENAISSANCE CULTURE AND SCIENCE 309
Artists and Artisans 309Architecture: Echoing the Human Form 309Sculpture Comes into Its Own 311Painting from a New Perspective 312
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: VISUALS: Raphael, School of Athens, 1510–1511 313
Celestial Music of Human Emotions 313Science or Pseudoscience? 314Leonardo da Vinci: The “Renaissance Man” 314
RENAISSANCE OF THE “NEW MONARCHIES” OF THE NORTH, 14531640 315
France: Under the Italian Infl uence 315Visual Arts in Northern Europe 316
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 10.3: France in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries 317
English Humanism 317
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 10.3: A Courtier Describes a Suspicious King—Louis the Spider 318
Renaissance London: A Booming City 319England’s Pride: William Shakespeare 319
LOOKING BACK & MOVING FORWARD 320
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THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 12.1: Amerigo Vespucci Describes the New World 366
The Northern Europeans Join the Race, 1497–1650 366
CONFRONTATION OF CULTURES 367The Original Americans South of the Rio Grande 367
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 12.2: European Expansion, ca. 1700 368
The Original Northern Americans 369
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 12.3: Indigenous Peoples and Empires in the Americas, ca. 1500 370
Early Contacts 371Conquest of the Great Empires, 1520–1550 371North American Contacts 372
GLOBAL CONNECTIONS: The Inca Empire Falls 373
Life and Death Under European Rule, 1550–1700 374The African Slave Trade 375Gathering Souls in the New Lands 377
THE WORLD MARKET AND COMMERCIAL REVOLUTION 378
High Prices and Profi ts: Trading on the World Stage 378
The Rise of Commercial Capitalism 379
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 12.2: Thomas Mun Praises Trade 380
Mercantilism: Controlling the Balance of Trade 381The Growth of Banking 381The Danger of Overspending: Spain
Learns a Lesson 381Redefi ning Work Roles 382Piracy: Banditry on a World Scale, 1550–1700 382
BIOGRAPHY: Maria Sibylla Merian (1647–1717) 383
THE WORLD TRANSFORMED 384European Culture Spreads 384European Culture Transformed 385
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: VISUALS: Festival Scene Painted on a Screen, Mexico, ca. 1650 386
A New Worldview 387
LOOKING BACK & MOVING FORWARD 389
The Council of Trent, 1545–1563 343Catholics on the Off ense 344
EUROPE ERUPTS AGAIN: A CENTURY OF RELIGIOUS WARFARE, 15591648 346
French Wars of Religion, 1562–1598 346A “Council of Blood” in the Netherlands,
1566–1609 347The Thirty Years’ War, 1618–1648 348
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 11.3: The Thirty Years’ War, 1618–1648 350
Peace at Westphalia 351
LIFE AFTER THE REFORMATION 351New Defi nitions of Courtship and Marriage 351
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 11.4: Europe, 1648 352
Forging a Link Between Education and Work 353Anxiety and Spiritual Insecurity 354Searching for Scapegoats: The Hunt for Witches 354
LOOKING BACK & MOVING FORWARD 355
CHAPTER 12
FAITH, FORTUNE, AND FAME: EUROPEAN EXPANSION, 14501700 359THE WORLD IMAGINED 360
The Lure of the East 360Imagined Peoples 361Ptolemy’s Map 361
THE WORLD DISCOVERED 361Fame, Fortune, and Faith: The Drive to Explore 361New Technologies and Travel 362The Portuguese Race for the East, 1418–1600 363
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 12.1: Exploration and Conquest, Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries 364
Spain’s Westward Discoveries, 1492–1522 364
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Protestantism Revitalized 410James I Invokes the Divine Right of Kings 411Charles I Alienates Parliament 411
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 13.4: The English Civil War, 1642–1649 412
“God Made Men and the Devil Made Kings”: Civil War, 1642–1649 412
The King Laid Low 413A Puritan Republic Is Born: The
Commonwealth, 1649–1660 414Who Has the Power to Rule? 415The Monarchy Restored, 1660–1688 416The Glorious Revolution 417Royalism Reconsidered: John Locke 417
BIOGRAPHY: Samuel Pepys (1633–1703) 418The Netherlands Maintain a Republic 419
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 13.5: The United Provinces and the Spanish Netherlands, 1609 419
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 13.3: An Ambassador Describes the Dutch Government 420
LOOKING BACK & MOVING FORWARD 422
CHAPTER 14
A NEW WORLD OF REASON AND REFORM: THE SCIENTIFIC REVOLUTION AND THE ENLIGHTENMENT, 16001800 425QUESTIONING TRUTH AND AUTHORITY 426
Reasoning and Technology: East and West 426The Old View 426Undermining the Old View 427
DEVELOPING A MODERN SCIENTIFIC VIEW 428Astronomy and Physics: From Copernicus to
Newton 428
CHAPTER 13
THE STRUGGLE FOR SURVIVAL AND SOVEREIGNTY: EUROPE’S SOCIAL AND POLITICAL ORDER, 16001715 391STRESSES IN TRADITIONAL SOCIETY 392
Mounting Demands on Rural Life 392
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: VISUALS: Louis le Nain, The Cart, 1641 393
Pressures on the Upper Orders 394
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 13.1: Bishop Bossuet Justifi es Monarchical Absolutism 395
ROYAL ABSOLUTISM IN FRANCE 395Henry IV Secures the Monarchy 396Richelieu Elevates Royal Authority 396Mazarin Overcomes the Opposition 397The Sun King Rises 397
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 13.2: Louis XIV Describes Monarchical Rights and Duties 398
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 13.1: France Under Louis XIV, 1661–1715 402
THE STRUGGLE FOR SOVEREIGNTY IN EASTERN EUROPE 403
Centralizing the State in Brandenburg-Prussia 403
Austria Expands Its Control 403The Ottoman Challenge 403
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 13.2: Central and Eastern Europe, 1648 404
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 13.3: Central and Eastern Europe, 1640–1725 405
Russia and Its Tsars Gain Prominence 406The Victory of the Nobility in Poland 407
GLOBAL CONNECTIONS: The Rise and Fall of the Mughal Empire in India 408
THE TRIUMPH OF CONSTITUTIONALISM 409The Nobility Loses Respect 409
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THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 15.1: Europe, 1721 453
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 15.1: Landlords and Serfs in Russia 455
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 15.2: The Expansion of Russia and the Partition of Poland, 1721–1795 456
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 15.3: Prussia and the Austrian Empire, 1721–1772 458
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 15.2: Austria’s Empress Explains the Diplomatic Revolution 459
Warfare in the Eighteenth Century 459Western Europe and the Great Colonial Rivalry 460
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 15.4: Overseas Colonies and Trade, 1740 461
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 15.3: Olaudah Equiano Describes the Middle Passage 465
GLOBAL CONNECTIONS: Western Africa, Brazil, and the Atlantic Slave Trade 467
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 15.5: India, 1756–1805 468
THE TWILIGHT OF MONARCHIES? THE QUESTION OF ENLIGHTENED ABSOLUTISM 468
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 15.6 AND 15.7: North America, 1755 and 1763 469
CHANGES IN COUNTRY AND CITY LIFE 471The Agricultural Revolution 471Manufacturing Spreads in the Countryside:
Cottage Industry 472
THINKING ABOUT SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY: The Golden Age of Canals 473
More People, Longer Lives 474Deepening Misery for the Poor 474Prosperity and the Bourgeoisie 475
THE CULTURE OF THE ELITE: COMBINING THE OLD AND THE NEW 476
The Advent of the Modern Novel 476Pride and Sentiment in Art and Architecture 476Reaching New Heights in Music 477
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: VISUALS: Jean-Baptiste Greuze, The Father’s Curse, ca. 1778 478
The Grand Tour 478
CULTURE FOR THE LOWER CLASSES 478Festivals and Popular Literature 478
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 14.1: Kepler and Galileo Exchange Letters About Science 430
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 14.2: Isaac Newton: God in a Scientifi c Universe 431
The Revolution Spreads: Medicine, Anatomy, and Chemistry 432
The Methodology of Science Emerges 433
SUPPORTING AND SPREADING SCIENCE 434Courts and Salons 435The Rise of Royal Societies 435Religion and the New Science 435The New Worldview 436
LAYING THE FOUNDATIONS FOR THE ENLIGHTENMENT 436
Science Popularized 436Skepticism and Religion 438Eastern Customs and Criticism of Authority 439
THE ENLIGHTENMENT IN FULL STRIDE 439The Philosophes 439
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 14.3: Condorcet Lauds the Power of Reason 440
The Encyclopedia 441Battling the Church 441Reforming Society 442
BIOGRAPHY: Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712–1778) 444
The Culture and Spread of the Enlightenment 445
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: VISUALS: Léonard Defrance, At the Shield of Minerva, 1781 447
LOOKING BACK & MOVING FORWARD 447
CHAPTER 15
COMPETING FOR POWER AND WEALTH: THE OLD REGIME, 17151789 451STATEBUILDING AND WAR 452
Rising Ambitions in Eastern Europe 452
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THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 16.2: The Jacobins’ Revolutionary Politics 498
The Terror 499
BIOGRAPHY: Manon Roland (1754–1793) 500The Republic of Virtue 501
The Revolution Spreads Outside of France 503
Resistance to the Republic Rises 503
Reaction: The “White” Terror and the Directory 504
NAPOLEON BONAPARTE 505Napoleon’s Rise to Power 505
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 16.3: France and Its Sister Republics 506
Napoleon Consolidates Control 507
Reforming France 507
Creating the Empire 507
War and Conquest 508
The Impact Overseas 509
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 16.4: Europe, 1810 510
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 16.3: Napoleon Issues an Imperial Decree at Madrid 511
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 16.5: Latin America After Independence 512
Decline and Fall 512
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: VISUALS: Francisco de Goya, The Executions of the Third of May, 1808 513
LOOKING BACK & MOVING FORWARD 514
CHAPTER 17
FACTORIES, CITIES, AND FAMILIES IN THE INDUSTRIAL AGE: THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION, 1780–1850 517THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION BEGINS 518
Why the West and Not the East 519
Britain’s Unique Set of Advantages 519
BIOGRAPHY: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756–1791) 479
Gin and Beer 480
Religious Revivals 480
FORESHADOWING UPHEAVAL: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION 481
Insults, Interests, and Principles: The Seeds of Revolt 481
A War for Independence 482
Creating the New Nation 482
LOOKING BACK & MOVING FORWARD 483
THE WORLD & THE WEST: Moving into the Modern World 484
CHAPTER 16
OVERTURNING THE POLITICAL AND SOCIAL ORDER: THE FRENCH REVOLUTION AND NAPOLEON, 1789–1815 487“A GREAT FERMENT”: TROUBLE BREWING IN FRANCE 488
The Financial Crisis Weakens the Monarchy 488
The Underlying Causes of the Revolution 488
The Tennis Court Oath 490
Storming the Bastille 491
The End of the Old Order 492
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 16.1: New Laws End the Feudal System in France 493
THE CONSTITUTIONAL MONARCHY: ESTABLISHING A NEW ORDER 494
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 16.1 AND 16.2: Reorganizing France in 1789 495
The King Discredited 495
Reactions Outside France 496
TO THE RADICAL REPUBLIC AND BACK 496War and the Breakdown of Order 497
Radical Republicans Struggle for Power 497
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Seeking Medical Care 537
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 17.3: The Spread of a Cholera Epidemic 538
Promising Developments for Public Health 539
FAMILY IDEALS AND REALITIES 539Middle-Class Ideals: Aff ection, Children, and
Privacy 539Separate Spheres: Changing Roles for Middle-Class
Women and Men 540
BIOGRAPHY: The Cadburys 542
Working-Class Realities 542Prostitution 543Stress and Survival in the Working Classes 544
LOOKING BACK & MOVING FORWARD 544
CHAPTER 18
COPING WITH CHANGE: IDEOLOGY, POLITICS, AND REVOLUTION, 18151850 547THE CONGRESS OF VIENNA: A GATHERING OF VICTORS 548
The Concert of Europe: Securing the Vienna Settlement 549
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 18.1: Europe, 1815 550
IDEOLOGIES: HOW THE WORLD SHOULD BE 551
Conservatism: Restoring the Traditional Order 551
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 18.1: A Conservative Theorist Attacks Political Reform 552
Liberalism: Individual Freedom and Political Reform 552
Nationalism: A Common Identity and National Liberation 553
GLOBAL CONNECTIONS: Cross-Cultural Misunderstandings: China and Great Britain 520
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 17.1: Eighteenth-Century England 521
A Revolution in Agriculture 522
NEW MARKETS, MACHINES, AND POWER 522The Rising Demand for Goods 522Cotton Leads the Way 522
THINKING ABOUT SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY: The Electric Motor 523
Iron: New Processes Transform Production 524The Steam Engine and the Factory System 524
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 17.1: Andrew Ure Defends Industrial Capitalism 525
Coal: Fueling the Revolution 525Railroads: Carrying Industrialization Across the
Land 525
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: VISUALS: William Powell Frith, The Railway Station, 1862 527
Britain’s Triumph: The Crystal Palace Exhibition 528
INDUSTRIALIZATION SPREADS TO THE CONTINENT 528
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 17.2: The Industrial Revolution in Europe, 1850 530
BALANCING THE BENEFITS AND BURDENS OF INDUSTRIALIZATION 530
The Middle Class 531The Working Classes 531
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 17.2: Factory Owners Establish Discipline for Workers 532
Developing Working-Class Consciousness 533
LIFE IN THE GROWING CITIES 534The Promise and Pitfalls of Work in the Cities 534Living with Urban Growth 535Worrying About Urban Society: Rising Crime 535
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 17.3: A Middle-Class Reformer Describes Workers’ Housing 536
PUBLIC HEALTH AND MEDICINE IN THE INDUSTRIAL AGE 536
The Danger of Disease 536
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CHAPTER 19
NATIONALISM AND STATEBUILDING: UNIFYING NATIONS, 18501870 577BUILDING UNIFIED NATIONSTATES 578
THE DRIVE FOR ITALIAN UNIFICATION 578
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 19.1: Garibaldi Appeals to Italians for Support 580
GERMANY “BY BLOOD AND IRON” 580
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: VISUALS: Garibaldi Landing in Sicily 581
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 19.1: The Unifi cation of Italy 582
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 19.2: Bismarck Masters Politics in Prussia 583
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 19.2: The Unifi cation of Germany 584
THE FIGHT FOR NATIONAL UNITY IN NORTH AMERICA 585
DIVIDED AUTHORITY IN THE AUSTRIAN AND OTTOMAN EMPIRES 586
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 19.3: Language Groups of Austria-Hungary 587
USING NATIONALISM IN FRANCE AND RUSSIA 587
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 19.4: The Decline of the Ottoman Empire, 1683–1914 588
Napoleon III and the Second Empire 588Alexander II and Russia 589
BIOGRAPHY: Florence Nightingale (1820–1910) 590
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 19.3: A Serf Reacts to the Russian Emancipation Proclamation 593
LOOKING BACK & MOVING FORWARD 593
BIOGRAPHY: John Stuart Mill (1806–1873) and Harriet Taylor (1807–1858) 554
Romanticism: Freedom, Instinct, and Spontaneity 556
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: VISUALS: Karl Friedrich Schinkel, Medieval Town on a River, 1815 558
Early Socialism: Ending Competition and Inequities 559
“Scientifi c Socialism”: Karl Marx and The Communist Manifesto 560
RESTORATION AND REPRESSION 561The Return of the Bourbons in France 561Reaction and Repression in the German
States 562Restoration in Italy 562Conservatism in Russia 563Holding the Line in Great Britain 563
A WAVE OF REVOLUTION AND REFORM 564
The Greek War for Independence 564Liberal Triumphs in Western Europe 565Testing Authority in Eastern and Southern
Europe 566Liberal Demands in Great Britain 566
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 18.2: European Revolts, 1820–1831 567
THE DAM BURSTS, 1848 568The “Glory Days” 568
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 18.2: France’s Provisional Government Issues Decrees 570
The Return to Order 571
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 18.3: European Revolts, 1848–1849 571
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 18.3: German Liberals and Nationalists Rally for Reform 572
What Happened? 573
LOOKING BACK & MOVING FORWARD 574
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THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 20.3: Imperialism in Africa, 1914 615
Establishing Control in Asia 616
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 20.4: The Middle East and Central Asia, 1850–1914 617
GLOBAL CONNECTIONS: Opium and the West in China 619
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 20.5: Imperialism in Asia, 1840–1914 620
The Legacy of Imperialism 622
LOOKING BACK & MOVING FORWARD 623
CHAPTER 21
MODERN LIFE AND THE CULTURE OF PROGRESS: WESTERN SOCIETY, 18501914 625THE SECOND INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION 626
Steel Leads the Way 626New Transportation and
Communication Networks 627The Birth of Big Business 627The Lure of Shopping 628Western and Non-Western Worlds: The Race for
Wealth 628
GLOBAL CONNECTIONS: Economic Transformation in Latin America 629
THE NEW URBAN LANDSCAPE 630Rebuilding Cities 630Sewers and Subways 630
CITY PEOPLE 630On Top of It All: The Urban Elite 631Pride and Success: The “Solid” Middle Class 631
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 21.1: John Stuart Mill Argues for Women’s Rights 632
Hardworking and Hopeful: The Lower Middle Class 632
CHAPTER 20
MASS POLITICS AND IMPERIAL DOMINATION: DEMOCRACY AND THE NEW IMPERIALISM, 18701914 597DEMANDS FOR DEMOCRACY 598
Liberal Democracy in Western Europe 598For and Against Democracy in Central and Eastern
Europe 600
INSIDERS AND OUTSIDERS: POLITICS OF THE EXTREMES 601
The Spread of Unions 602Socialism Gains Strength 602Anarchism: Freedom from All Authority 603Anti-Semitism and Ultranationalism 604
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 20.1: Jewish Migration, 1870–1914 606
Still Outsiders: Women, Feminism, and the Right to Vote 606
EMIGRATION: OVERSEAS AND ACROSS CONTINENTS 607
Leaving Europe 607
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: VISUALS: Eugène Laermans, The Emigrants, 1896 608
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 20.1: Kaiser William II Links Nationalism and Imperialism 609
THE NEW IMPERIALISM: THE RACE FOR AFRICA AND ASIA 609
Money and Glory 609
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 20.2: Economics and Imperialism in Africa 611
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 20.3: Progress and the Struggle of Race with Race 612
The Tools of Conquest 612The Scramble for Africa 613
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 20.2: Imperialism in Africa, ca. 1885 614
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CHAPTER 22
DESCENDING INTO THE TWENTIETH CENTURY: WORLD WAR AND REVOLUTION, 19141920 655ON THE PATH TO TOTAL WAR 656
Rivalries and Alliances 656Crises in the Balkans 657
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 22.1 AND 22.2: The Balkans, 1878 and 1914 658
THE FRONT LINES 659Off to Battle 659
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 22.1: A Russian Socialist Supports the War Eff ort 660
The Schlieff en Plan 660
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 22.3: World War I 661
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 22.4: The Western Front 662
Slaughter and Stalemate on the Western Front 662
THINKING ABOUT SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY: The Invention of the Tank 664
Victory and Defeat on the Eastern and Southern Fronts 664
The War Spreads Across the Globe 665
WAR ON THE HOME FRONT 666Mobilizing Resources 666New Gender Roles 666Maintaining the Eff ort 667
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: VISUALS: Let Us Never Forget 668
TO THE BITTER END 668
ASSESSING THE LOSSES 669
THE PEACE SETTLEMENT 669
BIOGRAPHY: Käthe Kollwitz (1867–1945) 670Gathering at Versailles 670A Victors’ Peace 671Redrawing the Maps of Europe and the Middle East 672
The “Other Half”: The Working Classes 633
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: VISUALS: Léon Frédéric, The Stages of a Worker’s Life, 1895–1897 634
What to Do About “Them” 634
SPORTS AND LEISURE IN THE CITIES 635Building Character Through Athletics 635The New Tourist 635
PRIVATE LIFE: TOGETHER AND ALONE AT HOME 635
Family: The Promise of Happiness 635A Home of One’s Own 636
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 21.2: Beeton’s Guide for Women 637
Poor Housing 637Intimacy and Morality 638Sexual Realities 638Psychic Stress and Alcoholism 639
SCIENCE IN AN AGE OF OPTIMISM 639
THINKING ABOUT SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY: Universities and the Professionalization of Science 640
Science, Evolution, and Religion 640
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 21.3: Walter Bagehot on Natural Selection and Human History 642
Mysteries of the Material and Human World 642Germs, Cures, and Health Care 643
CULTURE: ACCEPTING THE MODERN WORLD 645
Realism and Naturalism: The Details of Social Life 645Impressionism: Celebrating Modern Life 646
FROM OPTIMISM TO UNCERTAINTY 647
BIOGRAPHY: Claude Monet (1840–1926) 648Everything Is Relative 648Sex, Confl ict, and the Unconscious 649Fear of Social Disintegration 649Disenchantment Sets In 649Art Turns Inward 650
LOOKING BACK & MOVING FORWARD 651
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xx CO N T E N T S
The Rise of Fascism in Italy 695
NAZISM IN GERMANY 697The Young Adolf Hitler 697The Birth of Nazism in Germany’s Postwar Years 697The Growth of the Nazi Party 698The Appeal of Nazism 698Hitler Takes Power 698
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 23.2: Goebbels’s Nazi Propaganda Pamphlet 699
Life in Nazi Germany 699Rebuilding and Rearming the New Germany 701
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: VISUALS: Felix Nussbaum, Self-Portrait with Jewish Identity Card, 1943 701
TRANSFORMING THE SOVIET UNION, 19201939 702
Lenin’s Compromise: The NEP 702The Struggle to Succeed Lenin 702Stalin’s Five-Year Plans 703
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 23.3: Stalin Collectivizes Agriculture 704
Blood and Terror: The Great Purges 705
THE GREAT DEPRESSION, 19291939 706Crash! 706In the Teeth of the Depression 706Searching for Solutions 707
LOOKING BACK & MOVING FORWARD 708
CHAPTER 24
INTO THE FIRE AGAIN: WORLD WAR II, 19391945 711THE ROAD TO WAR, 19311939 712
International Aff airs Break Down 712
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 24.1: The Spread of Authoritarian Governments 713
Civil War in Spain 713
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: VISUALS: Pablo Picasso, Guernica, 1937 714
Trying to Cope with Germany 714
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 24.2: The Spanish Civil War, 1936–1939 715
Legacy of the Peace Treaty 672
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 22.2: In the Trenches and Beyond 673
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 22.5: Europe, 1923 674
REVOLUTIONS IN RUSSIA 674
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 22.6: The Middle East, 1923 675
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 22.3: Keynes Warns of the Economic Consequences of the Peace 676
The First Warnings, 1905 676The Fall of the Tsar 677The Provisional Government 678The Rise of the Bolsheviks 679Communism and Civil War 680
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 22.7: Civil War in Russia, 1919 681
LOOKING BACK & MOVING FORWARD 682
CHAPTER 23
DARKENING DECADES: RECOVERY, DICTATORS, AND DEPRESSION, 19201939 685TRYING TO RECOVER FROM THE GREAT WAR, 19191929 686
The Victors Just Hold On 686Continuing Crises in Germany 687Conciliation and a Glimpse of Prosperity 688
THINKING ABOUT SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY: Penicillin and Antibiotics 689
The Roaring Twenties? 689
THINKING ABOUT DOCUMENT 23.1: Postwar Strains in Germany 690
The Anxious Twenties 692
TURNING AWAY FROM DEMOCRACY: DICTATORSHIPS AND FASCISM, 19191929 693
Authoritarianism in East-Central Europe 693
BIOGRAPHY: Virginia Woolf (1882–1941) 694
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CO N T E N T S xxi
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 25.1: Europe After World War II 739
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 25.2: Europe During the Cold War 741
The Global Impact of the Cold War 741
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 25.1: The Cold War and Nuclear Weapons 742
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 25.3: Cold War Alliances and Confl icts 744
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 25.4: Vietnam and Southeast Asia 745
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: VISUALS: Wolf Vostell, Miss America, 1968 746
Détente 747
EAST AND WEST: TWO PATHS TO RECOVERY IN EUROPE 747
Tight Control in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe 747
Parliamentary Politics and Prosperity in the Western Democracies 749
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 25.2: A Warning About the United States 751
Assessing the Paths Taken 751
THE TWILIGHT OF COLONIALISM 752Revolts in Southern Asia 753Confl ict in the Middle East 753
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 25.5: The Arab-Israeli Confl ict, 1947–1982 754
Liberating Africa 755
GLOBAL CONNECTIONS: Apartheid in South Africa 756
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 25.6: Decolonization 757
A SENSE OF RELATIVITY IN THOUGHT AND CULTURE 758
Existentialism: Responsibility and Despair 758A Culture of Contrasts and Criticism 758
PROTESTS, PROBLEMS, AND NEW POLITICS: THE 1960s TO THE 1980s 760
A Flurry of Social Protests and Movements 760
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 25.3: An Oxford Student Explains Revolutionary Attitudes 761
Stagnant Growth and Rising Infl ation 762
BIOGRAPHY: Simone de Beauvoir (1908–1986) 763
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 24.3: German Expansion, 1936–1939 716
AXIS VICTORIES, 19391942 717Triumph of the German Blitzkrieg 717War in North Africa and the Balkans 718Operation Barbarossa: Germany Invades the Soviet
Union 718Japan Attacks 719
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 24.4: World War II in Europe 720
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 24.5: World War II in the Pacifi c 721
BEHIND THE LINES: THE STRUGGLE AND THE HORROR 721
GLOBAL CONNECTIONS: The Rise of Japanese Ultranationalism 722
The Holocaust 722
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 24.1: The Nazi Death Camps 724
Collaboration and Resistance 725Mobilizing the Home Fronts 725
TURNING THE TIDE OF WAR, 19421945 725The Eastern Front and the Battle of
Stalingrad 725
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 24.2: Women Go to Work in the Factories 726
The Southern Fronts 727The Western Front 727The War in the Pacifi c 728
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 24.3: “We Shall Plunge into Enemy Ships” 730
PEACE AND THE LEGACY OF WAR 730The Settlement 731The Legacy of War 731
LOOKING BACK & MOVING FORWARD 732
THE WORLD & THE WEST: Forming the Present 734
CHAPTER 25
SUPERPOWER STRUGGLES AND GLOBAL TRANSFORMATIONS: THE COLD WAR, 19451980s 737ORIGINS OF THE COLD WAR 738
The Heart of the Cold War 738
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xxii CO N T E N T S
REPERCUSSIONS AND REALIGNMENTS IN THE WEST 785
The United States Unchallenged and Germany Rising 785
Politics Shift to the Right 785Toward European Integration 786
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 26.5: The European Union, 2012 787
THE WORLD AND THE WEST FROM A GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE 787
East Asia and the Rise of the Pacifi c Rim 788The Challenge of Islam 788International Terrorism and War 789
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 26.6: Israel and the Occupied Territories, 2010 790
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 26.7: The Middle East and Iraq, 2003 791
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 26.2: War in Afghanistan 793
Upheavals in North Africa and the Middle East 793
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 26.8: Afghanistan, Kashmir, and South-Central Asia, 2002 794
Across Borders: Cultural Confl ict and Convergence 794
Beyond Borders: Uncertainty and Opportunity in a Shrinking World 796
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 26.9: The Growth of Cities 798
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 26.10: Global Environmental Problems 799
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: VISUALS: Charles Michael Helmken, Loveaidspeople, 1989 800
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 26.3: The Copenhagen Accord on Climate Change 801
THINKING ABOUT SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY: CERN 802
LOOKING BACK & MOVING FORWARD 803
The New Political Landscape 764
POSTINDUSTRIAL SOCIETY 765Changing Fortunes in the Postindustrial Society 765The Baby Boom and the Booming Cities 766The Shifting Foundations of Family and Private
Life 766The “Sexual Revolution” and the Youth Culture 767
BREAKTHROUGHS IN SCIENCE 767From the Universe Above to the Universe Within 768The Information Revolution 768Transforming Medicine 768
LOOKING BACK & MOVING FORWARD 769
CHAPTER 26
INTO THE TWENTYFIRST CENTURY: THE PRESENT IN PERSPECTIVE 773THE COLLAPSE OF COMMUNISM 774
Undermining Communism in the Soviet Union 774
Gorbachev Launches Reforms 775Revolutions in Eastern Europe 776
BIOGRAPHY: Václav Havel (1936–2011) 778The Soviet Union Disintegrates 778
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 26.1: Eastern Europe, 1989 780
Life After the Collapse of Communism 780
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENT 26.1: The End of the Cold War 781
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 26.2: The Dissolution of the Soviet Union, 1991 782
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY 26.3 AND 26.4: Disintegration of Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia, 1991–2007 783
Nationalism Unleashed 783
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xxiii
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: DOCUMENTS P.1 Conspirators Assassinate Julius Caesar P-14
P.2 Charlemagne Promotes Educational Reforms P-21
9.1 Agnolo the Fat Survives the Plague 268
9.2 Joan of Arc Is Defi ant 277
9.3 A Franciscan Missionary Goes to China 283
10.1 Isabella d’Este Implores Leonardo da Vinci to Paint for Her 297
10.2 Friar Savonarola Ignites a “Bonfi re of the Vanities” 301
10.3 A Courtier Describes a Suspicious King—Louis the Spider 318
11.1 Germans Rage Against Papal Exploitation 331
11.2 Marie Dentière Defends Reformation Women’s Rights 336
11.3 Ignatius Loyola Argues for Education as a Solution 343
12.1 Amerigo Vespucci Describes the New World 366
12.2 Thomas Mun Praises Trade 380
13.1 Bishop Bossuet Justifi es Monarchical Absolutism 395
13.2 Louis XIV Describes Monarchical Rights and Duties 398
13.3 An Ambassador Describes the Dutch Government 420
14.1 Kepler and Galileo Exchange Letters About Science 430
14.2 Isaac Newton: God in a Scientifi c Universe 431
14.3 Concorcet Lauds the Power of Reason 440
15.1 Landlords and Serfs in Russia 455
15.2 Austria’s Empress Explains the Diplomatic Revolution 459
15.3 Olaudah Equiano Describes the Middle Passage 465
16.1 New Laws End the Feudal System in France 493
16.2 The Jacobins’ Revolutionary Politics 498
16.3 Napoleon Issues an Imperial Decree at Madrid 511
17.1 Andrew Ure Defends Industrial Capitalism 525
17.2 Factory Owners Establish Discipline for Workers 532
17.3 A Middle-Class Reformer Describes Workers’ Housing 536
18.1 A Conservative Theorist Attacks Political Reform 552
18.2 France’s Provisional Government Issues Decrees 570
18.3 German Liberals and Nationalists Rally for Reform 572
19.1 Garibaldi Appeals to Italians for Support 580
19.2 Bismarck Masters Politics in Prussia 583
19.3 A Serf Reacts to the Russian Emancipation Proclamation 593
20.1 Kaiser Wilhelm II Links Nationalism and Imperialism 609
20.2 Economics and Imperialism in Africa 611
20.3 Progress and the Struggle of Race with Race 612
21.1 John Stuart Mill Argues for Women’s Rights 632
21.2 Beeton’s Guide for Women 637
21.3 Walter Bagehot on Natural Selection and Human History 642
22.1 A Russian Socialist Supports the War Eff ort 660
22.2 In the Trenches and Beyond 673
22.3 Keynes Warns of the Economic Consequences of the Peace 676
23.1 Postwar Strains in Germany 690
23.2 Goebbels’s Nazi Propaganda Pamphlet 699
23.3 Stalin Collectivizes Agriculture 704
24.1 The Nazi Death Camps 724
24.2 Women Go to Work in the Factories 726
24.3 “We Shall Plunge into Enemy Ships” 730
25.1 The Cold War and Nuclear Weapons 742
25.2 A Warning About the United States 751
25.3 An Oxford Student Explains Revolutionary Attitudes 761
26.1 The End of the Cold War 781
26.2 War in Afghanistan 793
26.3 The Copenhagen Accord on Climate Change 801
THINKING ABOUT SOURCES: VISUALS Illumination from a Book of Hours, Fifteenth
Century 280
Raphael, School of Athens, 1510–1511 313
Festival Scene Painted on a Screen, Mexico, ca. 1650 386
Louis le Nain, The Cart, 1641 393
Léonard Defrance, At the Shield of Minerva, 1781 447
Jean-Baptiste Greuze, The Father’s Curse, ca. 1778 478
Francisco de Goya, The Executions of the Third of May, 1808 513
William Powell Frith, The Railway Station, 1862 527
Karl Friedrich Schinkel, Medieval Town on a River, 1815 558
Garibaldi Landing in Sicily 581
Eugène Laermans, The Emigrants, 1896 608
Léon Frédéric, The Stages of a Worker’s Life, 1895–1897 634
Let Us Never Forget 668
Felix Nussbaum, Self-Portrait with Jewish Identity Card, 1943 701
Pablo Picasso, Guernica, 1937 714
Wolf Vostell, Miss America, 1968 746
Charles Michael Helmken, Loveaidspeople, 1989 800
LIST
OF
PRIM
ARY
SO
URC
E S
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LIST
OF
MA
PS
17.1 Eighteenth-Century England 521 17.2 The Industrial Revolution in Europe, 1850 530 17.3 The Spread of a Cholera Epidemic 538 18.1 Europe, 1815 550 18.2 European Revolts, 1820–1831 567 18.3 European Revolts, 1848–1849 571 19.1 The Unifi cation of Italy 582 19.2 The Unifi cation of Germany 584 19.3 Language Groups of Austria-Hungary 587 19.4 The Decline of the Ottoman
Empire, 1683–1914 588 20.1 Jewish Migration, 1870–1914 606 20.2 Imperialism in Africa, ca. 1885 614 20.3 Imperialism in Africa, 1914 615 20.4 The Middle East and Central Asia,
1850–1914 617 20.5 Imperialism in Asia, 1840–1914 620 22.1 and 22.2 The Balkans, 1878 and 1914 658 22.3 World War I 661 22.4 The Western Front 662 22.5 Europe, 1923 674 22.6 The Middle East, 1923 675 22.7 Civil War in Russia, 1919 681 24.1 The Spread of Authoritarian Governments 713 24.2 The Spanish Civil War, 1936–1939 715 24.3 German Expansion, 1936–1939 716 24.4 World War II in Europe 720 24.5 World War II in the Pacifi c 721 25.1 Europe After World War II 739 25.2 Europe During the Cold War 741 25.3 Cold War Alliances and Confl icts 744 25.4 Vietnam and Southeast Asia 745 25.5 The Arab-Israeli Confl ict, 1947–1982 754 25.6 Decolonization 757 26.1 Eastern Europe, 1989 780 26.2 The Dissolution of the Soviet Union, 1991 782 26.3 and 26.4 Disintegration of Czechoslovakia
and Yugoslavia, 1991–2007 783 26.5 The European Union, 2012 787 26.6 Israel and the Occupied Territories, 2010 790 26.7 The Middle East and Iraq, 2003 791 26.8 Afghanistan, Kashmir, and South-
Central Asia, 2002 794 26.9 The Growth of Cities 798 26.10 Global Environmental Problems 799
P.1 Mesopotamia and Egypt, ca. 2000 B.C.E. P-5 P.2 The Persian Empire, ca. 500 B.C.E. P-7 P.3 The World of the Greeks P-8 P.4 The Successor States After the Death
of Alexander, ca. 240 B.C.E. P-11 P.5 Italy, 265 B.C.E. P-13 P.6 The Expansion of Islam to 750 P-19 P.7 Medieval France, England, and Germany,
Tenth Through Fourteenth Centuries P-23 9.1 The Spread of the Black Death 267 9.2 The Great Schism, 1378–1417 272 9.3 The Hundred Years’ War, 1337–1453 275 9.4 The Mongol Empire, ca. 1300 282 9.5 The Ottoman Empire, 1300–1566 285 9.6 The Rise of Moscow, 1325–1533 286 10.1 Italy in 1454 299 10.2 The Venetian Empire in the Fifteenth
Century 302 10.3 France in the Fifteenth and
Sixteenth Centuries 317 11.1 Europe in 1526—Habsburg-Valois Wars 325 11.2 Religions in Europe, ca. 1600 341 11.3 The Thirty Years’ War, 1618–1648 350 11.4 Europe, 1648 352 12.1 Exploration and Conquest, Fifteenth
and Sixteenth Centuries 364 12.2 European Expansion, ca. 1700 368 12.3 Indigenous Peoples and Empires in
the Americas, ca. 1500 370 13.1 France Under Louis XIV, 1661–1715 402 13.2 Central and Eastern Europe, 1648 404 13.3 Central and Eastern Europe, 1640–1725 405 13.4 The English Civil War, 1642–1649 412 13.5 The United Provinces and the Spanish
Netherlands, 1609 419 15.1 Europe, 1721 453 15.2 The Expansion of Russia and the Partition
of Poland, 1721–1795 456 15.3 Prussia and the Austrian Empire, 1721–1772 458 15.4 Overseas Colonies and Trade, 1740 461 15.5 India, 1756–1805 468 15.6 and 15.7 North America, 1755 and 1763 469 16.1 and 16.2 Reorganizing France in 1789 495 16.3 France and Its Sister Republics 506 16.4 Europe, 1810 510 16.5 Latin America After Independence 512
THINKING ABOUT GEOGRAPHY
xxiv
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OTH
ER F
EATU
RES John Stuart Mill and Harriet Taylor 554
Florence Nightingale 590
Claude Monet 648
Käthe Kollwitz 670
Virginia Woolf 694
Simone de Beauvoir 763
Václav Havel 778
GLOBAL CONNECTIONS The Inca Empire Falls 373
The Rise and Fall of the Mughal Empire in India 408
Western Africa, Brazil, and the Atlantic Slave Trade 467
Cross-Cultural Misunderstandings: China and Great Britain 520
Opium and the West in China 619
Economic Transformation in Latin America 629
The Rise of Japanese Ultranationalism 722
Apartheid in South Africa 756
THE WORLD & THE WEST Moving into the Modern World 484
Forming the Present 734
THINKING ABOUT SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY An Information Revolution: The Printing Press 298
Destruction and Amusement: The Development and Uses of Gunpowder 326
The Golden Age of Canals 473
The Electric Motor 523
Universities and the Professionalization of Science 640
The Invention of the Tank 664
Penicillin and Antibiotics 689
CERN 802
BIOGRAPHIES Vlad III Dracula (the Impaler), King of Wallachia 287
Isabella d’Este 296
Martin Guerre 328
Maria Sibylla Merian 383
Samuel Pepys 418
Jean-Jacques Rousseau 444
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart 479
Manon Roland 500
The Cadburys 542
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