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Ways of the World: A Brief Global History, Volume I
Third Edition| ©2016 Robert W. Strayer; Eric Nelson
A truly global narrative that helps students see the big picture
Ways of the World is one of the most successful and innovative textbooks for world history. The brief-by-design narrative that is truly global and focuses on significant historical trends, themes, and developments in world history. Authors Robert W. Strayer, a pioneer in the world history movement with years of classroom experience, along with new co-author Eric W. Nelson, a popular and skilled teacher, provide a thoughtful and insightful synthesis that helps students see the big picture while teaching students to consider the evidence the way historians do.
The third edition rolls out with Bedford/St. Martin's digital tools, including LearningCurve, an adaptive quizzing engine that garners over a 90% student satisfaction rate, and LaunchPad, the interactive e-book and course space that puts high quality easy-to-use assessment at your fingertips. Easy to integrate into your campus LMS, LaunchPad cements student understanding of the text while helping them make progress toward learning outcomes. It's the best content joined up with the best technology. Ways of the World is available in a number of affordable print and digital editions, including an edition with sources.Features
The thematic, comparative, and truly global narrative focuses on the big picture. Brief by design, the narrative avoids the overwhelming detail of many textbooks and emphasizes major developments. Broad themes include global commerce and trade, the emergence of global religions, industrialization, and the rise and fall of totalitarian systems. Part-opening essays set the stage for the chapters that follow and encourage students to make connections among the world's cultures.
The “docutext” format is more than two books in one. The docutext is a textbook and source book combined that teaches historical thinking and analysis through the use of related written and visual primary evidence. Located at the end of the chapter, each collection is organized around a particular theme, issue, or question, such as "State Building in the Early Modern Era"; “Perceptions of Outsiders in the Ancient World”; and "Faces of Globalization."
Each chapter employs a variety of learning tools to help students understand the big picture.
• Seeking the Main Point questions and chapter chronologies A Map of Time help students focus on the main theme of the chapter.
• Summing up So Far questions invite students to reflect on what they have learned to that point in the chapter.
• Margin review questions emphasize "comparison," "connection," and "change."
• At the end of each chapter, a short Reflections section raises provocative, sometimes quasi-philosophical, questions about the craft of the historian and the unfolding of the human story.
• Narrative-ending Big Picture questions encourage student synthesis of the material.
• Introductory headnotes and comparative questions in the Working with Evidence sections help students understand how the written documents and visual sources relate to each another and to the chapter narrative.
A thoughtful and reflective approach to history. Robert W. Strayer, a pioneer in the field of world history, and Eric W. Nelson, an innovative teacher, muse on the multiple meanings of history and the historian's craft. Students experience first-hand the process of reading historical evidence and making historical arguments.
LaunchPad helps you do more than you can with print alone. Free when packaged with the book, LaunchPad's course space and interactive e-book is ready to use as is, or can be edited and customized with your own material, and assigned right away. Developed with extensive feedback from history instructors and students, LaunchPad includes the complete narrative e-book, as well as abundant primary documents, maps, images, assignments and activities. The aims of key learning outcomes are addressed via formative and summative assessment, short answer and essay questions, multiple choice quizzing, and LearningCurve, an adaptive learning tool designed to get students to read before they come to class. Available with training and support, LaunchPad can help you take your teaching into a new era.
LearningCurve ensures students come to class prepared. Tired of your students not reading the textbook? Would you like to know what they read and how much they understood—BEFORE they come to class? Assign LearningCurve, the adaptive learning tool created for your survey textbook in LaunchPad, and the system’s analytics will show how your students are doing with the reading so that you can adapt your class as needed. Each chapter-based LearningCurve activity gives students multiple chances to understand key concepts, return to the narrative textbook if they need to reread, and answer questions correctly. Over 90% of students report satisfaction with LearningCurve's fun and accessible game-like interface. LearningCurve appeals to students so that they engage with the textbook, and it helps you to know what they know before class begins.
A range of options offers convenience and value. In addition to the standard bound textbook, this edition is also available in convenient, discount-priced loose-leaf and PDF formats and in an interactive e-book format in the text’s dedicated version of LaunchPad, with all accompanying study resources fully integrated. LaunchPad is a complete course’s worth of material in a course space that makes everything assignable and assessable—and all for free when packaged with the textbook. The textbook is also available in an edition with sources, Ways of the World: A Brief Global History.
New to This Edition
New co-author Eric Nelson brings an enhanced focus on teaching in today’s classroom. Eric Nelson, a popular and skilled teacher who has become a national leader in online course design and pedagogy, joins Bob Strayer as co-author of Ways of the World.
More on the environment and Pacific Oceania gives students expanded coverage of important topics. The third edition includes enhanced treatment of environmental issues in world history, including a more thorough account of environmentalism and climate change during the past century. Expanded coverage of Pacific Oceana throughout – including new in-depth coverage in Chapter 6 – rightfully positions this distinctive cultural region alongside the other regions of the world, while underscoring the truly global approach of this book.
"Zooming In" features link specific people, places, and events to big themes in world history. Two "Zooming In" features in every chapter call attention to particular people, places, and events, situating them in a larger global context. Incorporating many of the biographical "portraits" from the last edition, topics include the Buddhist "university" of Nalanda, the Ottoman devshirme, the civil war in Mozambique, and many more.
New source collection topics bring a fresh perspective and build skills in working with evidence. Retitled "Working with Evidence," the primary source-based collections at the end of each chapter offer many new and unique textual and visual sources that allow students to consider evidence like a historian. New sources and topics include a feature in Chapter 3 that probes outsiders’ accounts of Persia and Egypt, the Germanic peoples of Central Europe, and the Xiongnu living to the north of China; "Voices of European Socialism" in Chapter 17; and conflicting views of Islam and women’s dress in Chapter 22, among many others.
Assignable online document projects in LaunchPad allow students to put interpretation into practice. New "Thinking through Sources" activities in LaunchPad extend and amplify the "Working with Evidence" source projects from the book. Surrounded by a distinctive and sophisticated pedagogy of auto-graded exercises, these interactive activities guide students in assessing their understanding of the sources, in organizing those sources for use in an essay, and in drawing useful conclusions from them. Designed to build arguments and to practice historical reasoning, this unique pedagogy does for skill development what LearningCurve does for content mastery and reading comprehension.
Learn more about the "Thinking through Sources" activities in LaunchPad
"Another Voice" features with Eric Nelson in LaunchPad enhance the treatment of particular issues. Topics include the imperial styles of empires in the second wave era (Chapter 3); the Mongol legacy (Chapter 11); the relationship between technology and trade with Europe’s oceangoing ships (Chapter 14) and the future of industrial development (Chapter 22). Sometimes gently arguing with the narrative text, the features demonstrate that history is a dynamic and constantly evolving discipline.
"Ways of the World has been an amazing resource for me as I teach the world history course for the first time."
--Julia Gaffield, Georgia State University"Ways of the World is an excellent, engaging textbook for the world history course. In addition, the book incorporates the history of women as extensively and seamlessly as any general textbook I have seen."
--Gregory T Cushman, University of Kansas"Ways of the World provides a readable and engaging historical narrative. And in LaunchPad, students benefit from LearningCurve, which directs them to specific page numbers if they get stuck, and from map quizzes that connect historical geography to the narrative. These functions save me time because they are auto-graded."
--Kathryn Johnson, Northern Michigan University"The authors set the stage for students to study broad historical topics and, through questions in the margins, guide students to read and think critically about the past."
--Rebecca Seaman, Elizabeth City State University
Ways of the World: A Brief Global History, Volume I
Third Edition| ©2016
Robert W. Strayer; Eric Nelson
Digital Options
Ways of the World: A Brief Global History, Volume I
Third Edition| 2016
Robert W. Strayer; Eric Nelson
Table of Contents
Please note: The Combined Volume includes all chapters.
Volume 1 includes Chapters 1-12. Volume 2 includes Chapters 12-23.__NOTE: LaunchPad material that does not appear in the print book – including guided reading exercises, author features, LearningCurve adaptive quizzes, summative quizzes, and the Working with Evidence and Thinking through Sources primary source activities– has been indicated on this table of contents as shown. Each chapter in LaunchPad also comes with a wealth of additional documents, videos, key terms flashcards, map quizzes, timeline activities, and much more, all of which can be easily integrated and assigned.__PrefaceVersions and SupplementsBrief ContentsContentsMapsFeaturesWorking with EvidenceProloguePART ONE First Things First: Beginnings in History, to 500 b.c.e.The Big Picture Turning Points in Early World HistoryThe Emergence of HumankindThe Globalization of HumankindThe Revolution of Farming and HerdingThe Turning Point of CivilizationTime and World HistoryMapping Part One 1. First Peoples; First Farmers: Most of History in a Single Chapter, to 4000 b.c.e.Author Preview Video LaunchPadGuided Reading Exercise LaunchPadOut of Africa: First Migrations Into EurasiaInto AustraliaInto the AmericasInto the PacificThe Ways We WereThe First Human SocietiesEconomy and the EnvironmentThe Realm of the SpiritSettling Down: The Great TransitionBreakthroughs to AgricultureCommon PatternsVariationsThe Globalization of AgricultureTriumph and ResistanceThe Culture of AgricultureSocial Variation in the Age of AgriculturePastoral SocietiesAgricultural Village SocietiesChiefdomsAnother Voice Feature LaunchPadReflections: The Uses of the PaleolithicSecond ThoughtsWhat’s the Significance?Big Picture QuestionsNext Steps: For Further StudyZooming In: Göbekli Tepe: Monumental Construction before Agriculture
Zooming In: Ishi, the Last of His PeopleChapter Review [[√]] LearningCurve LaunchPadSummative Quiz LaunchPad1. WORKING WITH EVIDENCE LaunchPadStories of the Australian DreamtimeDocuments1.1 Understanding Creation: Yhi Brings Life to the World1.2 Understanding the Signifance of Animals: The Platypus1.3 Understanding Men and Women: The Man-Eater: The Mutjinga Myth1.4 Understanding Death: How Death Came: The Purukapali Myth1. THINKING THROUGH SOURCES LaunchPad History Before Writing: How Do We Know?Source 1.1: A Gatherer Hunter Woman in the Twentieth CenturySource 1.2: Lascaux Rock ArtSource 1.3: Female Figurine from ÇatalhüyükSource 1.4: Otzi the Ice ManSource 1.5: Stonehenge2. First Civilizations; Cities, States, and Unequal Societies, 3500 b.c.e.–500 b.c.e.Author Preview Video LaunchPadGuided Reading Exercise LaunchPadSomething New: The Emergence of CivilizationsIntroducing the First CivilizationsThe Question of OriginsAn Urban RevolutionThe Erosion of EqualityHierarchies of ClassHierarchies of GenderPatriarchy in PracticeThe Rise of the StateCoercion and ConsentWriting and AccountingThe Grandeur of KingsComparing Mesopotamia and EgyptEnvironment and CultureCities and StatesInteraction and ExchangeAnother Voice Feature LaunchPadReflections: "Civilization": What’s in a Word?Second ThoughtsWhat’s the Significance?Big Picture QuestionsNext Steps: For Further Study
Zooming In: Caral, a City of Norte Chico
Zooming In: Paneb, an Egyptian TroublemakerChapter Review [[√]] LearningCurve LaunchPadSummative Quiz LaunchPad2. WORKING WITH EVIDENCE LaunchPadIndus Valley CivilizationVisual Sources2.1 A Seal from the Indus Valley 2.2 Man from Mohenjo Daro 2.3 Dancing Girl 2. THINKING THROUGH SOURCES LaunchPad Social Life in the First CivilizationsSource 2.1: Law and Life in Ancient MesopotamiaSource 2.2: The Standard of UrSource 2.3: The Occupations of Old EgyptSource 2.4: The Social Relationships of Egyptian AgricultureSource 2.5: Social Life in Ancient ChinaSource 2.6: Socializing with AncestorsPART TWO Second-Wave Civilizations in World History, 500 b.c.e.–500 c.e.The Big Picture After the First Civilizations: What Changed and What Didn’t?Continuities in CivilizationChanges in CivilizationMapping Part Two3. State and Empire in Eurasia / North Africa, 500 b.c.e.–500 c.e.Author Preview Video LaunchPadGuided Reading Exercise LaunchPadEmpires and Civilizations in Collision: The Persians and the GreeksThe Persian EmpireThe GreeksCollision: The Greco-Persian WarsCollision: Alexander and the Hellenistic EraComparing Empires: Roman and ChineseRome: From City-State to EmpireChina: From Warring States to EmpireConsolidating the Roman and Chinese EmpiresThe Collapse of EmpiresAnother Voice Feature LaunchPadIntermittent Empire: The Case of IndiaReflections: Enduring Legacies of Second-Wave EmpiresSecond ThoughtsWhat’s the Significance?Big Picture QuestionsNext Steps: For Further Study
Zooming In: Trung Trac: Resisting the Chinese Empire
Zooming In: The Kushan EmpireChapter Review [[√]] LearningCurve LaunchPadSummative Quiz LaunchPad3. WORKING WITH EVIDENCE LaunchPadPerceptions of Outsiders in the Ancient WorldDocuments3.1 A Greek Historian on Persia and Egypt: Herodotus, The Histories, Mid-Fifth Century b.c.e.3.2 A Roman Historian on the Germans: Tacitus, Germania, First Century c.e. 3.3 A Chinese Historian on the Xiongnu: Sima Qian, Records of the Grand Historian, ca. 100 b.c.e.3. THINKING THROUGH SOURCES LaunchPad Political Authority in Second-Wave CivilizationsSource 3.1: Behistun Inscription c. 500 BCE Source 3.2: In Praise of Athenian Democracy SourceSource 3.3: Statue of AugustusSource 3.4: Governing a Chinese EmpireSource 3.5: Qin Shihuangdi Funerary ComplexSource 3.6: Governing an Indian Empire4. Culture and Religion in Eurasia / North Africa, 500 b.c.e.–500 c.e. Author Preview Video LaunchPadGuided Reading Exercise LaunchPadChina and the Search for OrderThe Legalist AnswerThe Confucian AnswerThe Daoist AnswerCultural Traditions of Classical IndiaSouth Asian Religion: From Ritual Sacrifice to Philosophical SpeculationThe Buddhist ChallengeHinduism as a Religion of Duty and DevotionToward Monotheism: The Search for God in the Middle EastZoroastrianismJudaismThe Cultural Tradition of Classical Greece: The Search for a Rational OrderThe Greek Way of KnowingThe Greek LegacyThe Birth of Christianity . . . with Buddhist ComparisonsThe Lives of the FoundersThe Spread of New ReligionsInstitutions, Controversies, and DivisionsAnother Voice Feature LaunchPadReflections: Religion and HistoriansSecond ThoughtsWhat’s the Significance?Big Picture QuestionsNext Steps: For Further Study
Zooming In: Nalanda, India’s Buddhist University
Zooming In: Perpetua, Christian MartyrChapter Review [[√]] LearningCurve LaunchPadSummative Quiz LaunchPad4. WORKING WITH EVIDENCE LaunchPadRepresentations of the BuddhaVisual Sources4.1 Footprints of the Buddha4.2 A Gandhara Buddha4.3 A Bodhisattva of Compassion: Avalokitesvara with a Thousand Arms 4.4 The Chinese Maitreya Buddha4. THINKING THROUGH SOURCES LaunchPad The "Good Life" in Asian Cultural TraditionsSource 4.1: Reflections from ConfuciusSource 4.2: Filial Piety IllustratedSource 4.3: A Daoist Perspective on the Good LifeSource 4.4: Reflections from the Hindu ScripturesSource 4.5: Reflections from JesusSource 4.6: Toward "Mature Manhood"5. Society and Inequality in Eurasia / North Africa, 500 b.c.e.–500 c.e.Author Preview Video LaunchPadGuided Reading Exercise LaunchPadSociety and the State in ChinaAn Elite of OfficialsThe Landlord ClassPeasantsMerchantsClass and Caste in IndiaCaste as VarnaCaste as JatiThe Functions of CasteSlavery: The Case of the Roman EmpireSlavery and CivilizationThe Making of Roman SlaveryAnother Voice Feature LaunchPadComparing PatriarchiesA Changing Patriarchy: The Case of ChinaContrasting Patriarchies: Athens and SpartaReflections: What Changes? What Persists?Second ThoughtsWhat’s the Significance?Big Picture QuestionsNext Steps: For Further Study
Zooming In: Ge Hong, a Chinese Scholar in Troubled Times
Zooming In: The Spartacus Slave RevoltChapter Review [[√]] LearningCurve LaunchPadSummative Quiz LaunchPad5. WORKING WITH EVIDENCE LaunchPadPompeii as a Window on the Roman WorldVisual Sources5.1 Terentius Neo and His Wife5.2 A Pompeii Banquet5.3 Scenes in a Pompeii Tavern5.4 A Domestic Shrine5.5 Mystery Religions: The Cult of Dionysus5. THINKING THROUGH SOURCES LaunchPad Patriarchy and Women’s VoicesSource 5.1: A Greek Expression of PatriarchySource 5.2: An Indian Expression of PatriarchySource 5.3: A Chinese Woman’s Instructions to Her DaughtersSource 5.4: An Alternative to Patriarchy in IndiaSource 5.5: Roman Women in Protest6. Commonalities and Variations: Africa, the Americas, and Pacific Oceania 500 b.c.e.–1200 c.e.Author Preview Video LaunchPadGuided Reading Exercise LaunchPadContinental ComparisonsCivilizations of AfricaMeroë: Continuing a Nile Valley CivilizationAxum: The Making of a Christian KingdomAlong the Niger River: Cities without StatesAnother Voice Feature LaunchPadCivilizations of MesoamericaThe Maya: Writing and WarfareTeotihuacán: The Americas’ Greatest CityCivilizations of the AndesChavín: A Pan-Andean Religious MovementMoche: A Civilization of the CoastWari and Tiwanaku: Empires of the InteriorAlternatives to CivilizationBantu Africa: Cultural Encounters and Social VariationNorth America: Ancestral Pueblo and the Mound BuildersPacific Oceania: Peoples of the SeaReflections: Deciding What’s Important: Balance in World HistorySecond ThoughtsWhat’s the Significance?Big Picture QuestionsNext Steps: For Further StudyZooming In: Piye, Kushite Conqueror of EgyptZooming In: The Lord of Sipan and the Lady of CaoChapter Review [[√]] LearningCurve LaunchPadSummative Quiz LaunchPad6. WORKING WITH EVIDENCE LaunchPadAxum and the WorldDocuments6.1 A Guidebook to the World of Indian Ocean Commerce: The Periplus of the Erythraean Sea, First Century c.e.6.2 The Making of an Axumite Empire: Inscription on a Stone Throne, Second or Third Century c.e.6.3 The Coming of Christianity to Axum: Rufinus, On the Evangelization of AbyssiniaLate Fourth Century c.e.6.4 Axum and the Gold Trade: Cosmas, The Christian Topography, Sixth Century c.e.6. THINKING THROUGH SOURCES LaunchPad Art and the Maya EliteSource 6.1: Shield Jaguar and Lady Xok, A Royal Couple of YaxchilanSource 6.2: The Presentation of CaptivesSource 6.3: A Bloodletting RitualSource 6.4: The Ball GameSource 6.5: A Maya Ruler RelaxingPart Three An Age of Accelerating Connections, 500–1500The Big Picture Defining a MillenniumThird-Wave Civilizations: Something New, Something Old, Something BlendedThe Ties That Bind: Transregional Interaction in the Third-Wave EraMapping Part Three7. Commerce and Culture, 500–1500 Author Preview Video LaunchPadGuided Reading Exercise LaunchPadSilk Roads: Exchange across EurasiaThe Growth of the Silk RoadsGoods in TransitCultures in TransitDisease in TransitAnother Voice Feature LaunchPadSea Roads: Exchange across the Indian OceanWeaving the Web of an Indian Ocean WorldSea Roads as a Catalyst for Change: Southeast AsiaSea Roads as a Catalyst for Change: East AfricaSand Roads: Exchange across the SaharaCommercial Beginnings in West AfricaGold, Salt, and Slaves: Trade and Empire in West AfricaAn American Network: Commerce and Connection in the Western HemisphereReflections: Economic Globalization — Ancient and ModernSecond ThoughtsWhat’s the Significance?Big Picture QuestionsNext Steps: For Further Study
Zooming In: The Arabian Camel
Zooming In: Thorfinn Karlsefni, Viking Voyager Chapter Review [[√]] LearningCurve LaunchPadSummative Quiz LaunchPad7. WORKING WITH EVIDENCE LaunchPadTravelers’ Tales and ObservationsDocuments7.1 A Chinese Buddhist in India, A Biography of the Tripitaka Master, Seventh Century c.e.7.2 A European Christian in China: Marco Polo, The Travels of Marco Polo, 12997.3 A Moroccan Diplomat in West Africa: Leo Africanus, The History and Description of Africa, 15267. THINKING THROUGH SOURCES LaunchPadLife and Travel on the Silk RoadsSource 7.1: Dangers and Assistance on the Silk RoadsSource 7.2: Advice for MerchantsSource 7.3: Stopping at a CaravanseraiSource 7.4: Buddhism on the Silk RoadsSource 7.5: Christianity on the Silk RoadsSource 7.6: Letters from the Silk Road8. China and the World: East Asian Connections, 500–1300Author Preview Video LaunchPadGuided Reading Exercise LaunchPadTogether Again: The Reemergence of a Unified ChinaA "Golden Age" of Chinese AchievementWomen in the Song DynastyChina and the Northern Nomads: A Chinese World Order in the MakingThe Tribute System in TheoryThe Tribute System in PracticeCultural Influence across an Ecological FrontierCoping with China: Comparing Korea, Vietnam, and JapanKorea and ChinaVietnam and ChinaJapan and ChinaAnother Voice Feature LaunchPadChina and the Eurasian World EconomySpillovers: China’s Impact on EurasiaOn the Receiving End: China as Economic BeneficiaryChina and BuddhismMaking Buddhism ChineseLosing State Support: The Crisis of Chinese BuddhismReflections: Why Do Things Change?Second ThoughtsWhat’s the Significance?Big Picture QuestionsNext Steps: For Further Study
Zooming In: Gunpowder
Zooming In: Izumi Shikibu, Japanese Poet and LoverChapter Review [[√]] LearningCurve LaunchPadSummative Quiz LaunchPad8. WORKING WITH EVIDENCE LaunchPadThe Leisure Life of China’s Elites Visual Sources8.1 A Banquet with the Emperor8.2 At Table with the Empress8.3 A Literary Gathering 8.4 An Elite Night Party8. THINKING THROUGH SOURCES LaunchPad The Making of Japanese CivilizationSource 8.1: Japanese Political IdealsSource 8.2: The Uniqueness of JapanSource 8.3: Social Life at CourtSource 8.4: Japanese Zen BuddhismSource 8.5: The Way of the WarriorSource 8.6: Samurai and the "Arts of Peace"9. The Worlds of Islam: Afro-Eurasian Connections, 600–1500Author Preview Video LaunchPadGuided Reading Exercise LaunchPadThe Birth of a New ReligionThe Homeland of IslamThe Messenger and the MessageThe Transformation of ArabiaAnother Voice Future LaunchPadThe Making of an Arab EmpireWar, Conquest, and ToleranceConversionDivisions and ControversiesWomen and Men in Early IslamIslam and Cultural Encounter: A Four-Way ComparisonThe Case of IndiaThe Case of AnatoliaThe Case of West AfricaThe Case of SpainThe World of Islam as a New CivilizationNetworks of FaithNetworks of ExchangeReflections: Past and Present: Choosing Our HistorySecond ThoughtsWhat’s the Significance?Big Picture QuestionsNext Steps: For Further Study
Zooming In: Mullah Nasruddin, the Wise Fool of Islam
Zooming In: Mansa Musa, West African Monarch and Muslim PilgrimChapter Review [[√]] LearningCurve LaunchPadSummative Quiz LaunchPad9. WORKING WITH EVIDENCE LaunchPadThe Life of the Prophet Visual Sources9.1 Muhammad and the Archangel Gabriel9.2 The Night Journey of Muhammad9.3 The Battle at Badr9.4 The Destruction of the Idols9. THINKING THROUGH SOURCES LaunchPad Voices of IslamSource 9.1: The Voice of AllahSource 9.2: The Voice of the Prophet MuhammadSource 9.3: The Voice of the LawSource 9.4: The Voice of the SufisSource 9.5: Islamic Practice in West AfricaSource 9.6: Men and Women10. The Worlds of Christendom: Contraction, Expansion, and Division, 500–1300Author Preview Video LaunchPadGuided Reading Exercise LaunchPadChristian Contraction in Asia and AfricaAsian ChristianityAfrican ChristianityByzantine Christendom: Building on the Roman PastThe Byzantine StateThe Byzantine Church and Christian DivergenceByzantium and the WorldThe Conversion of RussiaWestern Christendom: Rebuilding in the Wake of Roman CollapsePolitical Life in Western EuropeSociety and the ChurchAccelerating Change in the WestEurope Outward Bound: The Crusading TraditionThe West in Comparative PerspectiveCatching UpPluralism in PoliticsReason and FaithAnother Voice Future LaunchPadReflections: Remembering and Forgetting: Continuity and Surprise in the Worlds of ChristendomSecond ThoughtsWhat’s the Significance?Big Picture QuestionsNext Steps: For Further StudyZooming In: 988 and the Conversion of Rus
Zooming In: Cecilia Penifader, an English Peasant and Unmarried WomanChapter Review [[√]] LearningCurve LaunchPadSummative Quiz LaunchPad10. WORKING WITH EVIDENCE LaunchPadThe Making of Christian Europe Documents10.1 The Conversion of Clovis: Gregory of Tours, History of the Franks, Late Sixth Century10.2 Advice on Dealing with "Pagans": Pope Gregory, Advice to the English Church, 601 10.3 Charlemagne and the Saxons: Charlemagne, Capitulary on Saxony, 78510.4 and 10.5 The Persistence of Tradition: Willibald, Life of Boniface, ca. 760 c.e., and Leechbook, Tenth Century10. THINKING THROUGH SOURCES LaunchPad The Crusades as Cultural EncounterSource 10.1: A Western Christian Perspective: Pope Urban IISource 10.2: Jewish Perspectives on the CrusadesSource 10.3: Muslim Perspectives on the CrusadesSource 10.4: Jerusalem and the CrusadesSource 10.5: A Byzantine Perspective on the CrusadesSource 10.6: More than Conflict11. Pastoral Peoples on the Global Stage: The Mongol Moment, 1200–1500Author Preview Video LaunchPadGuided Reading Exercise LaunchPadLooking Back and Looking Around: The Long History of Pastoral Peoples The World of Pastoral SocietiesBefore the Mongols: Pastoralists in HistoryBreakout: The Mongol EmpireFrom Temujin to Chinggis Khan: The Rise of the Mongol EmpireExplaining the Mongol MomentAnother Voice Future LaunchPadEncountering the Mongols: Comparing Three CasesChina and the MongolsPersia and the MongolsRussia and the MongolsThe Mongol Empire as a Eurasian NetworkToward a World EconomyDiplomacy on a Eurasian ScaleCultural Exchange in the Mongol RealmThe Plague: An Afro-Eurasian PandemicReflections: Changing Images of Pastoral PeoplesSecond ThoughtsWhat’s the Significance?Big Picture QuestionsNext Steps: For Further Study
Zooming In: A Mongol Failure: The Invasion of Japan
Zooming In: Khutulun, a Mongol Wrestler PrincessChapter Review [[√]] LearningCurve LaunchPadSummative Quiz LaunchPad11. WORKING WITH EVIDENCE LaunchPadPerspectives on the Mongols Documents11.1 Mongol History from a Mongol Source: The Secret History of the Mongols, ca. 124011.2 Chinggis Khan and Changchun: Chinggis Khan, Letter to Changchun, 121911.3 The Conquest of Bukhara: A Persian View: Juvaini, The History of the World Conqueror, 121911.4 A Russian View of the Mongols: The Chronicle of Novgorod, 123811.5 Mongol Women through European Eyes: William of Rubruck, Journey to the Land of the Mongols, ca. 125511. THINKING THROUGH SOURCES LaunchPad Living and Dying During the Black DeathSource 11.1: The Black Death in the Islamic WorldSource 11.2: The Black Death in Western EuropeSource 11.3: The Black Death in ByzantiumSource 11.4: Religious Responses in the Islamic WorldSource 11.5: Religious Responses in the Christian WorldSource 11.6: The Black Death and European JewsSource 11.7: A Government’s Response to the Plague12. The Worlds of the Fifteenth CenturyAuthor Preview Video LaunchPadGuided Reading Exercise LaunchPadThe Shapes of Human CommunitiesPaleolithic Persistence: Australia and North AmericaAgricultural Village Societies: The Igbo and the IroquoisPastoral Peoples: Central Asia and West AfricaCivilizations of the Fifteenth Century: Comparing China and EuropeMing Dynasty ChinaEuropean Comparisons: State Building and Cultural RenewalEuropean Comparisons: Maritime VoyagingCivilizations of the Fifteenth Century: The Islamic WorldIn the Islamic Heartland: The Ottoman and Safavid EmpiresOn the Frontiers of Islam: The Songhay and Mughal EmpiresCivilizations of the Fifteenth Century: The AmericasThe Aztec EmpireThe Inca EmpireWebs of ConnectionA Preview of Coming Attractions: Looking Ahead to the Modern Era, 1500–2015 Another Voice Future LaunchPadReflections: What If? Chance and Contingency in World HistorySecond ThoughtsWhat’s the Significance?Big Picture QuestionsNext Steps: For Further StudyZooming In: Zheng He, China’s Non-Chinese AdmiralZooming In: 1453 in ConstantinopleChapter Review [[√]] LearningCurve LaunchPad Summative Quiz LaunchPad12. WORKING WITH EVIDENCE LaunchPadIslam and Renaissance Europe Visual Sources12.1 Gentile Bellini, Portrait of Mehmed II12.2 The Venetian Ambassador Visits Damascus12.3 Aristotle and Averroes12.4 Saint George Baptizes the Pagans of Jerusalem12.5 Giovanni da Modena, Muhammad in Hell12. THINKING THROUGH SOURCES LaunchPad Early Encounters; First ImpressionsSource 12.1: Cadamosto in a West African ChiefdomSource 12.2: Vasco da Gama at Calicut, IndiaSource 12.3: Celebrating de Gama’s arrival in CalicutSource 12.4: Columbus in the CaribbeanSource 12.5: Columbus EngravedWays of the World: A Brief Global History, Volume I
Third Edition| 2016
Robert W. Strayer; Eric Nelson
Authors
Robert W. Strayer
Robert W. Strayer (Ph.D., University of Wisconsin) brings wide experience in world history to the writing of Ways of the World. His teaching career began in Ethiopia where he taught high school world history for two years as part of the Peace Corps. At the university level, he taught African, Soviet, and world history for many years at the State University of New York-College at Brockport, where he received Chancellors Awards for Excellence in Teaching and for Excellence in Scholarship. In 1998 he was visiting professor of world and Soviet history at the University of Canterbury in Christchurch, New Zealand. Since moving to California in 2002, he has taught world history at the University of California, Santa Cruz; California State University, Monterey Bay; and Cabrillo College. He is a long-time member of the World History Association and served on its Executive Committee. He has also participated in various AP® World History gatherings, including two years as a reader. His publications include Kenya: Focus on Nationalism, The Making of Mission Communities in East Africa, The Making of the Modern World, Why Did the Soviet Union Collapse?, and The Communist Experiment.
Eric W. Nelson
Eric W. Nelson (D.Phil., Oxford University) is a professor of history at Missouri State University. He is an experienced teacher who has won a number of awards, including the Governor’s Award for Teaching Excellence in 2011 and the CASE and Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching Professor of the Year Award for Missouri in 2012. He is currently Faculty Fellow for Engaged Learning, developing new ways to integrate in-class and online teaching environments. His publications include The Legacy of Iconoclasm: Religious War and the Relic Landscape of Tours, Blois and Vendôme, and The Jesuits and the Monarchy: Catholic Reform and Political Authority in France.
Ways of the World: A Brief Global History, Volume I
Third Edition| 2016
Robert W. Strayer; Eric Nelson
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Ways of the World: A Brief Global History, Volume I
Third Edition| 2016
Robert W. Strayer; Eric Nelson
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