aim: how can we review for the exam? -...
TRANSCRIPT
AIM: HOW CAN WE REVIEW FOR THE EXAM?
DO NOW: What were the achievements of the Gupta?
Monday, January 6, 2014
Reminders
DBQ ESSAY EXAM TOMORROW ( HAN, SONG AND TANG, MAURYA, AND GUPTA)
PROJECT DUE JANUARY 17th, 2014
Monday, January 6, 2014
DO’S OF THE DBQ ESSAY
WRITE DOWN A THESIS STATEMENT TO ARGUE IN YOUR ESSAY.
USE OUTSIDE INFORMATION AND THE DOCUMENTS.
STAY ON TASK.
CITE THE DOCUMENT.
Monday, January 6, 2014
HOW TO CITE THE DOCUMENTS?
IN A DBQ ESSAY YOU ARE USING DOCUMENTS FROM HISTORY TO HELP YOU ARGUE YOUR THESIS STATEMENT.
AS A RESULT, YOU AS THE STUDENT MUST CITE, WHICH DOCUMENTS YOU ARE USING.
Monday, January 6, 2014
HOW TO CITE DBQ’S IN YOUR ESSAY?
Document 5
Source: Alfred W. Crosby Jr., The Columbian Exchange: Biological and Cultural Consequences of 1492,Greenwood Publishing (adapted)
5 According to Alfred W. Crosby, what was one effect of Spanish colonization on the island of Española? [1]
Score
… It all began in Española [Hispaniola] with sugar, which was already a profitable plantationcrop in the Canaries and Portugal’s Atlantic islands in the fifteenth century. Columbus himselfhad shipped sugar from Madeira to Genoa in 1478, and the mother of his first wife owned asugar estate on that island. He brought sugar cane with him to Española in 1493, and the canegrew well in American soil. But the growth of the sugar industry was painfully slow untilCharles V intervened, ordering that sugar masters and mill technicians be recruited from theCanaries, and authorizing loans to build sugar mills on Española. There were thirty-four millson the island by the late 1530s and sugar was one of the two staples of the island’s economy(the other being cattle ranching) until the latter part of the sixteenth century.…
Global Hist. & Geo. – June ’13 [18]
Monday, January 6, 2014
HOW TO CITE DBQ’S IN YOUR ESSAY?
Document 5
Source: Alfred W. Crosby Jr., The Columbian Exchange: Biological and Cultural Consequences of 1492,Greenwood Publishing (adapted)
5 According to Alfred W. Crosby, what was one effect of Spanish colonization on the island of Española? [1]
Score
… It all began in Española [Hispaniola] with sugar, which was already a profitable plantationcrop in the Canaries and Portugal’s Atlantic islands in the fifteenth century. Columbus himselfhad shipped sugar from Madeira to Genoa in 1478, and the mother of his first wife owned asugar estate on that island. He brought sugar cane with him to Española in 1493, and the canegrew well in American soil. But the growth of the sugar industry was painfully slow untilCharles V intervened, ordering that sugar masters and mill technicians be recruited from theCanaries, and authorizing loans to build sugar mills on Española. There were thirty-four millson the island by the late 1530s and sugar was one of the two staples of the island’s economy(the other being cattle ranching) until the latter part of the sixteenth century.…
Global Hist. & Geo. – June ’13 [18]
Monday, January 6, 2014
HOW TO CITE DBQ’S IN YOUR ESSAY?
Document 5
Source: Alfred W. Crosby Jr., The Columbian Exchange: Biological and Cultural Consequences of 1492,Greenwood Publishing (adapted)
5 According to Alfred W. Crosby, what was one effect of Spanish colonization on the island of Española? [1]
Score
… It all began in Española [Hispaniola] with sugar, which was already a profitable plantationcrop in the Canaries and Portugal’s Atlantic islands in the fifteenth century. Columbus himselfhad shipped sugar from Madeira to Genoa in 1478, and the mother of his first wife owned asugar estate on that island. He brought sugar cane with him to Española in 1493, and the canegrew well in American soil. But the growth of the sugar industry was painfully slow untilCharles V intervened, ordering that sugar masters and mill technicians be recruited from theCanaries, and authorizing loans to build sugar mills on Española. There were thirty-four millson the island by the late 1530s and sugar was one of the two staples of the island’s economy(the other being cattle ranching) until the latter part of the sixteenth century.…
Global Hist. & Geo. – June ’13 [18]
Monday, January 6, 2014
HOW TO CITE DBQ’S IN YOUR ESSAY?
Document 5
Source: Alfred W. Crosby Jr., The Columbian Exchange: Biological and Cultural Consequences of 1492,Greenwood Publishing (adapted)
5 According to Alfred W. Crosby, what was one effect of Spanish colonization on the island of Española? [1]
Score
… It all began in Española [Hispaniola] with sugar, which was already a profitable plantationcrop in the Canaries and Portugal’s Atlantic islands in the fifteenth century. Columbus himselfhad shipped sugar from Madeira to Genoa in 1478, and the mother of his first wife owned asugar estate on that island. He brought sugar cane with him to Española in 1493, and the canegrew well in American soil. But the growth of the sugar industry was painfully slow untilCharles V intervened, ordering that sugar masters and mill technicians be recruited from theCanaries, and authorizing loans to build sugar mills on Española. There were thirty-four millson the island by the late 1530s and sugar was one of the two staples of the island’s economy(the other being cattle ranching) until the latter part of the sixteenth century.…
Global Hist. & Geo. – June ’13 [18]
THE COLONY OF HISPANIOLA MADE MONEY FROM THE GROWING OF SUGAR, AN INDUSTRY THAT THE
SPANISH GOVERNMENT HELPED TO EXPAND ( DOCUMENT 5).
Monday, January 6, 2014
HOW TO CITE DBQ’S IN YOUR ESSAY?
Document 5
Source: Alfred W. Crosby Jr., The Columbian Exchange: Biological and Cultural Consequences of 1492,Greenwood Publishing (adapted)
5 According to Alfred W. Crosby, what was one effect of Spanish colonization on the island of Española? [1]
Score
… It all began in Española [Hispaniola] with sugar, which was already a profitable plantationcrop in the Canaries and Portugal’s Atlantic islands in the fifteenth century. Columbus himselfhad shipped sugar from Madeira to Genoa in 1478, and the mother of his first wife owned asugar estate on that island. He brought sugar cane with him to Española in 1493, and the canegrew well in American soil. But the growth of the sugar industry was painfully slow untilCharles V intervened, ordering that sugar masters and mill technicians be recruited from theCanaries, and authorizing loans to build sugar mills on Española. There were thirty-four millson the island by the late 1530s and sugar was one of the two staples of the island’s economy(the other being cattle ranching) until the latter part of the sixteenth century.…
Global Hist. & Geo. – June ’13 [18]
Monday, January 6, 2014
HOW TO CITE DBQ’S IN YOUR ESSAY?
Document 5
Source: Alfred W. Crosby Jr., The Columbian Exchange: Biological and Cultural Consequences of 1492,Greenwood Publishing (adapted)
5 According to Alfred W. Crosby, what was one effect of Spanish colonization on the island of Española? [1]
Score
… It all began in Española [Hispaniola] with sugar, which was already a profitable plantationcrop in the Canaries and Portugal’s Atlantic islands in the fifteenth century. Columbus himselfhad shipped sugar from Madeira to Genoa in 1478, and the mother of his first wife owned asugar estate on that island. He brought sugar cane with him to Española in 1493, and the canegrew well in American soil. But the growth of the sugar industry was painfully slow untilCharles V intervened, ordering that sugar masters and mill technicians be recruited from theCanaries, and authorizing loans to build sugar mills on Española. There were thirty-four millson the island by the late 1530s and sugar was one of the two staples of the island’s economy(the other being cattle ranching) until the latter part of the sixteenth century.…
Global Hist. & Geo. – June ’13 [18]
Monday, January 6, 2014
HOW TO CITE DBQ’S IN YOUR ESSAY?
Document 5
Source: Alfred W. Crosby Jr., The Columbian Exchange: Biological and Cultural Consequences of 1492,Greenwood Publishing (adapted)
5 According to Alfred W. Crosby, what was one effect of Spanish colonization on the island of Española? [1]
Score
… It all began in Española [Hispaniola] with sugar, which was already a profitable plantationcrop in the Canaries and Portugal’s Atlantic islands in the fifteenth century. Columbus himselfhad shipped sugar from Madeira to Genoa in 1478, and the mother of his first wife owned asugar estate on that island. He brought sugar cane with him to Española in 1493, and the canegrew well in American soil. But the growth of the sugar industry was painfully slow untilCharles V intervened, ordering that sugar masters and mill technicians be recruited from theCanaries, and authorizing loans to build sugar mills on Española. There were thirty-four millson the island by the late 1530s and sugar was one of the two staples of the island’s economy(the other being cattle ranching) until the latter part of the sixteenth century.…
Global Hist. & Geo. – June ’13 [18]
Monday, January 6, 2014
HOW TO CITE DBQ’S IN YOUR ESSAY?
Document 5
Source: Alfred W. Crosby Jr., The Columbian Exchange: Biological and Cultural Consequences of 1492,Greenwood Publishing (adapted)
5 According to Alfred W. Crosby, what was one effect of Spanish colonization on the island of Española? [1]
Score
… It all began in Española [Hispaniola] with sugar, which was already a profitable plantationcrop in the Canaries and Portugal’s Atlantic islands in the fifteenth century. Columbus himselfhad shipped sugar from Madeira to Genoa in 1478, and the mother of his first wife owned asugar estate on that island. He brought sugar cane with him to Española in 1493, and the canegrew well in American soil. But the growth of the sugar industry was painfully slow untilCharles V intervened, ordering that sugar masters and mill technicians be recruited from theCanaries, and authorizing loans to build sugar mills on Española. There were thirty-four millson the island by the late 1530s and sugar was one of the two staples of the island’s economy(the other being cattle ranching) until the latter part of the sixteenth century.…
Global Hist. & Geo. – June ’13 [18]
ACCORDING TO DOCUMENT 5, THE COLONY OF HISPANIOLA MADE MONEY FROM THE GROWING
OF SUGAR, AN INDUSTRY THAT THE SPANISH GOVERNMENT HELPED TO EXPAND .
Monday, January 6, 2014
HOW TO CITE DBQ’S IN YOUR ESSAY?
Document 5
Source: Alfred W. Crosby Jr., The Columbian Exchange: Biological and Cultural Consequences of 1492,Greenwood Publishing (adapted)
5 According to Alfred W. Crosby, what was one effect of Spanish colonization on the island of Española? [1]
Score
… It all began in Española [Hispaniola] with sugar, which was already a profitable plantationcrop in the Canaries and Portugal’s Atlantic islands in the fifteenth century. Columbus himselfhad shipped sugar from Madeira to Genoa in 1478, and the mother of his first wife owned asugar estate on that island. He brought sugar cane with him to Española in 1493, and the canegrew well in American soil. But the growth of the sugar industry was painfully slow untilCharles V intervened, ordering that sugar masters and mill technicians be recruited from theCanaries, and authorizing loans to build sugar mills on Española. There were thirty-four millson the island by the late 1530s and sugar was one of the two staples of the island’s economy(the other being cattle ranching) until the latter part of the sixteenth century.…
Global Hist. & Geo. – June ’13 [18]
Monday, January 6, 2014
HOW TO CITE DBQ’S IN YOUR ESSAY?
Document 5
Source: Alfred W. Crosby Jr., The Columbian Exchange: Biological and Cultural Consequences of 1492,Greenwood Publishing (adapted)
5 According to Alfred W. Crosby, what was one effect of Spanish colonization on the island of Española? [1]
Score
… It all began in Española [Hispaniola] with sugar, which was already a profitable plantationcrop in the Canaries and Portugal’s Atlantic islands in the fifteenth century. Columbus himselfhad shipped sugar from Madeira to Genoa in 1478, and the mother of his first wife owned asugar estate on that island. He brought sugar cane with him to Española in 1493, and the canegrew well in American soil. But the growth of the sugar industry was painfully slow untilCharles V intervened, ordering that sugar masters and mill technicians be recruited from theCanaries, and authorizing loans to build sugar mills on Española. There were thirty-four millson the island by the late 1530s and sugar was one of the two staples of the island’s economy(the other being cattle ranching) until the latter part of the sixteenth century.…
Global Hist. & Geo. – June ’13 [18]
Monday, January 6, 2014
HOW TO CITE DBQ’S IN YOUR ESSAY?
Document 5
Source: Alfred W. Crosby Jr., The Columbian Exchange: Biological and Cultural Consequences of 1492,Greenwood Publishing (adapted)
5 According to Alfred W. Crosby, what was one effect of Spanish colonization on the island of Española? [1]
Score
… It all began in Española [Hispaniola] with sugar, which was already a profitable plantationcrop in the Canaries and Portugal’s Atlantic islands in the fifteenth century. Columbus himselfhad shipped sugar from Madeira to Genoa in 1478, and the mother of his first wife owned asugar estate on that island. He brought sugar cane with him to Española in 1493, and the canegrew well in American soil. But the growth of the sugar industry was painfully slow untilCharles V intervened, ordering that sugar masters and mill technicians be recruited from theCanaries, and authorizing loans to build sugar mills on Española. There were thirty-four millson the island by the late 1530s and sugar was one of the two staples of the island’s economy(the other being cattle ranching) until the latter part of the sixteenth century.…
Global Hist. & Geo. – June ’13 [18]
Monday, January 6, 2014
HOW TO CITE DBQ’S IN YOUR ESSAY?
Document 5
Source: Alfred W. Crosby Jr., The Columbian Exchange: Biological and Cultural Consequences of 1492,Greenwood Publishing (adapted)
5 According to Alfred W. Crosby, what was one effect of Spanish colonization on the island of Española? [1]
Score
… It all began in Española [Hispaniola] with sugar, which was already a profitable plantationcrop in the Canaries and Portugal’s Atlantic islands in the fifteenth century. Columbus himselfhad shipped sugar from Madeira to Genoa in 1478, and the mother of his first wife owned asugar estate on that island. He brought sugar cane with him to Española in 1493, and the canegrew well in American soil. But the growth of the sugar industry was painfully slow untilCharles V intervened, ordering that sugar masters and mill technicians be recruited from theCanaries, and authorizing loans to build sugar mills on Española. There were thirty-four millson the island by the late 1530s and sugar was one of the two staples of the island’s economy(the other being cattle ranching) until the latter part of the sixteenth century.…
Global Hist. & Geo. – June ’13 [18]
ACCORDING TO ALFRED W. CROSBY, THE COLONY OF HISPANIOLA MADE MONEY FROM THE GROWING
OF SUGAR, AN INDUSTRY THAT THE SPANISH GOVERNMENT HELPED TO EXPAND .
Monday, January 6, 2014
HOW TO CITE DBQ’S IN YOUR ESSAY?
Document 5
Source: Alfred W. Crosby Jr., The Columbian Exchange: Biological and Cultural Consequences of 1492,Greenwood Publishing (adapted)
5 According to Alfred W. Crosby, what was one effect of Spanish colonization on the island of Española? [1]
Score
… It all began in Española [Hispaniola] with sugar, which was already a profitable plantationcrop in the Canaries and Portugal’s Atlantic islands in the fifteenth century. Columbus himselfhad shipped sugar from Madeira to Genoa in 1478, and the mother of his first wife owned asugar estate on that island. He brought sugar cane with him to Española in 1493, and the canegrew well in American soil. But the growth of the sugar industry was painfully slow untilCharles V intervened, ordering that sugar masters and mill technicians be recruited from theCanaries, and authorizing loans to build sugar mills on Española. There were thirty-four millson the island by the late 1530s and sugar was one of the two staples of the island’s economy(the other being cattle ranching) until the latter part of the sixteenth century.…
Global Hist. & Geo. – June ’13 [18]
Monday, January 6, 2014
HOW TO CITE DBQ’S IN YOUR ESSAY?
Document 5
Source: Alfred W. Crosby Jr., The Columbian Exchange: Biological and Cultural Consequences of 1492,Greenwood Publishing (adapted)
5 According to Alfred W. Crosby, what was one effect of Spanish colonization on the island of Española? [1]
Score
… It all began in Española [Hispaniola] with sugar, which was already a profitable plantationcrop in the Canaries and Portugal’s Atlantic islands in the fifteenth century. Columbus himselfhad shipped sugar from Madeira to Genoa in 1478, and the mother of his first wife owned asugar estate on that island. He brought sugar cane with him to Española in 1493, and the canegrew well in American soil. But the growth of the sugar industry was painfully slow untilCharles V intervened, ordering that sugar masters and mill technicians be recruited from theCanaries, and authorizing loans to build sugar mills on Española. There were thirty-four millson the island by the late 1530s and sugar was one of the two staples of the island’s economy(the other being cattle ranching) until the latter part of the sixteenth century.…
Global Hist. & Geo. – June ’13 [18]
Monday, January 6, 2014
HOW TO CITE DBQ’S IN YOUR ESSAY?
Document 5
Source: Alfred W. Crosby Jr., The Columbian Exchange: Biological and Cultural Consequences of 1492,Greenwood Publishing (adapted)
5 According to Alfred W. Crosby, what was one effect of Spanish colonization on the island of Española? [1]
Score
… It all began in Española [Hispaniola] with sugar, which was already a profitable plantationcrop in the Canaries and Portugal’s Atlantic islands in the fifteenth century. Columbus himselfhad shipped sugar from Madeira to Genoa in 1478, and the mother of his first wife owned asugar estate on that island. He brought sugar cane with him to Española in 1493, and the canegrew well in American soil. But the growth of the sugar industry was painfully slow untilCharles V intervened, ordering that sugar masters and mill technicians be recruited from theCanaries, and authorizing loans to build sugar mills on Española. There were thirty-four millson the island by the late 1530s and sugar was one of the two staples of the island’s economy(the other being cattle ranching) until the latter part of the sixteenth century.…
Global Hist. & Geo. – June ’13 [18]
Monday, January 6, 2014
HOW TO CITE DBQ’S IN YOUR ESSAY?
Document 5
Source: Alfred W. Crosby Jr., The Columbian Exchange: Biological and Cultural Consequences of 1492,Greenwood Publishing (adapted)
5 According to Alfred W. Crosby, what was one effect of Spanish colonization on the island of Española? [1]
Score
… It all began in Española [Hispaniola] with sugar, which was already a profitable plantationcrop in the Canaries and Portugal’s Atlantic islands in the fifteenth century. Columbus himselfhad shipped sugar from Madeira to Genoa in 1478, and the mother of his first wife owned asugar estate on that island. He brought sugar cane with him to Española in 1493, and the canegrew well in American soil. But the growth of the sugar industry was painfully slow untilCharles V intervened, ordering that sugar masters and mill technicians be recruited from theCanaries, and authorizing loans to build sugar mills on Española. There were thirty-four millson the island by the late 1530s and sugar was one of the two staples of the island’s economy(the other being cattle ranching) until the latter part of the sixteenth century.…
Global Hist. & Geo. – June ’13 [18]
ACCORDING TO THE COLUMBIAN EXCHANGE , THE COLONY OF HISPANIOLA MADE MONEY FROM THE
GROWING OF SUGAR, AN INDUSTRY THAT THE SPANISH GOVERNMENT HELPED TO EXPAND .
Monday, January 6, 2014
HOW TO CITE DBQ’S IN YOUR ESSAY?
Document 5
Source: Alfred W. Crosby Jr., The Columbian Exchange: Biological and Cultural Consequences of 1492,Greenwood Publishing (adapted)
5 According to Alfred W. Crosby, what was one effect of Spanish colonization on the island of Española? [1]
Score
… It all began in Española [Hispaniola] with sugar, which was already a profitable plantationcrop in the Canaries and Portugal’s Atlantic islands in the fifteenth century. Columbus himselfhad shipped sugar from Madeira to Genoa in 1478, and the mother of his first wife owned asugar estate on that island. He brought sugar cane with him to Española in 1493, and the canegrew well in American soil. But the growth of the sugar industry was painfully slow untilCharles V intervened, ordering that sugar masters and mill technicians be recruited from theCanaries, and authorizing loans to build sugar mills on Española. There were thirty-four millson the island by the late 1530s and sugar was one of the two staples of the island’s economy(the other being cattle ranching) until the latter part of the sixteenth century.…
Global Hist. & Geo. – June ’13 [18]
ACCORDING TO THE COLUMBIAN EXCHANGE , THE COLONY OF HISPANIOLA MADE MONEY FROM THE
GROWING OF SUGAR, AN INDUSTRY THAT THE SPANISH GOVERNMENT HELPED TO EXPAND .
Monday, January 6, 2014
HOW TO CITE
THE COLONY OF HISPANIOLA MADE MONEY FROM THE GROWING OF SUGAR, AN INDUSTRY THAT THE
SPANISH GOVERNMENT HELPED TO EXPAND ( DOCUMENT #).
Monday, January 6, 2014
HOW TO CITE
THE COLONY OF HISPANIOLA MADE MONEY FROM THE GROWING OF SUGAR, AN INDUSTRY THAT THE
SPANISH GOVERNMENT HELPED TO EXPAND ( DOCUMENT #).
ACCORDING TO DOCUMENT #, THE COLONY OF HISPANIOLA MADE MONEY FROM THE GROWING
OF SUGAR, AN INDUSTRY THAT THE SPANISH GOVERNMENT HELPED TO EXPAND .
Monday, January 6, 2014
HOW TO CITE
ACCORDING TO AUTHOR, THE COLONY OF HISPANIOLA MADE MONEY FROM THE GROWING
OF SUGAR, AN INDUSTRY THAT THE SPANISH GOVERNMENT HELPED TO EXPAND .
Monday, January 6, 2014
HOW TO CITE
ACCORDING TO AUTHOR, THE COLONY OF HISPANIOLA MADE MONEY FROM THE GROWING
OF SUGAR, AN INDUSTRY THAT THE SPANISH GOVERNMENT HELPED TO EXPAND .
ACCORDING TO THE TITLE OF THE BOOK, THE COLONY OF HISPANIOLA MADE MONEY FROM THE
GROWING OF SUGAR, AN INDUSTRY THAT THE SPANISH GOVERNMENT HELPED TO EXPAND .
Monday, January 6, 2014
NOW YOU TRY!!!
Document 7a
Document 7bThe age of railroads played a role in and supported the growth of a new period of imperialism.
Source: Robert Lee, “Potential Railway World Heritage Sites in Asia and the Pacific,” Institute of Railway Studies and Transport History, The University of York
7 Based on these documents, what do railroads enable colonial powers to do? [1]
AhmadabadBaroda
Hyderabad
AgraDelhi
Calcutta
ArabianSea
BombayNagpur
Bay ofBengal
Madras
0 300 Miles
Borders
Broad GaugeMeter Gauge andNarrow Gauge
Railroads
Lucknow
Bangalore
Source: Ashok K. Dutt et al., India in Maps,Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company (adapted)
Score
… Thus, colonial railways were part of this process of the spread of empire, its economicpatterns, its ideas and its institutions. The process was essentially the same throughout theworld: production of new commodities to feed the burgeoning [quickly growing] industries ofthe West; new populations to produce them; new patterns of land ownership, often involvingthe dispossession of previous inhabitants; new legal codes to make the conquered lands safefor investment and exploitation. Such was the story everywhere empires expanded.…
Global Hist. & Geo. – June ’13 [20]
WHAT DID THE RAILWAYS ALLOW COLONIAL POWERS TO DO?
Monday, January 6, 2014