HIST 102 FINAL EXAM VOCABULARY
conquistador
Spanish for "conqueror," a new livelihood in the Americas after Columbus
khipu
Knotted cotton or alpaca fiber strings used by the Incas and other Andeans to record tributes, troop numbers and possibly narratives of events
caste
a hereditary social class separated from others in Hindu societies
absolutism
a political theory holding that all power should e vested in one ruler; also such a system of government
kabuki
a popular Japanese theater known for bawdy humor and female impersonation
oba
a priest-king or queen of the Yoruba culture
geisha
a professional female entertainer in Tokugawa Japan
daimyo
a regional lord in feudal and early modern Japan
caravanserai
a roadside inn for merchants on the Silk Road and other overland trade routes
vertical archipelago
Andean system of planting crops and grazing animals at different altitudes
autosacrifice
the Mesoamerican practice of personal bloodletting as a means of paying debts to the gods
audience
the high appeals court in Spanish America
yangban
the noble class in early modern Korea
shamanism
widespread system of religious belief and healing originating in Central Asia
kitomi
deities attended by Kongo priests prior to the arrival of Christian Europeans
bourgeoisie
in early modern Europe, a new class of burghers, or urban-dwelling merchants
capitalism
in early modern Europe, a new way of conducting business by pooling money, goods, and labor to make a profit
indulgence
in early modern Europe, a note sold by the Catholic Church to speed a soul's exit from Purgatory
maroon
in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, a runaway slave and his or her descendants
peca
Portuguese for "piece," used to describe enslaved Africans as units of labor
mestizaje
Spanish for "mixture," referring to racial blending of any type
manikongo
a "blacksmith" kinf of Kongo
buccaneer
a Caribbean-based pirate of the seventeenth century
creole
a European born in the Americas and his or her descendants
sumo
a Japanese professional wrestler known for his heft
nanban
a Japanese term for "southern barbarians," or Europeans; also applies to hybrid European-Japanese artistic style
feitoria
a Portuguese overseas trading post, usually fortified
mita
a Spanish revival of the Inca draft labor system
Inquisition
a branch of the Catholic Church established to enforce orthodoxy
serf
a dependent agricultural laborer attached to a property and treated much like a slave
fetishism
a derogatory term used by Europeans to describe western African use of religious objects
encomienda
a feudal-style grant of a native American village to a conquistador or other Spaniard
armada
a fleet of warships; usually used in reference to the Spanish naval fleet defeated by England in 1588
kisaeng
a geisha-like female entertainer in early modern Korea
indenture
a labor system in which Europeans contracted for several years of unpaid labor in exchange for free passage across the Atlantic and housing
timar
a land grant given in compensation for military service by the Ottoman sultan to a soldier
Brahman
a member of the priestly caste in Hindu societies
Kshatriya
a member of the warrior caste in Hindu societies
trade diaspora
a network of merchants from the same city or country who live permanently in foreign lands and cooperate with one another to pursue trading opportunities
Renaissance
a period of intense intellectual and artistic creativity in Europe, beginning in Italy in the fourteenth century as a revival of the classical civilization of ancient Greece and Rome
mestizo
a person of mixed European and native American ancestry
waka
a sacred place or thing in Andean culture
genie
a sacred site or feature in the West African landscape
pombeiro
a slave-trade middleman in the West Central African interior
dhow
a small sailing vessel with triangular rigs used in monsoon trade to East Africa
theocracy
a state ruled by religious authorities
merchantilism
a system of economic regulations aimed at increasing the power of the state
chinampa
a terrace for farming and house building constructed in the shallows of Mexico's Lake Texcoco by the Aztecs and their neighbors
Sufism
a tradition within Islam that emphasizes mystical knowledge and personal experience of the divine
monsoon
a wind system that influences large climatic regions such as the Indian Ocean basin and reverses direction seasonally
longhouse
a wooden communal dwelling typical of Eastern Woodlands peoples
repartimiento
an allotment of indigenous laborers in colonial Mexico, similar to the Andean mita
constitutionalism
an early modern system of government based on a written charter defining a power-sharing arrangement between a monarch and representative bodies, or parliaments
pandemic
an outbreak of epidemic disease that spreads across an entire region
wampum
beads made of seashells; used in eastern North America as currency and to secure alliances
Columbian Exchange
Historian Alfred Crosby's term for the movement of American plants, animals, and germs to the rest of the world and vice versa
African diaspora
the global dispersal, mostly through the Atlantic slave trade, of African peoples
shogun
the military commander who effectively exercised supreme political and military authority over Japan during the Kamakura, Ashikaga, and Tokugawa shogunates
Neo-Confucianism
the reformulation of Confucian doctrines to reassert a commitment to moral perfection and the betterment of society; dominated Chinese intellectual life and social thought from the twelfth to the twentieth centuries
humanism
the study of the humanities (rhetoric, poetry, history, and moral philosophy), based on the works of ancient Greek and Roman writers, that provided the intellectual foundations for the Renaissance
Little Ice Age
name applied by environmental historians to periods of prolonged cool weather in the temperate zones of the earth
mulatto
offspring of Europeans and Africans
trading companies
private corporations licensed by early modern European states to monopolize Asian and other overseas trades
oligarchy
rule by a small group of individuals or families
northwest passage
searched-for sea route to Asia via North America
janissary corps
slave soldiers who served as the principal armed forces of the Ottoman Empire beginning in the fifteenth century; also staffed much of the Ottoman state bureaucracy
tribute
taxes paid to a state or empire, usually in the form of farm produce or artisan manufactures but sometimes also human labor or even human bodies
Middle Passage
the Atlantic crossing made by slaves taken from Africa to the Americas
devshirme
the Ottomans' conscription of Christian male youths from eastern Europe to serve in the military or administration
sati
the ancient Indian practice of ritual suicide by widows
geocentrism
the ancient belief that the earth is the center of the universe
Black Death
the catastrophic outbreak of plague that spread from the Black Sea to Europe, the Middle East, and North Africa in 1347-1350, killing a third or more of the population in afflicted areas.
heliocentrism
the early modern discovery that the sun is the center of our solar system
paramount chief
a chief who presided over several headmen and controlled a large area
joint-stock company
a colonial commercial venture with a royal charter and private shareholders
fatwa
a decree issued by Islamic religious officials
samurai
"those who serve"; the hereditary warriors who dominated Japanese society and culture from the twelfth to the nineteenth centuries
metis
French for "mixed," or offspring of Europeans and native Americans
husbandry
human intervention in the breeding of animals