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AP World History Modern

Unit 1: The Global Tapestry

State-building, belief systems, social hierarchy, and regional comparison before the age of oceanic empires.

c. 1200 to c. 1450 Study Guide Exam Writing
01

Big Picture

Core question

How did major societies organize power before 1450? Focus on bureaucracy, religion, military elites, tribute, labor systems, and social hierarchy.

Best comparison angle

Compare centralized states like Song China with decentralized systems like feudal Europe or military aristocracies in Japan.

Full-marks habit

Do not just name a state. Explain what problem its system solved: tax collection, legitimacy, defense, labor, or control over distance.

02

East Asia: China and Its Neighbors

Song China

The Song used Confucian bureaucracy, civil service exams, commercial growth, paper money, Champa rice, and large cities to strengthen state capacity.

Yuan China

Mongol rulers kept many Chinese governing tools but placed Mongols and Central Asians above ethnic Chinese in the political hierarchy.

Ming China

The Ming restored ethnic Chinese rule, expanded the Great Wall, promoted Confucian governance, and sponsored Zheng He voyages before reducing maritime activity.

Japan

Japan adapted Chinese ideas but developed a feudal order with shogun, daimyo, and samurai. Power was more military and decentralized than China.

03

Dar al-Islam

Political diversity

The Abbasid Caliphate declined politically, but Islamic states and scholars remained connected across the Middle East, North Africa, Central Asia, and South Asia.

Learning networks

Madrasas, scholars, merchants, and Sufi missionaries helped spread ideas, law, mathematics, medicine, and religious practice.

Delhi Sultanate

Turkic Muslim rulers governed parts of South Asia. Their rule shows both cultural exchange and tension with existing Hindu and caste-based society.

04

South and Southeast Asia

South Asia

Caste shaped occupation, social boundaries, and status. Hinduism and Buddhism remained important even as Islam expanded into parts of the region.

Southeast Asia

States such as Khmer/Angkor and Srivijaya used trade, irrigation, Hindu-Buddhist kingship, and maritime location to build power.

Syncretism

Southeast Asian rulers often blended imported belief systems with local traditions instead of copying another culture exactly.

05

Africa and the Americas

Mali

Mali grew wealthy from trans-Saharan gold and salt trade. Mansa Musa shows the connection between wealth, Islam, and political legitimacy.

Swahili city-states

East African port cities connected inland African goods to Indian Ocean trade. Swahili culture blended Bantu and Arabic influences.

Mexica and Inca

The Mexica used conquest and tribute. The Inca used mita labor, roads, ayllu communities, and quipu records to manage a large empire.

06

Europe

Feudalism

Feudalism was a political and military hierarchy built around land, protection, loyalty, and service.

Manorialism

Manorialism was the economic system of self-sufficient estates where serfs worked land in exchange for protection.

Catholic Church

The Church shaped education, law, legitimacy, rituals, and social life. It was not only a religious institution.

07

How to Write About Unit 1

Claim model

In the period 1200 to 1450, states used different systems to solve the same problem of ruling complex societies; China relied more on bureaucracy, while Europe and Japan relied more on local military elites.

Evidence model

Use specific evidence such as civil service exams, mita labor, trans-Saharan trade, samurai loyalty, caste, or the Catholic Church. Then explain how the evidence supports the claim.

Common mistake

Avoid listing regions separately without a comparison category. Pick one category, such as administration, legitimacy, or social hierarchy.