- Page 5 and 6: Senior ConsultantsRoger B. Beck, Ph
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- Page 11 and 12: 500-1500An Age of Exchange and Enco
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- Page 21 and 22: ▲FeaturesWork and Play in Ancient
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- Page 25 and 26: Historical and Political Maps (cont
- Page 27 and 28: Time Lines, Infographics, and Polit
- Page 29 and 30: Primary and Secondary Sources (cont
- Page 31 and 32: World History ThemesWhile historica
- Page 33 and 34: Geography ThemesGeography is the st
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- Page 37 and 38: How Do We Know?Do you like puzzles?
- Page 39 and 40: World: Political . . . . . . . . .
- Page 41 and 42: A3World: Political
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1516Aleppo151640°Trabzon1461R e d
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A29Revolutions in the Atlantic Worl
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30°20°10°0°10°20°30°40°110
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GREECEEParisPOLAND138,909,000Konigs
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AO C E A NTornioCeded toUSSR 1940DN
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1890Ivens30˚40˚AZORESPort.30˚20
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80° 100° 120° 140° 160° 180°I
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NzS E AKAZAKHSTANTehrānEsfahan ¸
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DunhuangSILK ROADEMPIRE100° 110°
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90°YeniseyTIBETBrahmaputraCalcutta
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Lower TunguskaA RSevernayaZemlyaCT
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Part 1: Strategies for Studying His
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Use Active Reading Strategies As Yo
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STRATEGIESPart 2: Test-Taking Strat
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STRATEGIESPrimary SourcesPrimary so
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STRATEGIESSecondary SourcesSecondar
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STRATEGIESPolitical CartoonsPolitic
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STRATEGIESChartsCharts present info
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STRATEGIESLine and Bar GraphsGraphs
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STRATEGIESPie GraphsA pie, or circl
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STRATEGIESPolitical MapsPolitical m
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STRATEGIESThematic MapsA thematic m
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STRATEGIESTime LinesA time line is
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STRATEGIESConstructed ResponseConst
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STRATEGIESExtended ResponseExtended
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STRATEGIESDocument-Based QuestionsA
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Document 2: A Declaration of Rights
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The Peopling of theWorld, Prehistor
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How would these tools helpearly hum
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CultureIn prehistoric times, bands
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Australopithecines• 4 million to
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of wood and animal skins. Animal bo
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Cave PaintingsCave paintings create
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Humans Try to Control Nature2MAIN I
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Domestication of Animals Food gathe
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▼ A 9,000-year-oldbaked-clay figu
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nature. Early city dwellers develop
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CASE STUDY: UR INSUMERCivilization
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Chapter1 AssessmentTERMS & NAMESFor
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Early River ValleyCivilizations, 35
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Why do communitiesneed laws?The har
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30°EC a s p i a nThe Fertile Cresc
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▲ This gold andlapis ram with ash
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Hammurabi? -1750 B.C.The noted lawg
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Ancient Egypt, 3000-2000 B.C.Medite
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These magnificent monuments were re
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The Rosetta StoneIn 1799, near the
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Work and Play inAncient EgyptFor an
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Planned Cities on the Indus3MAIN ID
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▼ A map of thecitadel portionof M
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▼ Harappan sealsshow an elephant(
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River Dynasties in China4MAIN IDEA
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Lady Hao’s TombLady Hao was a wif
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New dynasty gainspower, restorespea
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Chapter2 Assessment Sumer EgyptTERM
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People and Ideas onthe Move, 2000 B
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Why might you leave yourhomeland?Wh
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0°Indo-European Migrations,Startin
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The Aryan Caste SystemThe four majo
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Hinduism and Buddhism Develop2MAIN
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Siddhartha Gautamac. 563-483 B.C.Ac
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▲ Buddhist monksview a temple atA
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3Seafaring TradersMAIN IDEA WHY IT
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The Phoenicians were remarkable shi
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▲ Phoenicianinscription froma sar
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▲ This statue ofMoses wascarved b
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When the Hebrews arrived in Canaan,
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The next 200 years were confusing f
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Chapter 3 AssessmentTERMS & NAMESFo
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First Age of Empires,1570 B.C.-200
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How will the empirehelp you or harm
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Hatshepsutreigned 1472-1458 B.C.Hat
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of imposing their own culture, the
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▼ This ring, bearingthe head of a
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Sea40°N96 Chapter 4BlackPHOENICIAM
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▲ This is an artist’srendering
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Cyrus also allowed the Jews, who ha
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The Royal RoadOne of the ways in wh
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The Unification of China4MAIN IDEA
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according to Laozi, only humans fai
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The Great Wall of ChinaFrom the Yel
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Chapter 4 AssessmentTERMS & NAMESFo
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The Rise of CivilizationsThousands
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UNIT 1 Comparing & Contrasting: Anc
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UNIT 1 Comparing & Contrasting: Anc
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118
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Classical Greece,2000 B.C.-300 B.C.
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What does this art tellyou about Gr
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The small streams that watered thes
- Page 246 and 247:
The heroes of the Iliad are warrior
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Athens Builds a Limited DemocracyTh
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Festivals and SportsThe ancient Gre
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00Mt. OlympusMediterraneanSeaIonian
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Democracy and Greece’sGolden Age3
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▼ This posterpromotes an 1898prod
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▼ Surrounded bysupporters,Socrate
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Greek Art and ArchitectureDuring an
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4Alexander’s EmpireMAIN IDEA WHY
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by a cavalry charge. As the Persian
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The Spread of Hellenistic Culture5M
- Page 268 and 269:
Pythagorean TheoremGeometry student
- Page 270 and 271:
Chapter5 AssessmentTERMS & NAMESFor
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Ancient Rome and EarlyChristianity,
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What makes a successful leader?You
- Page 276 and 277:
The Etruscans were native to northe
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Hannibal 247-183 B.C.When Hannibal
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2The Roman EmpireMAIN IDEA WHY IT M
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the poor by creating jobs, especial
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Roman Emperors, A.D. 37-A.D. 180Bad
- Page 286 and 287:
Life in a Roman VillaMuch of what w
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The Rise of Christianity3MAIN IDEA
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The Jewish DiasporaCenturies of Jew
- Page 292 and 293:
A Single Voice As Christianity grew
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Emperors Attempt ReformRemarkably,
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▲ This skull, stillretaining its
- Page 298 and 299:
Rome and the Roots ofWestern Civili
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Western CivilizationWestern civiliz
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The ColosseumThe Colosseum was one
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Chapter 6 AssessmentA.D. 1 300 B.C.
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India and ChinaEstablish Empires,40
- Page 308 and 309:
Would you spy foryour government?Yo
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Chandragupta’s capital. Megasthen
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▲ This terra-cottatile, showing a
- Page 314 and 315:
cave temples out of solid rock. Art
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R.Asian Trade Routes, A.D. 400To Ro
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Hindu and Buddhist ArtThe main diff
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Han Emperors in China3MAIN IDEA WHY
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When Wudi realized that the bribes
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The Chinese perfected a plow that w
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(bahn jow) worked on it. Ban Zhao a
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Chapter7 Assessment300 B.C.100 B.C.
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African Civilizations,1500 B.C.-A.D
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How can newcomerschange a community
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Vegetation Regions of Africa1 The d
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▲ This rockpainting innorthwester
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African IronworkingRefining metal w
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MigrationCASE STUDY: Bantu-Speaking
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0°N A M IB DESERT10°NNiger R.Bant
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▲ This Kubamask representsthe sis
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40°E50°E30°NTropic of Cancer20°
- Page 348 and 349:
When Ezana finally became ruler of
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Chapter8 AssessmentAfrican Civiliza
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The Americas: ASeparate World,40,00
- Page 354 and 355:
How can killing a mammothhelp you s
- Page 356 and 357:
PRIMARY SOURCEWhat a wild world it
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A Bison Kill SiteThe first hunters
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Early Mesoamerican Civilizations2MA
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Zapotec Civilization ArisesBy the t
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Olmec SculptureAround 1200 B.C., th
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3Early Civilizationsof the AndesMAI
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Nazca LinesEtched on the plains of
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Chapter 9 AssessmentTERMS & NAMESFo
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Lasting AchievementsA classical age
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UNIT 2 Comparing & Contrasting: Cla
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UNIT 2 Comparing & Contrasting: Cla
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258
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The Muslim World,600-1250Previewing
- Page 382 and 383:
Because the Christian Churchbelieve
- Page 384 and 385:
Trade Routes, A.D. 570Constantinopl
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The Dome of the RockThe Dome of the
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Muslim PrayerFive times a day—daw
- Page 390 and 391:
▲ From 632 to 750,highly mobiletr
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▼ This 13thcenturyminiature shows
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▲ In a miniaturepainting fromPers
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The Thousand and One NightsThe Thou
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▲ This interior viewof the GreatM
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Chapter10 AssessmentTERMS & NAMESFo
- Page 402 and 403:
A Global ViewReligion is defined as
- Page 404 and 405:
BuddhismBuddhism has influenced Asi
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ChristianityChristianity is the lar
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HinduismHinduism, one of the world
- Page 410 and 411:
IslamIslam is a religion based on t
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JudaismJudaism is the religion of t
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ConfucianismWith no clergy and with
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Buddhism Christianity Hinduism Isla
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Byzantines, Russians, andTurks Inte
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How will you expandyour empire?You
- Page 422 and 423:
Life in the New RomeA separate gove
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The Empire FallsAfter Justinian’s
- Page 426 and 427:
Another significant figure was Sain
- Page 428 and 429:
58°N50°N42°N8°E34°N16°ESwedes
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Resisting Mongol RuleAlthough Russi
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▲▲Russian Religious Artand Arch
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3Turkish EmpiresRise in AnatoliaMAI
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▲ This drawingfrom an early 13thc
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Chapter11 AssessmentTERMS & NAMESFo
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Empires in East Asia,600-1350Previe
- Page 442 and 443:
Which Chinese inventionwould be mos
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Tang Taizong 600-649The man who res
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world bustled with international tr
- Page 448 and 449:
Tang and Song China:People and Tech
- Page 450 and 451:
The Mongol Conquests2MAIN IDEA WHY
- Page 452 and 453:
Genghis the Conqueror Several chara
- Page 454 and 455:
20° EViennaVeniceEUROPEKievMediter
- Page 456 and 457:
▲ This detail froma 13th-centuryJ
- Page 458 and 459:
850Gunpowderinvented1215Genghis Kah
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120°ECHINA00YellowSeaKOREAKyushu34
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Japanese SamuraiSamurai were member
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Kingdoms of SoutheastAsia and Korea
- Page 466 and 467:
▼ Tan’gun (orDangun) is said to
- Page 468 and 469:
Chapter12 AssessmentTERMS & NAMESFo
- Page 470 and 471:
European Middle Ages,500-1200Previe
- Page 472 and 473:
What freedoms would yougive up for
- Page 474 and 475:
▼ Illuminatedmanuscripts,such as
- Page 476 and 477:
50°NATLANTICOCEAN42°NFrankish Kin
- Page 478 and 479:
Feudalism in Europe2MAIN IDEA WHY I
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effectively defend their lands from
- Page 482 and 483:
The Medieval ManorThe medieval mano
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3The Age of ChivalryMAIN IDEA WHY I
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Castles and Siege WeaponsAttacking
- Page 488 and 489:
songs about the joys and sorrows of
- Page 490 and 491:
The Power of the Church4MAIN IDEA W
- Page 492 and 493:
Otto’s attempt to revive Charlema
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Chapter13 AssessmentTERMS & NAMESFo
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The Formation ofWestern Europe, 800
- Page 498 and 499:
What are the dangers andrewards of
- Page 500 and 501:
on these laws. Diplomats for the po
- Page 502 and 503:
The CrusadesThe Age of Faith also i
- Page 504 and 505:
Richard the Lion-Hearted1157-1199Ri
- Page 506 and 507:
Using Primary and Secondary Sources
- Page 508 and 509:
SurnamesMany people can trace their
- Page 510 and 511:
The Commercial Revolutionneededwork
- Page 512 and 513:
▲ Thomas Aquinas’swritings focu
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Anglo-Saxons fought the battle that
- Page 516 and 517:
▲ The coronationof Philip II inRe
- Page 518 and 519:
The Hundred Years’ Warand the Pla
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The Bubonic PlagueThe bubonic plagu
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The LongbowThe longbow was cheap, e
- Page 524 and 525:
Chapter14 AssessmentTERMS & NAMESBr
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Societies and Empiresof Africa, 800
- Page 528 and 529:
How might trade benefit both sides?
- Page 530 and 531:
410 Chapter 15A1 2 3 4c d e f g h i
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▲ Carpets for salein Marrakech,Mo
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...West African Empires, 1000-1500E
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Mansa Musa’s KingdomIn 1324, Mans
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Queen Amina’s ReignIn the 1500s,
- Page 540 and 541:
Benin BronzesBenin is famous for it
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Eastern City-Statesand Southern Emp
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Kilwa grew rich because it was as f
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Great ZimbabweGreat Zimbabwe was an
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Chapter15 AssessmentTERMS & NAMESFo
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Trade Creates LinksA trade network
- Page 552 and 553:
UNIT 3 Comparing & Contrasting: Tra
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UNIT 3 Comparing & Contrasting: Tra
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436
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People and Empiresin the Americas,
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What does this headdress tell youab
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North American Culture Areas, c. 14
- Page 564 and 565:
▲ Great SerpentMound runs some1,3
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Maya Kings and Cities2MAIN IDEA WHY
- Page 568 and 569:
that human sacrifice pleased the go
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Maya ArchitectureMaya architects cr
- Page 572 and 573:
The Aztecs Control Central Mexico3M
- Page 574 and 575:
According to one of the Aztec legen
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▲ This mural, in theNational Pala
- Page 578 and 579:
Rise and Fall of the AztecsTraits o
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but used force only when necessary.
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▼ Machu Picchulies some 8,000feet
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Incan MummiesFor the Inca, death wa
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Chapter16 AssessmentPeople and Empi
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European Renaissanceand Reformation
- Page 590 and 591:
What can you learn from art?You wor
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Medici FamilyA rival family grew so
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The Renaissance Revolutionizes ArtS
- Page 596 and 597:
Italian, he wrote sonnets—14-line
- Page 598 and 599:
Renaissance IdeasInfluence Renaissa
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2The Northern RenaissanceMAIN IDEA
- Page 602 and 603:
Northern Writers Try to Reform Soci
- Page 604 and 605:
Printing Spreads Renaissance IdeasT
- Page 606 and 607:
City Life inRenaissance EuropeThrou
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3Luther Leads the ReformationMAIN I
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The Response to LutherLuther was as
- Page 612 and 613:
Still determined that his subjects
- Page 614 and 615:
Elizabeth I1533-1603Elizabeth I, li
- Page 616 and 617:
John Calvin1509-1564A quiet boy, Ca
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Francis I, Marguerite of Navarre, p
- Page 620 and 621:
Jesuit MissionariesThe work of Jesu
- Page 622 and 623:
Chapter17 AssessmentEuropean Renais
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The Muslim WorldExpands, 1300-1700P
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How do you governa diverse empire?Y
- Page 628 and 629:
Timur the Lame Halts Expansion The
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Suleyman the Lawgiver1494-1566In th
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2Cultural BlendingCASE STUDY: The S
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Azov40° ETrabzonMosulEuphrates R.C
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The Mughal Empire in India3MAIN IDE
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Akbar1542-1605Akbar was brilliant a
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Building the Taj MahalSome 20,000 w
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Cultural Blending inMughal IndiaAs
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Chapter18 Assessment Government Cul
- Page 646 and 647:
An Age of Explorationsand Isolation
- Page 648 and 649:
Would you sailinto the unknown?It i
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Prince Henry1394-1460For his role i
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A Ship’s RationsThe captain of a
- Page 654 and 655:
Europeans in the East, 1487-1700Azo
- Page 656 and 657:
China Limits European Contacts2MAIN
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The Forbidden CityWhen Yonglo moved
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including Chinese acceptance of Bri
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Japan Returns to Isolation3MAIN IDE
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Ieyasu founded the Tokugawa Shoguna
- Page 666 and 667:
▼ Japanesemerchants andJesuit mis
- Page 668 and 669:
Chapter19 AssessmentAn Age of Explo
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The Atlantic World,1492-1800Preview
- Page 672 and 673:
What might you gain orlose by joini
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▲ Portrait of aMan CalledChristop
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Population (in millions)Native Popu
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This U.S. postagestamp wasissued in
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Using Primary and Secondary Sources
- Page 682 and 683:
A Trading Empire France’s North A
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Europeans in North America60°N120
- Page 686 and 687:
The Atlantic Slave Trade3MAIN IDEA
- Page 688 and 689:
African Cooperation and Resistance
- Page 690 and 691:
Slaves also found ways to resist. T
- Page 692 and 693:
The Columbian ExchangeFew events tr
- Page 694 and 695:
MercantilismAs you have read, merca
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Chapter20 AssessmentTERMS & NAMESFo
- Page 698 and 699:
Four GovernmentsIn Unit 4, you stud
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UNIT 4 Comparing & Contrasting: Met
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UNIT 4 Comparing & Contrasting: Met
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584
- Page 706 and 707:
Absolute Monarchs inEurope, 1500-18
- Page 708 and 709:
What are the benefits anddrawbacks
- Page 710 and 711:
0°0°Defeat of the Spanish Armada,
- Page 712 and 713:
Hoping to “right every manner of
- Page 714 and 715:
Dutch Trading Empire The stability
- Page 716 and 717:
The Reign of Louis XIV2MAIN IDEA WH
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this, he became an important figure
- Page 720 and 721:
The Palace at VersaillesLouis XIV
- Page 722 and 723:
Livres (in millions)Debt of the Roy
- Page 724 and 725:
armies out of northern Germany. How
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Maria Theresa1717-1780An able ruler
- Page 728 and 729:
Absolute Rulers of Russia4MAIN IDEA
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Peter Rules AbsolutelyInspired by h
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Surviving the Russian WinterMuch of
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Parliament Limitsthe English Monarc
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The English Civil War, 1642-164558
- Page 738 and 739:
Chapter21 AssessmentAbsolute Monarc
- Page 740 and 741:
Enlightenment andRevolution, 1550-1
- Page 742 and 743:
How would you react to arevolutiona
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Saturn▲ This modelshows howCopern
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1566 Marie de CosteBlanche publishe
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▲ The famousDutch painterRembrand
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Voltaire1694-1778Voltaire befriende
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Enlightenment thinkers on many matt
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seemed to quicken in the 1700s. Sci
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The Enlightenment Spreads3MAIN IDEA
- Page 758 and 759:
▲ Joseph IIEnlightenment and Mona
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The American Revolution4MAIN IDEA W
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Changing Idea: Colonial Attachment
- Page 764 and 765:
The French RevolutionThe American R
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Chapter 22 Assessment New Idea Why
- Page 768 and 769:
The French Revolutionand Napoleon,
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How would you change anunjust gover
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The Three EstatesBACA First Estate
- Page 774 and 775:
▼ The attack on theBastille claim
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2Revolution BringsReform and Terror
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In addition, factions outside the L
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the death of all those who continue
- Page 782 and 783:
Using Primary and Secondary Sources
- Page 784 and 785:
Napoleon Bonaparte1769-1821Because
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50°N16°WATLANTIC42°NOCEANPORTUGA
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Napoleon’s Empire Collapses4MAIN
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422,000June 1812Napoleon and histro
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The Congress of Vienna5MAIN IDEA WH
- Page 794 and 795:
16°E16°W50°N42°N8°W0°UNITED K
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Chapter 23 AssessmentThe French Rev
- Page 798 and 799:
Nationalist RevolutionsSweep the We
- Page 800 and 801:
What symbolizes yourcountry’s val
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Spanish colonial armies. Together t
- Page 804 and 805:
Struggling TowardDemocracyRevolutio
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Before the Mexican revolution, Cent
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NationalismNationalism—the belief
- Page 810 and 811:
▲ In Combat Beforethe Hotel de Vi
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3NationalismCASE STUDY: Italy and G
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Armenia, the Ottomans massacred and
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Otto von Bismarck1815-1898To some G
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Revolutions in the Arts4MAIN IDEA W
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The Shift to Realism in the ArtsBy
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Revolutions in PaintingEuropean pai
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Chapter24 Assessment Country Nation
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Revolutions Across TimeRevolution
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UNIT 5 Comparing & Contrasting: Pol
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UNIT 5 Comparing & Contrasting: Pol
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712
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The IndustrialRevolution, 1700-1900
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What are fair workingconditions?You
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An Englishfarmer plants hisfields i
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Inventions in AmericaIn the United
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▲ GeorgeStephenson’sRocketrailr
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The Day of a Child Laborer, William
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One group of such workers was calle
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Child Labor TodayTo save on labor c
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Railroad System, 1840 Railroad Syst
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CHINASeaofJapanJAPANIndustrializati
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Reforming the Industrial World4MAIN
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Utopian Ideas Other reformers took
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738 Chapter 25Communism TodayCommun
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Jane Addams1860-1935After graduatin
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Chapter25 AssessmentThe Industrial
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An Age of Democracyand Progress, 18
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What ideals might be worthfighting
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Expansion of Suffrage in BritainBef
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SECTION1In 1894, Captain Alfred Dre
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0 500 MilesCANADA0 1,000 Kilometers
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The Irish Win Home RuleEnglish expa
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Life in Early AustraliaEuropean exp
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War and Expansionin the United Stat
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Civil War in the United States, 186
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Nineteenth-Century Progress4MAIN ID
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▲ AirplaneThrough trial and error
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Ernest Rutherford suggested that at
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Chapter26 AssessmentTERMS & NAMESFo
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The Age of Imperialism,1850-1914Pre
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How would you react tothe colonizer
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▲ This stampcelebrates thecentena
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Berlin Conference Divides Africa Th
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Winston Churchilland the Boer WarWi
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ImperialismImperialism is a policy
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Managing the Colony In this new age
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The Legacy of Colonial RuleEuropean
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Europeans Claim Muslim Lands3MAIN I
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▼ Muhammad Aliwas a commonsoldier
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Battle over Tobacco Tension arose b
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British Transport Trade Goods India
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Company did not take part in the re
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Imperialism in Southeast Asia5MAIN
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Siam modernized itself under the gu
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Chapter27 Assessment Africa MuslimT
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TransformationsAround the Globe,180
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Why might you seek out orresist for
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War Breaks Out This growing supply
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China: Spheres of Influence and Tre
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Modernization in Japan2MAIN IDEA WH
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abolition of extraterritorial right
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Japanese WoodblockPrintingWoodblock
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U.S. Economic Imperialism3MAIN IDEA
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Outside Investment and Interference
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Panama CanalThe Panama Canal is con
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Turmoil and Change in Mexico4MAIN I
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Juárez: Symbol of MexicanIndepende
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Emiliano Zapata 1879-1919Shortly af
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Chapter28 AssessmentTERMS & NAMESFo
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A Period of ChangeThe period from 1
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UNIT 6 Comparing & Contrasting: Sci
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UNIT 6 Comparing & Contrasting: Sci
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836
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The Great War, 1914-1918Previewing
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Should you alwayssupport an ally?Wo
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Yet another troubling development t
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BlackSeaC a uc aGEORGIARUSSIACaspia
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World War I in Europe, 1914-1918Tre
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The New Weapons of WarPoison GasSol
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Military AviationWorld War I introd
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0120°WThe World at War, 1914-19184
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▲ A woman reliefworker writes ale
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World War I StatisticsTotal Number
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4A Flawed PeaceMAIN IDEA WHY IT MAT
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58°NEurope Pre-World War I8°W0°O
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Chapter29 AssessmentThe Great WarLo
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Revolution andNationalism, 1900-193
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How do you resist oppressiverule-wi
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V.I. Lenin1870-1924In 1887, when he
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The Czar Steps Down The local prote
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Russia’s civil war proved far mor
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2TotalitarianismCASE STUDY: Stalini
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▲ Members of aRussian youthgroup
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An Agricultural Revolution In 1928,
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PropagandaYou have read how a total
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Imperial China Collapses3MAIN IDEA
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where the peasants could be the tru
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▲ A Japaneselanding partyapproach
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speeches. The demonstration, viewed
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Mustafa Kemal1881-1938As president
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Chapter30 AssessmentTERMS & NAMESBr
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Years of Crisis, 1919-1939Previewin
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Which candidatewill you choose?On a
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Literature in the 1920sThe brutalit
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▲ Women likethese marchingin a 19
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Labor-Saving Devices inthe United S
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A Worldwide Depression2MAIN IDEA WH
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again make war against each other.
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Unemployment Rate, 1928-1938World T
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Fascism Rises in Europe3MAIN IDEA W
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Benito Mussolini1883-1945Because Mu
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night of November 9, 1938, Nazi mob
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The Japanese attack on Manchuria wa
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GuernicaOn April 26, 1937, Franco
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Chapter31 AssessmentThe Great Depre
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World War II, 1939-1945Previewing M
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Under what circumstancesis war just
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Finland. The Soviets expected to wi
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▲ A London bus issubmerged in abo
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Impatient with the progress in Leni
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Almost at the same time of the Pear
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General Douglas MacArthur1880-1964D
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3The HolocaustMAIN IDEA WHY IT MATT
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Hitler believed that his plan of co
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4The Allied VictoryMAIN IDEA WHY IT
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World War II: Allied Advances, 1942
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The D-Day Invasion, June 6, 1944Qui
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The Atomic BombOn the eve of World
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Europe and Japan in Ruins5MAIN IDEA
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A New War Crimes TribunalIn 1993, t
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Chapter32 AssessmentTERMS & NAMESFo
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Technology of WarIn Unit 7, you stu
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UNIT 7 Comparing & Contrasting: The
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UNIT 7 Comparing & Contrasting: The
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960
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Restructuring thePostwar World,1945
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1Cold War: Superpowers Face OffMAIN
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Eastern Europe’s Iron CurtainA ma
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16° EThe Berlin AirliftFrom June 1
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The Space RaceBeginning in the late
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NationalistsChinese Political Oppon
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DrawingConclusionsWhy did theCultur
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RecognizingEffectsWhat effectsdid t
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War in Vietnam, 1957-1973CHINADien
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RecognizingEffectsWhat was oneof th
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How the Cold War Was FoughtDuring t
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ContrastingWhat differingU.S. and S
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ComparingIn what wayswere U.S. invo
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Imre Nagy (1896-1958)Imre Nagy was
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ContrastingIn what waysdid Nixon’
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Use the quotation and your knowledg
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995
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1The Indian SubcontinentAchieves Fr
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During the summer of 1947, 10 milli
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enemies and neighbors has become a
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regularly flood the land, ruin crop
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Southeast Asia, 1945-1975INDIABANGL
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VocabularyHouse arrest is confineme
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SECTION2Sukarnoputri faces enormous
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▲▼MarketsAs the post-colonial e
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do with the areas where ethnic grou
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British imprisoned him for nearly a
- Page 1137 and 1138:
4Conflicts in the Middle EastMAIN I
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RecognizingEffectsWhat weresome of
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ClarifyingWhat was thesignificance
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In response to the uprising, Israel
- Page 1145 and 1146:
ClarifyingWhy was therelittle ethni
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leaders accused the Taliban of allo
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Use the following excerpt from the
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1031
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1DemocracyCASE STUDY: Latin America
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SLatin America, 200380°W40°W120°
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RecognizingEffectsWhy does overreli
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Vocabularywelfare state: a governme
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Africa, 1967MOROCCOTUNISIASPANISHSA
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MakingInferencesHow did thepolicy o
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South Africa, 1948-Present1959Black
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GlasnostMikhail Gorbachev’s polic
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The Breakup of the Soviet Union, 19
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Russia Under Vladimir PutinPutin fo
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Vocabularydeposed: removedfrom powe
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Democracy Spreads in Czechoslovakia
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20°EEthnic Groups in the Former Yu
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5China: Reform and ReactionMAIN IDE
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Analyzing CausesHow did economicref
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heritage. In the first four or five
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Fall of the Wall ▼When the East G
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Use the quotation and your knowledg
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1069
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1The Impact ofScience and Technolog
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Access to the Internet, 2007Interne
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2Global Economic DevelopmentMAIN ID
- Page 1197 and 1198:
World Trading Blocs, 2003Arctic Cir
- Page 1199 and 1200:
Impact of Global DevelopmentThe dev
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Using Primary and Secondary Sources
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Weapons of Mass DestructionNations
- Page 1205 and 1206:
World AIDS Situation, 2002EASTERN E
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4TerrorismCASE STUDY: September 11,
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Europe Many countries in Europe hav
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damage the lungs and cause death. F
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5Cultures Blend in a Global AgeMAIN
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World Culture Blends Many Influence
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RecognizingEffectsHow do peoplereac
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Use the passage, which was written
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Skillbuilder HandbookRefer to the S
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Section 1: Reading Critically1.2 Fo
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Section 1: Reading Critically1.4 Id
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Section 1: Reading Critically1.6 Co
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Section 2: Higher-Order Critical Th
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Section 2: Higher-Order Critical Th
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Section 2: Higher-Order Critical Th
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Section 2: Higher-Order Critical Th
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Section 2: Higher-Order Critical Th
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Section 2: Higher-Order Critical Th
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Section 2: Higher-Order Critical Th
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Section 3: Exploring Evidence: Prin
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Section 3: Exploring Evidence: Prin
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Section 3: Exploring Evidence: Prin
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Section 3: Exploring Evidence: Prin
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iSection 4: Creating Presentations4
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Section 4: Creating Presentations4.
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Section 4: Creating Presentations4.
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Section 4: Creating Presentations4.
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Primary Source HandbookCONTENTSUnit
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from the King James Bible, Psalm 23
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from History of the Peloponnesian W
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from the Annalsby TacitusSETTING TH
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from The Pillow Bookby Sei Shōnago
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from the Popol VuhSETTING THE STAGE
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from Utopiaby Sir Thomas MoreSETTIN
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from A Vindication of the Rights of
- Page 1275 and 1276:
from the Report on Child Laborby th
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from The Natural Rights of Civilize
- Page 1279 and 1280:
from Nightby Elie WieselSETTING THE
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from the Inaugural Addressby Nelson
- Page 1283 and 1284:
An Open Letterby Cesar ChavezSETTIN
- Page 1285 and 1286:
and the rich. For a comparison of c
- Page 1287 and 1288:
nations have low per capita GDPs; m
- Page 1289 and 1290:
INFLATIONA sustained rise in the av
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Poverty in the United States, 1981-
- Page 1293 and 1294:
A rapid fall in stock prices is cal
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Nations that trade with one another
- Page 1297 and 1298:
Anabaptist [AN•uh•BAP•tihst]
- Page 1299 and 1300:
cloning [KLOH•nihng] n. the creat
- Page 1301 and 1302:
entrepreneur [AHN•truh•pruh•N
- Page 1303 and 1304:
imperialism [ihm•PEER•ee•uh
- Page 1305 and 1306:
mercantilism [MUR•kuhn•tee•LI
- Page 1307 and 1308:
peninsulares [peh•neen•soo•LA
- Page 1309 and 1310:
Scientific Revolution n. a major ch
- Page 1311 and 1312:
Triple Entente [ahn•TAHNT] n. a m