Chapter 3 and 4 AP world history

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Across
  1. 2. the most stunning architectural expression of Hinduism in the temple complex
  2. 8. originally domesticated in Southeast Asia and provided both agriculture and economic growth in Africa.
  3. 9. The people who herded large groups of animals for grazing environments in varying climates.
  4. 10. politically united the region shortly after the withdrawal of the Mongols
  5. 11. the alternating wind currents that blew northeast during the summer months and southwest during the winter.
  6. 13. allowed Mongol leaders to know what was available to them and made possible the systematic taxation of conquered people.
  7. 14. provided rapid communication across the empires and fostered trade as well.
  8. 15. could go for ten days without water, and finally made possible the long trek across the Sahara.
  9. 16. with various specialized offices took shape in the new capital of Karakorum.
  10. 17. 7 feet frame of a Chinese man who
  11. 18. Dynasty/Great Khanate in China, Ilkhanate in the Southeast and Persia, and the Chagatai Khanate in Central Asia
  12. 21. who became the first il-khan (subordinate khan) of Persia.
  13. 22. personally loyal to the emperor exercised great authority, much to the dismay of the official bureaucrats.
Down
  1. 1. facilitated Indian Ocean commerce and they were permanent settlements of foreign traders at various points along the Indian Ocean routes.
  2. 3. a widely traveled Arab scholar, merchant, and public official, visited the Swahili coast in the early fourteenth century
  3. 4. Chinese power and prestige in the Indian Ocean and exerted Chinese control over foreign trade in the region.
  4. 5. in the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries helped an independent Persia reunite for a sustained period.
  5. 6. A form of Buddhism in which it was excluded from China.
  6. 7. powerful state which seems clearly connected to the growing trade in gold to the coast and to the wealth from its large herds of cattle.
  7. 12. the inns or guest houses for caravans located all along the trade routes from the eastern Mediterranean to China
  8. 19. outlook rejected the religious aspects of both Buddhism and Daoism but appreciated the high moral standards of Buddhist teachings
  9. 20. state-approved associations of merchants that could pool there resources and limit there losses in the event a caravan failed.