Decline of the Three Gunpowder Empires Essay

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    Gunpowder Empires Essay

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    From the 1300s to 1700s, three powers dominated parts of Africa, Asia, and Europe. These powers were the Ottoman, Safavid, and Mughal Empires. The success of these three is contributed largely to their strong armies and mastery of advanced artillery. This leading weaponry allowed them to conquer neighboring peoples and expand their territory exponentially. Due to this common attribute, these three Empires are all referred to as “Gunpowder Empires”. The longest lasting of these was the Ottoman Empire. In the fourteenth century, this empire began cultivating a mastery of advanced artillery such as muskets and cannons. The Empire had an army of 30,000 elite soldiers that the Ottoman rulers brought together by raisings slaves from the Christian…

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    Question1 The Ottomans, Safavids, and Mughals were known as “gunpowder empires”. Gunpowder Empires were empires that used modern warfare techniques with firearms to succeed in military conquest (The Gunpowder Empires, n.d.). All three empires were Islamic. The Ottomans were the first of the Islamic empires to be considered a gunpowder one (Gelvin, 2015). They used the largest canons of the time that could destroy walls, this aided their conquering of Constantinople. The Safavids learned of…

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    Explain the apparent military decline of East Asia after 1700 East Asia had been regarded as one of the most military advanced region of the globe since the early firearms were invented by the Chinese before the Europeans perfected them. Indeed, the earliest known formula for gunpowder is found in a Chinese work dating from the 800s. This allowed the Chinese to apply it to warfare through producing a variety of gunpowder weapons among them rockets, bombs, mines, and rockets before inventing the…

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    period, and environmental structure had kept its roots. Although things were kept the same, change was also present. In 100 C.E, the Han Dynasty had ruled all of China, but soon fell in 220 C.E due to when the son of “Cao Cao” forces Emperor Xian from his throne. When this occurred, he became the emperor of Cao Wei, one of the Three Kingdoms that formed after the Han Dynasty fell. This soon started the warring period. The Jin Dynasty soon claims to “reunite” china from 265 C.E. This had lasted…

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    dramatically between 1550-1650. With new technologies came exciting warfare ideas and strategies. This new development started with the gunpowder revolution, especially in Europe in the mid 1400’s. Guns began to develop rapidly and by the early 1600’s flintlock muskets were the standard. The invention of the musket completely reinvented battles and tactics. With these new lethal and penetrating weapons, it changed the face of combat. Armor during this time became obsolete along with lancers…

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    The Silk Road traded many things because of all the countries it goes through. The main good is silk from China which was very rare because only China knew how to make it.They also traded pottery, paper, and gunpowder. These were all invented by China and a lot of people wanted it especially Romans. Moreover, India traded goods such as, spices. Slaves, metals and weapons, ivory, pearls, and precious gems. Then there was the Byzantine Empire Empire. This was known as the “gateway to Europe”…

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    of Religion By: Phillip Ableidinger, Jin Johnson, and Matthew Kellen “Discuss the relationship between politics and religion by examining the wars of religion. Choose three specific examples from the following: the Dutch Revolt, the French wars of religion, the English Civil war, and the Thirty Years’ war.” Politics and religion have for long been two sides of the same coin. Although it’s easy to dismiss their relationship as desultory or ineffectual, it has jointly wielded considerable power…

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    being: one of the three great, original periods in the history of logic [and] the peculiarly medieval contributions to logic were developed and cultivated to a very high degree. It was no longer a matter of interpreting Aristotle, or commenting on the works of the “Old Logic” or the “New Logic”; wholly new genres of logical writing sprang up, and entirely new logical and semantic notions were developed. (p. 16) Thus, Medieval philosophy, and the beliefs of Eriugena, certainly appear to have…

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    Slave Trade The European demand for trade was at an all time high because of the need for slave labor on the American plantations. The entire enterprise was in the European’s hands. The Slave trade had a huge impact on the African population, the Europeans were taking a massive amount of Africans to use as slave labor. As the demand for slaves grew the conditions on the ships got worse. The cargo ships used were overcrowded, unsanitary, and covered in diseases. Many slaves died on the…

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