Arabia, AD 570
Transcription
Arabia, AD 570
Name Class Date History and Geography The Islamic World Arabia, AD 570 The Arabian Peninsula is located near the intersection of Africa, Asia, and Europe. This made it well suited for trade between all three continents. By AD 570, traders were using both land and sea routes to carry goods between all three continents. ELEVATION Feet N E W S 13,120 6,560 1,640 656 (Sea level) 0 Below sea level Meters 4,000 2,000 500 200 0 (Sea level) Below sea level Land trade route Sea trade route 0 0 250 250 500 Miles 500 Kilometers MAP ACTIVITY 1. On the map, draw an X on the city that is located between a desert in Arabia and a mountain range in Persia. 2. Use a bright color to trace a sea trade route from India to Constantinople. Copyright © by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved. 19 5621_MSH_HistGeo_Ch12.indd 19 The Islamic World 6/16/05 11:45:36 AM Name Class Date History and Geography The Islamic World, continued 3. Use a second bright color to trace a land trade route from India to Constantinople. 4. Use a different bright color to trace a sea and land trade route from India to Constantinople. ANALYZING MAPS 1. Movement What is the shortest trade route between India and Constantinople: the land route, the sea route, or the land and sea route? 2. Place What city in Arabia was located on both a sea route and a land route to Europe? 3. Location What two deserts are found in Arabia? 4. Human/Environment Interaction Based on the map, what were some of the challenges traders traveling from Asia to Medina faced? 5. Compare/Contrast What two cities were on sea trade routes to Europe? How were they alike? How were they different? Copyright © by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved. 20 The Islamic World Answer Key History and Geography Economics and History MAP ACTIVITY WHAT DID YOU LEARN? 1. X should be on Ctesiphon, in You may wish to verify that students’ lists and answers to activity questions are properly completed. 1. Trade enables people to have a greater variety of goods. Also, people along trade routes make money selling goods and services to the traders. 2. Jobs are lost and wealth declines. 3. It would make the empire less wealthy and its control over faraway places less strong. 4. Gunpowder cannons would break the walls. A wall is no longer a useful defense. northeastern Arabia. 2. Route should start in India and go to a port in southern Arabia and then to Aden. It should then go through the Red Sea, then the Mediterranean Sea, and end at Constantinople. 3. Route should start in India, extend upward through Asia, veer left through Persia to Ctesiphon, then move to Antioch, and end at Constantinople. 4. Route should start in India, go through the Arabian Sea to Muscat, continue through the Persian Gulf and then go over land to Ctesiphon. From this location, land routes may vary: one goes through Antioch to Constantinople and one goes through Damascus to Antioch to Constantinople. Social Studies Skills PRACTICE THE SKILL Students’ answers may vary. Sample answer: At the time that Muhammad began to write the messages he claimed that he received from Allah, many Arabs believed in more than one god: they believed in spirits in natural objects or they considered the sun and moon as deities. When Muhammad preached that there was only one god, Allah, some Arabs were probably angry and resentful that their beliefs were being challenged and replaced. ANALYZING MAPS 1. 2. 3. 4. the land and sea route Antioch the Syrian Desert and the Nafud Desert crossing the Zagros Mountains and traveling through the Syrian Desert and the Nafud Desert 5. Alexandria and Antioch shipped goods directly to Europe. Both cities were on the Mediterranean Sea and were on sea routes to Constantinople. Both cities were on trade routes that originated in Asia. They differed in that Antioch was on both a land route and a sea route to Europe. APPLY THE SKILL Students’ answers will vary, but may reflect awareness of violence or threats of violence that have occurred in school settings. Chapter Review REVIEWING VOCABULARY, TERMS, AND PEOPLE 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. caliph Muhammad jihad Islam tolerance minaret Copyright © by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved. 36 The Islamic World