Practice Flashcards
What was the scholar-gentry in Song China?
Track your progress — Sign up free to save your progress and get smart review reminders based on spaced repetition.
All Flashcards in Topic 6.4
Below are all 24 flashcards for this topic. Sign up free to track your progress and get personalized review schedules.
6.4.112 cards
What was the scholar-gentry in Song China?
Educated, landowning officials who passed the civil service examinations and staffed the imperial bureaucracy.
What did the Chinese civil service examinations test?
Candidates were tested on the Confucian classics, at local, provincial and imperial levels; only a small fraction passed.
Why did China's population shift south after 1127?
Nomadic Jin armies conquered northern China, so the Song court fled south to Hangzhou, where fast-ripening rice could feed far more people.
What was the Grand Canal used for?
A vast network of waterways over 1,000 miles long linking northern and southern China, moving grain, goods and troops between the two regions.
When did Song China issue the world's first government paper money?
In the 1120s, building on merchant promissory notes that had already been used for large transactions.
What was footbinding?
The painful binding of young girls' feet, mainly among elite Song families, to keep them small as a mark of status and beauty.
How did elite and peasant women's lives differ in Song China?
Elite women were more likely to have bound feet and stay secluded at home; peasant women usually went unbound and kept working the fields and looms.
Who invented movable type printing, and when?
Bi Sheng, in the 1040s during the Song dynasty, using individual reusable characters made of baked clay.
What was woodblock printing used for under the Tang?
Carving a whole page of text into a wooden block to print copies, widely used to spread Buddhist texts and calendars.
What was gunpowder first developed for, and how was it later used?
First made by Chinese alchemists seeking immortality potions; by the Song period it was used in bombs, fire-lances and early rockets against northern invaders.
Why was Chinese porcelain economically important?
It became one of China's most valuable exports along the Silk Road and maritime trade routes, spreading Chinese craftsmanship and wealth abroad.
Compare how elites gained power in Song China versus feudal Western Europe.
Song China: partly merit-based, through civil service exams open in theory to able men. Feudal Europe: power passed mainly through birth and land grants within a fixed nobility.
6.4.212 cards
What is a chinampa?
A raised, artificial farming bed built from lake mud and reeds, used by the Aztecs to grow food on Lake Texcoco.
Why was Tenochtitlan remarkable?
It was a city of up to 200,000 people built on a lake island, fed by chinampas and linked to the mainland by causeways and aqueducts.
What was tribute in the Aztec Empire?
Regular payments of goods (maize, cloth, cacao, gold, captives) that conquered peoples owed the Aztec state, while keeping their own local rulers.
Who were the pochteca?
A hereditary class of Aztec long-distance merchants who traded in luxury goods and also gathered intelligence on distant towns.
Describe the four main ranks of Aztec society.
Emperor (tlatoani) at the top, then nobles (pipiltin), then commoners (macehualtin) who farmed and fought, then slaves (tlacotin), often war captives.
What was the trans-Saharan trade built around?
Camel caravans carrying gold north (from West Africa) and salt south (from Saharan mines), taxed by Mali's rulers.
Who was Mansa Musa and why is he famous?
The Mali emperor whose 1324 hajj to Mecca showcased vast wealth — he reportedly gave away so much gold in Cairo that its value fell for years.
Why was Timbuktu significant?
It grew into a major centre of Islamic learning in the Mali Empire, home to mosques, libraries and the Sankore university.
Compare how the Aztec and Mali empires generated their wealth.
Aztecs: chinampa farming plus tribute extracted from conquered peoples. Mali: taxing trade routes carrying gold and salt, without directly mining the gold.
Compare how the Aztec and Mali empires kept their elites and subjects loyal.
Aztecs relied on tribute enforced by fear of the army; Mali relied more on trade networks and shared Islamic faith binding rulers and merchants.
What was the House of Wisdom equivalent in Mali?
Timbuktu's Sankore university and libraries, which attracted scholars from as far as Cairo and Mecca to study and copy manuscripts.
Why must a 'two-region' Paper 2 answer name both societies early?
Because examiners require explicit engagement with two named regions throughout — the Aztec or Mali empire can serve as a strong non-European second region alongside Western Europe or the Islamic Middle East.
Topic 6.4 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Case studies: society and economy across regions
History exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
Want smart review reminders?
Sign up free to track your progress. Our spaced repetition algorithm will tell you exactly which cards to review and when.
Start Free