The world before it was one.
East Asia, Dar al-Islam, South & Southeast Asia, the Americas, Africa, and Europe before the great convergence.
In 1200, the planet held a few hundred million people in dozens of distinct civilizations that mostly knew of each other through merchants and rumor. Song China was the technological frontier; the Islamic world was the largest contiguous trade network; Mali traded gold across the Sahara; the Aztec and Inca built tribute empires the Spanish would later wreck; feudal Europe was the Eurasian backwater. Knowing the period’s diversity is the key to seeing what changed when global integration began.
The unit, topic by topic.
Beyond the AP rubric: the era behind Unit 1
The 1200–1450 stretch in this unit lives inside a much wider story. For long-form context — themes, primary sources, and the moments that didn’t make the CED — read the era page(s):
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1.1
Developments in East Asia
Song China at the technological frontier; Heian Japan; Korea’s Goryeo dynasty.GOV · CDI · ECN
What to studySong China (960–1279) was the world’s most urbanized society. Champa rice from Vietnam fueled population growth; gunpowder, movable type, paper money, and the magnetic compass all originated here. Neo-Confucianism reasserted hierarchy and women’s subordination, while the civil service exam selected officials by merit (mostly from the gentry). Heian Japan adopted Chinese script, Buddhism, and Confucian government before developing distinctive aesthetics. Korea’s Goryeo dynasty synthesized Chinese influences while innovating: Korean movable type predated Gutenberg by two centuries.
Key termsChampa rice · Neo-Confucianism · Civil Service Exam · Junks · Grand Canal · Foot bindingExam focusBe ready to cite SPECIFIC Song innovations and explain how they enabled commercial growth and urbanization. Compare Song to its East Asian neighbors. -
1.2
Developments in Dar al-Islam
Abbasid decline, the rise of new Islamic states, scientific and cultural achievements.GOV · CDI
What to studyAfter the Mongol sack of Baghdad (1258), Abbasid power collapsed but Islamic civilization expanded. Turkic peoples (Seljuks, Mamluks, Ottomans) became its political backbone. Sufism’s mystical-personal Islam helped spread the faith into Central Asia, India, and West Africa by adapting to local cultures. The House of Wisdom’s preserved Greek texts—Aristotle, Galen, Ptolemy—reached Europe via Cordoba and helped trigger the Renaissance. Mathematicians like al-Khwarizmi (algebra, algorithms) and astronomers like al-Tusi shaped modern science.
Key termsSufism · Abbasid Caliphate · Mamluks · House of Wisdom · al-Khwarizmi · Ibn BattutaExam focusConnect Islamic intellectual transmission to the European Renaissance. Be specific about which texts/ideas crossed. -
1.3
Developments in South & Southeast Asia
The Delhi Sultanate, the Bhakti movement, Khmer and Srivijaya empires.GOV · CDI
What to studyThe Delhi Sultanate (1206–1526) brought Islamic rule to north India, imposing the jizya tax on non-Muslims but also catalyzing Hindu-Islamic cultural fusion. The Bhakti movement countered with devotional Hinduism accessible across castes—it would echo in Indian Sufi Islam. In Southeast Asia, the Khmer Empire built Angkor Wat (the largest religious monument on Earth); Srivijaya controlled the Strait of Malacca and grew rich taxing Indian Ocean trade. Both were Hindu-Buddhist polities adapting Indian religion to local cultures.
Key termsDelhi Sultanate · Bhakti Movement · Vijayanagara · Angkor Wat · Srivijaya · MajapahitExam focusCompare how Hindu/Buddhist/Muslim states managed religious diversity. Cite specific examples of cultural syncretism. -
1.4
State Building in the Americas
Aztec tribute empire, Inca road network, Mississippian and Pueblo societies.GOV · ENV
What to studyThe Aztec Triple Alliance (1428–1521) ruled central Mexico from Tenochtitlán through tribute and human sacrifice. The Inca Empire (1438–1533) stretched ~2,500 miles, knit together by 25,000 miles of roads, terrace agriculture, the mit’a labor draft, and quipu record-keeping. Both were technically literate states without alphabetic writing. North of the Rio Grande, Mississippian Cahokia (~20,000 people c. 1100) was larger than London at the time. Pueblo societies in the Southwest built the cliff dwellings at Mesa Verde and Chaco Canyon.
Key termsAztec / Mexica · Tenochtitlán · Inca · Mit’a · Quipu · Cahokia · MississippianExam focusDon’t treat the Americas as primitive. Cite the engineering, statecraft, and population scale that European invaders exploited and admired. -
1.5
State Building in Africa
Mali, Great Zimbabwe, the Swahili coast.GOV · ECN · CDI
What to studyMali (c. 1235–1670s) controlled the Trans-Saharan gold trade; Mansa Musa’s 1324 hajj brought so much gold to Cairo that prices crashed for a decade. Timbuktu was a center of Islamic scholarship. Great Zimbabwe (c. 1100–1450) built dry-stone palaces from gold, cattle, and Indian Ocean trade. The Swahili coast (Kilwa, Mombasa) blended Bantu and Arab cultures into “Swahili” through monsoon trade with India and China—Chinese porcelain shards still wash up on Kenyan beaches.
Key termsMali · Mansa Musa · Timbuktu · Great Zimbabwe · Swahili coast · KilwaExam focusAfrica was wealthy and connected. Cite specific trade goods (gold, salt, cattle, ivory, slaves) and the routes that moved them. -
1.6
Developments in Europe
Feudalism, the Crusades, the Renaissance begins.GOV · CDI · ECN
What to studyDecentralized feudal Europe was the Eurasian backwater of 1200, rebuilding from the Roman collapse. The Catholic Church and feudal manors organized society. The Crusades (1095–1291) reopened Mediterranean trade and exposed Europeans to Islamic learning. The Black Death (1347) killed roughly a third of Europe but broke the manorial system: surviving peasants demanded wages. By 1400 the Italian Renaissance was beginning—humanism, perspective, recovered classical texts. Europe’s ascent in the next era would build on these foundations.
Key termsFeudalism · Manorialism · Crusades · Black Death · Renaissance · HumanismExam focusFrame Europe as RECOVERING from a long decline, not yet dominant. The 1400s set the stage; the 1500s execute. -
1.7
Comparison in the Period 1200–1450
Comparing political and cultural systems across regions.GOV · CDI
What to studyAP World loves comparison. Be ready to compare: tribute and labor systems (Aztec tribute vs. Inca mit’a vs. Mali gold trade); religious policy (Delhi Sultanate jizya vs. Aztec sacrifice vs. Christian crusade); state legitimation (Mandate of Heaven vs. divine right vs. caliphal succession); urbanism (Hangzhou vs. Tenochtitlán vs. Cordoba vs. Cahokia). The strongest essays cite SPECIFIC features of each side and tie comparisons to causation.
Key termsComparison · Causation · Continuity & change · Specific evidenceExam focusOn comparison FRQs, give two specific facts per side and explain WHY they’re alike or different (the cause behind the contrast).
Connect to your study
Era page: see the Eras of World History hub for the period’s broader global context.
Practice: FRQ Lab · Practice MCQs · Unit 1 flashcards