Study Session
Unit 2: Networks of Exchange (1200-1450)
Mode: MCQ Sprint — Multiple choice pacing
5
Key themes
50
Flashcard topics
51
Sample questions
45-minute plan
Keep the pace brisk so you hit every rep.
- 5 min: Warm-up — Skim key themes + anchor a timeline point.
- 12 min: Flashcard reps — Run 8 terms fast and define them out loud.
- 20 min: MCQ set — Complete one 10-question sprint with a timer.
- 8 min: Review — Log misses + write 2 evidence reminders.
Flashcard set
Start with these eight terms.
Practice prompt
Use this as your main timed prompt.
LEQ
Evaluate the extent to which the Silk Roads fostered cultural exchange between 1200 and 1450 CE.
MCQ Sprint focus checklist
Use these cues while you work the prompt.
- Set a 7-minute timer for 10 questions
- Mark any stem you got wrong twice
- Write one sentence on why the right answer works
Wrap-up checklist
Close the loop so you retain what you just practiced.
- Log 2 concepts you still need to review
- Add 3 flashcards to tomorrow's deck
- Write a 1-sentence thesis in your own words
Additional prompts
Use these to extend the session or build a full practice set.
LEQ
Evaluate the extent to which the Silk Roads fostered cultural exchange between 1200 and 1450 CE.
Multiple Choice
The expansion of the Mali Empire in West Africa during the period 1200-1450 was primarily due to its control over:
- The gold and salt trade.
- Transoceanic voyages across the Atlantic.
- Agricultural innovations like the three-field system.
- The use of gunpowder weaponry.
Multiple Choice
Which factor most directly facilitated cultural exchange along the Indian Ocean trade network?
- Seasonal monsoon winds
- Overland caravanserai routes
- State-sponsored isolation policies
- The Atlantic slave trade
SAQ
Explain ONE way Mongol rule affected the Silk Roads. Explain ONE way the Silk Roads affected the spread of disease during 1200-1450.
Multiple Choice
Which technology most directly improved Indian Ocean navigation during 1200-1450?
- Astrolabe and lateen sail
- Steam engine
- Telegraph cables
- Railroads
Multiple Choice
Caravanserai along the Silk Roads primarily:
- Provided lodging and security for merchants
- Served as royal palaces
- Functioned as military forts for crusaders
- Stored ocean-going fleets
Multiple Choice
A major effect of the Pax Mongolica was:
- Reduced trade across Eurasia
- Increased cultural and commercial exchange
- End of Chinese maritime activity
- Isolation of the Islamic world
Multiple Choice
Which port city best illustrates Indian Ocean commercial activity?
- Calicut
- Tenochtitlan
- Potosi
- Moscow
Multiple Choice
Zheng He's voyages primarily aimed to:
- Colonize the Americas
- Project Ming power and secure tributary ties
- End all Indian Ocean trade
- Discover overland routes to Europe
Multiple Choice
The Black Death spread most directly through:
- Trade routes connecting Eurasia
- Religious pilgrimages to Rome
- Forced migration in the Atlantic world
- Industrial urbanization
Multiple Choice
Bills of exchange were important because they:
- Allowed merchants to transfer credit without carrying coin
- Endorsed by monarchs to abolish trade
- Replaced silk as a commodity
- Were used to fund crusades only
Multiple Choice
Which goods were commonly traded on the Silk Roads?
- Silk and porcelain
- Cotton and sugar from the Americas
- Rubber and petroleum
- Steam engines and railcars
Multiple Choice
Sogdian merchants are best known for:
- Facilitating Silk Road trade across Central Asia
- Leading Portuguese exploration in the Atlantic
- Founding the Ottoman Empire
- Abolishing slavery in West Africa
Multiple Choice
The Strait of Malacca was significant because it:
- Connected the Indian Ocean to the South China Sea
- Linked the Mediterranean to the Atlantic
- Provided the only land route to China
- Marked the boundary of the Roman Empire
Multiple Choice
A key feature of Swahili city-states was:
- Agrarian isolation from trade networks
- Cultural blending of African and Islamic traditions
- Dependence on transatlantic slavery
- Rule by European monarchs
Multiple Choice
Mansa Musa's hajj most clearly shows:
- West Africa's integration into Islamic networks
- The decline of trans-Saharan trade
- Chinese dominance of the Mediterranean
- Japan's maritime expansion
Multiple Choice
Which innovation most directly increased trans-Saharan trade capacity?
- Camel saddle
- Printing press
- Gunpowder
- Steamship
Multiple Choice
Ibn Battuta's travels are significant because they:
- Illustrate the reach of Islamic and trade connections
- Describe the conquest of the Americas
- Document the Industrial Revolution
- Show the decline of Mongol rule in Japan
Multiple Choice
Chinese junk ships were important because they:
- Supported large-scale maritime trade
- Enabled overland caravan travel
- Replaced horse cavalry in Europe
- Ended the use of monsoon winds
Multiple Choice
Which development best represents cultural syncretism along trade routes?
- Swahili language and culture blending African and Islamic elements
- European isolation from global trade
- End of caravan travel
- Decline of port cities
Multiple Choice
Malacca's rise was mostly due to:
- Control of a strategic trade chokepoint
- Abundant silver mines
- Defeat of the Mongols
- Complete isolation from Islam
Multiple Choice
Which statement best describes diasporic merchant communities?
- Minority trading groups that linked markets across regions
- Nomadic armies that ended trade
- Rural peasant communes
- Isolated monastic orders
Multiple Choice
Technological transfer along trade routes included:
- Gunpowder and the compass
- Steam engines and telephones
- Electricity and automobiles
- Plastic and microchips
Multiple Choice
Which city was a major Swahili trading port?
- Kilwa
- Samarkand
- Kyoto
- Lisbon
Multiple Choice
The primary effect of increased commercialization in Song China was:
- Growth of urban markets and specialization
- Collapse of trade networks
- Elimination of paper money
- End of foreign contact
Multiple Choice
Which factor best explains the diffusion of Islam to Southeast Asia?
- Merchant trade and Sufi missionaries
- European conquest
- Isolationist policies
- Crusader states
Multiple Choice
The Mongol Yam system functioned primarily as:
- A postal relay network for communication
- A religious pilgrimage route
- A maritime convoy system
- An agricultural irrigation network
Multiple Choice
Which of the following best describes Indian Ocean trade?
- Seasonal monsoon winds enabled predictable maritime routes
- Caravan routes dominated all exchanges
- Trade was dominated by the Atlantic world
- All commerce was controlled by Europe
Multiple Choice
A major consequence of long-distance trade in this period was:
- Spread of religions and technologies
- End of cultural exchange
- Complete economic isolation
- Elimination of urban centers
Multiple Choice
Marco Polo's accounts are useful because they:
- Documented Eurasian connectivity under Mongol rule
- Described the Industrial Revolution
- Focused on the Atlantic slave trade
- Explained the Meiji Restoration
Multiple Choice
Which of the following best explains why caravan cities prospered?
- They provided storage, markets, and security for traders
- They were isolated from trade routes
- They controlled ocean currents
- They hosted plantation agriculture
Multiple Choice
The treasure fleets are most associated with:
- Ming China's maritime expeditions
- Portuguese Atlantic colonization
- Aztec tribute collection
- Russian expansion into Siberia
Multiple Choice
Which statement best describes the relationship between trade and urbanization?
- Trade networks stimulated growth of port and caravan cities
- Trade caused the decline of cities
- Urbanization ended long-distance trade
- Cities became completely rural and agrarian
SAQ
Explain ONE way Indian Ocean trade differed from Silk Road trade. Explain ONE similarity between the two networks.
SAQ
Describe ONE way Mongol rule facilitated trade. Explain ONE negative consequence of Mongol rule for settled societies.
SAQ
Explain ONE way the Black Death affected societies in Eurasia. Explain ONE way trade networks recovered after the plague.
SAQ
Describe ONE role played by Swahili city-states in Indian Ocean commerce. Explain ONE cultural effect of that commerce on East Africa.
SAQ
Explain ONE way the Mali Empire benefited from trans-Saharan trade. Explain ONE way Islam spread through those trade routes.
SAQ
Describe ONE technological innovation that improved long-distance trade. Explain ONE impact of that innovation on commercial activity.
SAQ
Explain ONE reason Chinese maritime trade expanded during the Song/Yuan period. Explain ONE way the state regulated or influenced trade.
SAQ
Describe ONE example of cultural diffusion along the Silk Roads. Explain ONE way diffusion affected a receiving society.
SAQ
Explain ONE reason port cities like Malacca became powerful. Explain ONE challenge such cities faced.
SAQ
Describe ONE example of a diasporic merchant community. Explain ONE advantage these communities had in long-distance trade.
SAQ
Explain ONE way the Indian Ocean trade network encouraged the spread of Islam. Explain ONE way local cultures adapted Islamic practices.
SAQ
Describe ONE way states attempted to profit from trade routes. Explain ONE way merchants reduced risks during travel.
SAQ
Explain ONE reason the Silk Roads declined by the mid-1400s. Explain ONE continuity in Eurasian trade despite the decline.
SAQ
Describe ONE example of technological transfer from East Asia to the west. Explain ONE impact of that transfer.
LEQ
Evaluate the extent to which the Mongol Empire transformed long-distance trade between 1200 and 1450.
LEQ
Compare and contrast the economic and cultural impacts of the Silk Roads and the Indian Ocean trade networks from 1200 to 1450.
DBQ
Using the provided documents, analyze the causes of increased interregional trade in Afro-Eurasia between 1200 and 1450.
DBQ
Using the provided documents, analyze cultural exchanges that resulted from Indian Ocean trade in the period 1200-1450.