471 55 9MB
English Pages 164 [178] Year 2012
Sources in Patterns of World History Volume 2: Since 1400
Edited by Carey Roberts
Sources in Patterns of World History Volume 2: Since 1400
Edited by Carey Roberts H. Micheal Tarver Arkansas Tech University
New York Oxford OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
Oxford University Press, Inc., publishes works that further Oxford University’s objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education. Oxford New York Auckland Cape Town Dares Salaam Hong Kong Karachi Kuala Lumpur Madrid Melbourne Mexico City Nairobi New Delhi Shanghai Taipei Toronto With offices in Argentina Austria Brazil Chile Czech Republic France Greece Guatemala Hungary Italy Japan Poland Portugal Singapore South Korea Switzerland Thailand Turkey Ukraine Vietnam Copyright © 2012 by Oxford University Press, Inc.
For titles covered by Section 112 of the US Higher Education Opportunity Act, please visit www.oup.com/us/he for the latest information about pricing and alternate formats.
Published by Oxford University Press, Inc. 198 Madison Avenue, New York, New York, 10016 http://www.oup.com Oxford is a registered trademark of Oxford University Press All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of Oxford University Press.
The editors acknowledge the work of several individuals in making this sourcebook possible, especially Carolyn Neel, Carlos Marquez, John Derek Rowley, Antonio Contreras, Lyndsey Mosquito, Natasha Scruggs, John Cotton, Kyla Mclsaac, and Rod Williamson. ISBN 978-0-19-984618-4 Printing number: 987654321
Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper
Table of Contents Primary Sources: How to Read Them and Why They are Important in World History
i
15.
The Rise of Empires in the Americas, 600-1550
6
15.1
The Founding of Tenochtitl^n
5
15.2
Human Sacrifice by the Aztecs
8
15.3
Machu Picchu
g
15.4
The Inca Census
16.
The Ottoman-Habsburg Struggle and European Overseas Expansion, 1450-1600
12
16.1
The Tribute of Children
12
16.2
A European Ambassador Reports on the Ottomans
14
16.3
An Ottoman Travel Journal
I5
16.4
The Touma/of Christopher Columbus
18
17.
Renaissance, Reformation, and the New Science in Europe, 1450-1700
17.1
Marsilio Ficino, “Letter to Paul of Middelburg”
20
21
17.2
Laura Cereta to Cardinal Ascanio Maria Sforza
21
17.3
John Calvin, Prayer from Commentary on Hosea
22
17.4
Galileo Galilei, Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems
24
17.5
Antony van Leeuwenhoek’s “Animalcules"
25
17.6
Galileo’s Views of the Moon
26
17.7
Peter the Great, “Correspondence with Alexis, 1715
27
18.
New Patterns in New Worlds: Colonialism and Indigenous Responses in the Americas, 1500-1800
18.1
Aztecs Recount the Beginning of the War with the Conquistadors
30
18.2
Letter from Hernando de Soto
31
18.3
Coronado’s Report to Viceroy Mendoza
33
18.4
Increase Mather on King Philip’s Death
35
18.5
Reasons for Colonizing North America
36
30
iv
Table of Contents
19.
African Kingdoms, the Atlantic Slave Trade, and the Origins of Black America, 1450-1800
19.1
Leo Africanus on Timbuktu
19.2
“Krotoa” from the
19.3
The Arab Slave Trade
41
19.4
An Account of the Atlantic Slave Trade
42
19.5
Phillis Wheatly, "To the Right Honourable William, Earl of Dartmouth..."
43
19.6
Slave Market, Pernambuco, Brazil, 1824
44
20.
The Mughal Empire: Muslim Rulers and Hindu Subjects, 1400-1750 45
20.1
Ihe Ain-i-Akbari
46
20.2
The Journey to the Court of Akbar
47
20.3
Jahangir Debates with the Hindus
48
20.4
Summary of the Reasons Which Led Akbar to Renounce Islam
49
20.5
Akbar on Proper Behavior
50
20.6
The Habits and Manners of Aurangzeb
51
21.
Regulating the “Inner” and the “Outer” Domains of China and Japan, 1500-1800
53
21.1
Buddhist World Map, 1710
53
21.2
The Seclusion of Japan
55
21.3
The Philosophy of Wang Yang-Ming
56
21.4
Qianlong, Letter to George III
57
22.
Nation-States and Patterns of Culture in Europe and North America, 1750-1871
6i
22.1
Jean Jacques Rousseau, The Soc/a/Confracf
61
22.2
Olympe de Gouges,
22.3
Charles Maurice Talleyrand to Louis XVIII
68
22.4
Abraham Lincoln’s First Inaugural Address
70
22.5
Proclamation of the German Empire
72
22.6
Victor Emmanuel and the Catholic Church
73
23.
Industrialization and its Discontents, 1750-1914
75
23.1
Adam Smith, Wea/fh of/Vaf/ons
23.2
John Stuart Mill,
23.3
Frederich Engels,
23.4
Charles Dickens,
Journal of Jan van Riebeeck
Declaration of the Rights of Woman and the Female Citizen
On Liberty Condition of the Working Class in England David Copperfield
38
38 40
63
75 75 76 77
Table of Contents
V
23.5
Parliamentary Report on English Female Miners, 1842
78
23.7
Advertisment for a Vitascope, 1896
80
23.6
Friedrich Nietzsche, from
Beyond Good and Evil
83
24.
The Challenge of Modernity: East Asia, 1750-1910
85
24.1
The Nanjing Treaty
85
24.2
A Chinese Traveler on the Marvels of Western Technology
87
24.3
Jesuits in China
87
24.4
The “Opening” of Japan
88
24.5
The King of Siam to President Buchanan
90
25.
The Challenge of Modernity: The Ottoman and Russian Empires, 1683-1908
25.1
Peter the Great’s Decree on Western Dress
93
25.2
Petyr Chaadaev, “Philosophical Letters”
94
25.3
A British Diplomat Comments on the Ottoman Army
95
25.4
The Gulhane Decree
95
25.5
“Mr. Sansonov”
96
25.6
The Iranian and Turkish Constitutional Revolutions of 1906 and 1908
97
26.
The New Imperialism in the Nineteenth Century
26.1
Dadabhai Naoroji on the Benefits Detriments of British Rule in India
100
26.2
The Diamond Fields of South Africa, 1872
102
26.3
Rudyard Kipling, “The White Man’s Burden”
103
26.4
Edward 0. Morel, The Black Man's Burden
104
26.5
Raden Ayu Kartini,
26.6
Teapickers, northern India
110
27.
Creoles and Caudillos: Latin America in the Nineteenth Century
in
27.1
Alexander Von Humboldt on New Spain
112
27.2
Simbn de Bolivar, His Message to the Congress of Angostura
113
27.3
Pope Leo XIII,
In Plurimis
114
27.4
Jose Marti, “Our America"
115
27.5
United States Recognition of Cuban Independence
118
28.
World War and Competing Visions of Modernity to 1945
28.1
Theodore Roosevelt, “War for Righteousness”
119
28.2
Joseph Stalin on Liquidating the Kulaks
121
Letters of a Javanese Princess
92
lOO
107
119
vi
Table of Contents
28.3
Critics of Industrialization: The Southern Agrarians
122
28.4
Mohandas Gandhi and the Quit India Movement
124
28.5
Mussolini Repudiates on Political Liberalism, 1923
125
28.6
Adolf Hitler, German Economic Goals and the Jewish Question
126
28.7
Korean “Comfort Girls"
127
29.
Reconstruction, the Cold War, and Decolonization, 1945-1962
29.1
The Marshall Plan
131
29.2
Dwight D. Eisenhower on the Suez Crisis
133
29.3
Cuban Missile Crisis
134
29.4
Jawaharlal Nehru, "Why India is Non-Aligned"
137
29.5
Juan Perdn, excerpt from The l7o/ce of Peron
139
29.6
Jomo Kenyatta, from
29.7
Babies Being Weighed, North Korea, 1955
30.
The End of the Cold War, Western Social Transformation, and the Developing World, 1963-1991
30.1
The US Civil Rights Act of 1964
145
30.2
National Organization for Women, Sfafemenf of Purpose
146
30.3
The Yom Kippur/Ramadan War
149
30.4
Postcolonialism in Africa
150
30.5
Mikhail Gorbachev on the Arms Race Between the USSR and the US
151
30.6
The Tiananmen Square Massacre, 1989: a Poet Remembers
153
31.
A Fragile Democratic-Capitalist World Order, 1991-Present
31.1
Tim Berners Lee, “Enquire Within Upon Everything”
158
31.2
“Death by Government”
159
31.3
Rachel Carson, from S/teofSpr/Pg
161
31.4
The Sovereign Debt Crisis
161
31.5
James Tooley, from
Facing ML Kenya: The Tribal Life of the Gikuyu
The Beautiful Tree
130
141 144
145
157
163
Sources in Patterns of World History
y-;
ft lifw ^