Here's an interesting podcast about the Congress of Vienna from BBC Radio. How did the great powers come to Vienna? How did they decide in it? What were the turning points.
Here are some short videos and websites that are terrific for World War I. MAIN CAUSES History on the Ne t has a nice concise page on the MAIN causes of World War I. This video clip also reviews the MAIN causes in six minutes. It comes from "Made from History." John Ruddy has an awesom review of the war in six minutes. Day that Shook the World reviews the assassination of Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo. It's dramatic and engaging and only seventeen minutes. WEAPONS Check out weapons of World War I on this page from History on the Net. And here's a two minute clip about chemical gases during the war. SYKES PICOT Khan Academy reviews the Sykes-Picot agreement between Britain and France below. From BBC News, Why border lines drawn with a ruler in WW1 still rock the Middle East . The author reviews teh Sykes Picot Agreement and includes good maps. A GLOBAL WAR What makes World War I a global War ? The Guardian has an awesome interactive site with seven parts. Each par...
Here is a terrific short video introduction to Islam from Andrew Mark Henry and Dr. Hussein Rashid. The video is part of Henry's series called Religion for Breakfast . Henry and Rashid offer a methodology we can use to understand Islam and any religion. The methodology is that religions evolve over time, are internally diverse and are embedded in our culture. This methodology helps us to understand, for example, that Islam is not a monolithic religion. Islam in Indonesia is not like Islam in Saudi Arabia. This is an awesome introduction and the methodology will help students to understand the complexity of Islam and indeed all religions.
Images offer students a great way to understand history. The AP World History chat recently asked teachers to suggest images they used in their classes. Here are a few that I snagged. Bram Hubbell tweeted the handout below for analyzing images which ask students to consider the context, audience, and message of each image. The nine images below cover all periods from post-classical to the early 20th century. The image below represents the Danse Macabre, or the Dance of Death, painted in the 16th century during the Black Death. Here's an image from the Song Dyansty scroll which shows society and urban life in Song China. Here is a 1918 image from an Indian Home Rule pamphlet. It shows the British keeping Indians off Wilson's boat of self-determination. The image below from Puck in 1899 shows Japanese perceptions of the West. The image below come s from a Chinese newspaper in China on western colonialism and the response of the Qing court. ...
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