Topic 1.7: Comparison in the Period 1200–1450
AP World History: Modern — Unit 1 | Reading time: ~20 min
📌 What You Must Know
- Comparison is a core AP skill—you must identify and explain similarities AND differences between regions, societies, or developments.
- Common comparison categories: political organization, economic systems, social structure, religion, trade networks, cultural developments.
- Strong comparison essays need a defensible thesis with clear categories of analysis.
- Use specific evidence from multiple regions—not vague generalizations.
- Comparison appears in MCQs, SAQs, LEQs, and DBQs—it's high yield!
- Key comparison pairs for 1200–1450: East Asia vs. Europe, Dar al-Islam vs. Europe, Americas vs. Afro-Eurasia, land empires vs. maritime states.
- Explain WHY similarities and differences exist (causation + comparison = top scores).
1. The Comparison Skill
Comparison is not just listing facts about two regions. You must analyze relationships between them.
1.1 What Good Comparison Looks Like
| Weak Comparison | Strong Comparison |
|---|---|
| "China had civil service exams. Europe had feudalism." | "Both China and Europe had hierarchical political systems, but China's centralized bureaucracy selected officials through merit-based exams, while Europe's decentralized feudal system distributed power among hereditary nobles." |
1.2 Categories of Comparison
Use these categories to organize your thinking:
- Political: How was power organized? (Centralized vs. decentralized? Bureaucracy vs. feudalism?)
- Economic: How did people make a living? (Agriculture? Trade? What systems of labor?)
- Social: How were people ranked? (Class? Caste? Gender roles?)
- Religious/Cultural: What beliefs shaped society? (How did religion support rulers?)
- Interactions: How did regions connect? (Trade? War? Migration?)
Quick-Check #1
Question: What makes a comparison "strong" versus "weak"?
Show Answer
2. Comparison Thesis Templates
A strong thesis makes a defensible claim about similarities and differences.
2.1 Template 1: Similarity-Difference
Example: "Although Song China and medieval Europe both had hierarchical social systems, they differed in political organization—China's centralized examination-based bureaucracy versus Europe's decentralized hereditary feudalism—resulting in greater administrative efficiency in China."
2.2 Template 2: Multiple Categories
2.3 Template 3: Argument-Driven
Quick-Check #2
Question: What elements must a comparison thesis include?
Show Answer
3. Evidence Buckets by Category
Here are ready-to-use comparison points organized by category:
3.1 Political Organization
| Region | Key Evidence |
|---|---|
| Song China | Centralized bureaucracy; civil service exams; scholar-officials; Neo-Confucian ideology |
| Medieval Europe | Decentralized feudalism; hereditary nobles; Church competing with kings; Magna Carta |
| Dar al-Islam | Fragmented after Abbasid decline; sultanates; ulama (scholars) influence; sharia law |
| Aztec Empire | Hegemonic tribute system; Triple Alliance; local rulers kept power |
| Inca Empire | Highly centralized; divine ruler (Sapa Inca); mit'a labor; population relocation |
| Mali Empire | Strong central king (Mansa); Islam + traditional religion; griots preserve history |
Quick-Check #3
Question: What is a key difference between Aztec and Inca political organization?
Show Answer
3.2 Economic Systems
| Region | Key Evidence |
|---|---|
| Song China | Commercial revolution; paper money; Champa rice; maritime trade; Silk Road |
| Medieval Europe | Manorialism (self-sufficient estates); limited trade early; growth after Crusades |
| Dar al-Islam | Trans-Saharan + Indian Ocean trade; caravanserais; no interest (Islamic law) → trade networks |
| Swahili City-States | Indian Ocean entrepôts; monsoon trade; intermediaries between Africa and Asia |
| Aztec | Tribute in goods; chinampas agriculture; markets (Tlatelolco); no metal currency |
| Inca | Mit'a labor tax; no markets/currency; state redistribution; vertical archipelago |
Quick-Check #4
Question: How did Song China's economy compare to medieval Europe's?
Show Answer
3.3 Religion and Culture
| Region | Key Evidence |
|---|---|
| Song China | Neo-Confucianism; Buddhism/Daoism; civil exams spread Confucian values |
| Medieval Europe | Catholic Christianity; Church power; cathedrals; universities; Latin scholarship |
| Dar al-Islam | Islam; sharia law; ulama scholars; Sufi mysticism; syncretism in Africa/Asia |
| South Asia | Hinduism + Islam; Bhakti movement; Delhi Sultanate jizya; Vijayanagara temples |
| Americas | Polytheism; human sacrifice (Aztec); divine kings; no contact with Afro-Eurasia |
| Africa | Islam in elites; traditional religions; syncretism; oral traditions (griots) |
Quick-Check #5
Question: What role did religion play in legitimizing rulers in BOTH Dar al-Islam and medieval Europe?
Show Answer
3.4 Trade Networks
| Network | Regions Connected | Key Goods |
|---|---|---|
| Silk Road | China, Central Asia, Middle East, Europe | Silk, spices, paper, gunpowder, ideas, diseases |
| Indian Ocean | East Africa, Arabia, India, SE Asia, China | Spices, textiles, porcelain, gold, ivory |
| Trans-Saharan | West Africa, North Africa, Mediterranean | Gold, salt, enslaved people, cloth |
| Mediterranean | Europe, Middle East, North Africa | Luxury goods, Crusade-era trade growth |
Quick-Check #6
Question: What made the Indian Ocean trade network different from the Silk Road?
Show Answer
4. Worked Examples
📝 Worked Example #1: LEQ Comparison Essay Outline
Prompt: Compare political organization in TWO of the following regions from 1200 to 1450: East Asia, Europe, the Americas.
Planning Notes:
Choose: Song/Ming China vs. Medieval Europe (good contrast!)
Categories: Centralization, selection of officials, role of religion
Thesis:
"Although both Song/Ming China and medieval Europe maintained hierarchical political systems where rulers claimed authority over large populations, they differed fundamentally in structure: China's centralized bureaucracy recruited officials through merit-based civil service examinations, while Europe's decentralized feudal system distributed power among hereditary nobles, resulting in greater administrative unity in China but more pluralistic power structures in Europe."
Body Paragraph 1 — Similarity:
- Both had rulers claiming supreme authority (emperors, kings)
- Both used ideology to justify rule (Neo-Confucianism, divine right/Church sanction)
- Both had hierarchical social structures (nobles/peasants, scholar-gentry/peasants)
Body Paragraph 2 — Difference 1 (Centralization):
- China: Centralized; emperor commanded provinces through appointed officials
- Evidence: Civil service exams, standardized laws, one tax system
- Europe: Decentralized; kings had limited power over nobles' territories
- Evidence: Feudal obligations, Magna Carta limiting king, church-state conflict
Body Paragraph 3 — Difference 2 (Official Selection):
- China: Merit-based exams open to many (in theory); tested Confucian classics
- Europe: Hereditary nobility; birth determined status; no exam system
- Consequence: China had social mobility through education; Europe had rigid hereditary hierarchy
Conclusion:
Explain why these differences mattered: China's system created stability but could be inflexible; Europe's system allowed competing power centers that would later lead to innovation and exploration.
Tip: Always explain WHY differences exist and what consequences they had.
📝 Worked Example #2: SAQ Comparison
Prompt: Compare the spread of Islam in Africa and Southeast Asia from 1200 to 1450.
Part A — Similarity:
Claim: In both regions, Islam spread primarily through trade rather than conquest.
Evidence (Africa): Trans-Saharan merchants brought Islam to West African rulers like those in Mali; Mansa Musa's pilgrimage shows elite conversion for trade advantages.
Evidence (SE Asia): Muslim merchants at port cities led to conversions; Melaka became an Islamic sultanate through trade connections.
Part B — Difference:
Claim: In Africa, Islam coexisted with centralized empires (Mali, Songhai), while in Southeast Asia, Islam spread through independent trading city-states.
Evidence (Africa): Mali Empire rulers adopted Islam but maintained traditional practices; large territorial state.
Evidence (SE Asia): Melaka and other ports converted individually; no unified Islamic empire emerged; Buddhism/Hinduism still dominated inland areas.
Tip: SAQs require specific evidence—not generalizations. Name places, rulers, and practices.
Quick-Check #7
Question: What structure should a comparison LEQ body paragraph follow?
Show Answer
5. Major Comparison Themes for 1200–1450
5.1 Centralized vs. Decentralized States
| Centralized | Decentralized |
|---|---|
| Song/Ming China (bureaucracy, exams) | Medieval Europe (feudalism, competing nobles) |
| Inca Empire (mit'a, road system) | Maya city-states (independent, often warring) |
| Mali Empire (strong mansa) | Swahili city-states (no unified empire) |
5.2 Land-Based vs. Maritime Powers
| Land-Based | Maritime |
|---|---|
| Mongol Empire (steppe warfare, Silk Road) | Swahili cities (Indian Ocean trade) |
| Delhi Sultanate (land control) | Venice/Genoa (Mediterranean trade) |
| Mali/Songhai (Trans-Saharan) | Majapahit (Indonesian archipelago) |
5.3 Isolated vs. Connected Regions
| Connected to Trade Networks | Isolated/Limited Contact |
|---|---|
| Dar al-Islam, Song China, Swahili coast | Americas (no transoceanic contact) |
| Increased exchange of goods, ideas, disease | Independent development of agriculture, states, technology |
Quick-Check #8
Question: Why is the "connected vs. isolated" comparison important for understanding this period?
Show Answer
⚠️ Common Mistakes & Misconceptions
Fix: Strong comparison requires BOTH. Even if the prompt emphasizes one, acknowledge the other.
Fix: Each paragraph should discuss BOTH regions, not Region A in paragraph 2 and Region B in paragraph 3.
Fix: Name specific places, rulers, practices, dates. Not "China was advanced" but "Song China used paper money (jiaozi) and civil service exams."
Fix: Top essays explain causation. Why did Europe decentralize? (Geography, fall of Rome, weak central authority after Charlemagne.)
Fix: Compare politics to politics, economics to economics. Don't compare Aztec religion to Chinese economics.
Fix: Comparison essays can analyze why developments occurred differently in different places—this adds depth.
Quick-Check #9
Question: What's wrong with this thesis? "China and Europe were different in many ways during 1200–1450."
Show Answer
🎯 How This Appears on the AP Exam
| Question Type | How Comparison Shows Up |
|---|---|
| MCQ | "Which statement accurately compares the political systems of X and Y?" |
| SAQ | "Identify ONE similarity AND ONE difference between…" |
| LEQ | "Compare [process/development] in TWO of the following regions…" |
| DBQ | Documents may come from different regions; comparison can be used in argument and outside evidence. |
Quick-Check #10
Question: How many regions do you need to discuss in a typical comparison LEQ?
Show Answer
📖 Glossary (Key Terms)
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Comparison | Analyzing similarities and differences between historical developments, regions, or processes. |
| Category of analysis | Lens for comparison: political, economic, social, cultural, religious, etc. |
| Thesis | Defensible claim that answers the prompt and guides the essay argument. |
| Line of reasoning | Logical structure connecting thesis, evidence, and analysis throughout the essay. |
| Specific evidence | Named places, people, practices, dates—not vague generalizations. |
| Causation | Explaining WHY something happened—can be combined with comparison for top scores. |
| Contextualization | Placing developments in broader historical context (time, place, trends). |
| Synthesis | Connecting different historical developments; showing how parts relate to the whole. |
| Centralization | Concentration of political power in a single authority (emperor, state). |
| Decentralization | Distribution of power among many authorities (lords, nobles, city-states). |
📋 1-Page Condensed Sheet
COMPARISON SKILL
- Must include BOTH similarities + differences
- Use consistent categories: political, economic, social, religious
- Integrate both regions in each paragraph
THESIS FORMULA
- "Although [A] and [B] were similar in [Category 1], they differed in [Category 2], which [significance]."
QUICK EVIDENCE PAIRS
- Centralized vs. Decentralized: Song China (exams, bureaucracy) vs. Europe (feudalism, nobles)
- Tribute vs. Labor: Aztec (goods) vs. Inca (mit'a labor)
- Trade spread Islam: Africa (Trans-Saharan) + SE Asia (Indian Ocean) — both through merchants, not conquest
- Connected vs. Isolated: Afro-Eurasia (Silk Road, Indian Ocean) vs. Americas (no contact)
COMPARISON CHECKLIST
- ✓ Thesis with similarity + difference
- ✓ Categories of analysis named
- ✓ Specific evidence for BOTH regions
- ✓ Each body paragraph discusses BOTH
- ✓ Explains WHY (causation bonus)
COMMON PROMPTS
- Compare political organization in [2 regions]
- Compare effects of trade in [2 regions]
- Compare the spread of religion in [2 regions]
- Compare state-building in [2 regions]
Differentiation Tracks
🟢 Support Track (Sentence Frames)
Use these frames to build comparison sentences:
- "Both [A] and [B] __________, as shown by __________."
- "While [A] __________, [B] __________, which demonstrates __________."
- "Unlike [A], which __________, [B] __________."
- "A key similarity between [A] and [B] is __________."
- "The most significant difference was __________, because __________."
🔴 Challenge Track (Advanced Comparison)
- Explain not just what was similar/different but why (causation + comparison).
- Consider degree of similarity/difference—how significant was it?
- Connect comparison to broader patterns (e.g., how do trade networks shape political development differently in land vs. maritime empires?).
- Evaluate: Were the regions more similar or more different overall? Argue a position.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
How do I write a comparison thesis?
A comparison thesis must: (1) name both topics/regions, (2) identify categories of comparison (political, economic, etc.), (3) state at least one similarity AND one difference, and (4) ideally explain the significance. Template: "Although [A] and [B] were similar in [Category 1], they differed in [Category 2], resulting in [consequence]."
What should an AP World comparison essay include?
A comparison essay needs: a thesis with similarity and difference, body paragraphs that discuss BOTH regions together (not separately), specific evidence from each region, analysis explaining WHY similarities/differences exist, and a conclusion that synthesizes findings.
What are good comparison topics for 1200–1450?
Strong comparisons: Song China vs. Europe (political), Aztec vs. Inca (tribute/labor systems), Dar al-Islam vs. Europe (religion and state), connected Afro-Eurasia vs. isolated Americas, land empires vs. maritime trading states.
How do I compare regions on an LEQ?
Choose two regions, identify 2-3 categories of comparison, write a thesis stating similarity + difference, write body paragraphs that integrate both regions (don't separate them), use specific evidence (names, dates, places), and explain causation when possible.
What are the most common comparison mistakes?
Common mistakes: only discussing differences (or only similarities), writing separate mini-essays for each region, making vague claims without specific evidence, failing to explain WHY similarities/differences exist, and comparing incompatible categories.
How do I get top comparison points on DBQ?
On DBQs, use comparison when analyzing documents from different regions or time periods. Your outside evidence can come from a different region for comparison. Make sure to explicitly note what's similar or different and why it matters for your argument.
What categories should I use for comparison?
Standard categories: Political (how power is organized), Economic (trade, labor, production), Social (class, caste, gender), Cultural/Religious (beliefs, art, scholarship), and Interactions (trade, war, migration). Pick 2-3 that best fit your prompt.