You will be given the answer. You must give the correct question. Jeopardy Choose a category. You will be given the answer. You must give the correct question. Click to begin.
Click here for Final Jeopardy Choose a point value. Choose a point value. Click here for Final Jeopardy
English Civil War 2 Point 2 Point 2 Point 2 Point 2 Point 2 Point Stuarts English Civil War Ireland Restrictions New Ideas Wild Card 2 Point 2 Point 2 Point 2 Point 2 Point 2 Point 4 Points 4 Points 4 Points 4 Points 4 Points 4 Points 6 Points 6 Points 6 Points 6 Points 6 Points 6 Points 8 Points 8 Points 8 Points 8 Points 8 Points 8 Points 10 Points 10 Points 10 Points 10 Points 10 Points 10 Points
Famous translation sponsored by a Stuart king
King James Version of the Bible
Their belief that they ruled because they were chosen by God
Divine Right of Kings
Merry monarch who became king during the Restoration
Charles II
Catholic ruler who replaced his legitimate childless brother
James II
Policy Charles II made as king of England
Remove theater and entertainment restrictions; tolerated Catholics and tried to remove restrictions on them; continued commercial policy of Cromwell by seizing Dutch settlements in New World; and, war with French over control of the seas
Fate of England’s king
Tried for treason; found guilty, and executed
He created a new model army; governed England 1646-1658.
Oliver Cromwell
Name given to time between kings
Commonwealth or Interregnum
Two sides in the English Civil War
Cavaliers and Roundheads
Events which precipitated the war
Parliament refused to cooperate with Charles I after he called them into session to get money to fight the Scots, who rose up against the Covenant, leading Charles I to try to arrest leading members of Parliament
Result of Norman invasion of Ireland
Norman families married into and adopted Irish culture
Settlers sent by Elizabeth I and James I
Anglicans and Presbyterians
Defeat of the Irish and the Stuart Pretender, deposed King James II, by William of Orange
Battle of the Boyne
Protestant region of Ireland
Ulster
Cromwell’s attempts to reduce opposition in Ireland
Ban Catholic mass; ban Catholic landownership; ban Catholic’s going to school; ban Irish language instruction; move Catholic peasants to Connaught
Concept that says once arrested, you must be charged with a crime or released.
Habeas Corpus
Event where Parliament removed England’s Catholic king and invited his Protestant daughter and son-in-law to rule
Glorious Revolution
Protestant daughter and son-in-law invited to rule by Parliament
William III and Mary II
Advisors to the ruler selected from members of Parliament
Cabinet
Rights granted to the English people in Bill of Rights
Parliament chooses ruler; no excessive bail; right to petition government; can’t suspend law; can’t maintain army in peacetime; can’t impose taxes; can’ t interfere with Parliamentary elections; freedom of speech in Parliament
Replaced the monarch as the most powerful official
Prime Minister
These can’t ever be taken away: life, liberty, owning property
Natural Rights
Two political parties that emerged on opposite sides of who should be Charles II heir
Whigs and Tories
Locke’s theories
People had certain rights that could never be taken by a ruler, and they could get rid of the ruler of he tried.
Hobbes’ theories
People turned all power and rights over to their ruler in a social contract, necessitating absolute rule.
Collection of documents and acts of Parliament that form the basis for all English law
English Constitution
Nickname of Elizabeth I
Virgin Queen or Queen Bess
Title held by England’s ruler 1646-1660
Lord Protector
Family of rulers who came to the throne after the death of Queen Anne in 1714
Hanoverians
King when PA, DE, NY, NJ, NC, SC were founded
Charles II
Final Jeopardy Make your wager
What was the famous royal hereditary illness?
Porphyria