Ch. 1 II Ch. 2 II Ch. 3 II Ch. 4 II Ch. 5 II 100 100 100 100 100 200

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Ch. 1 II Ch. 2 II Ch. 3 II Ch. 4 II Ch. 5 II 100 100 100 100 100 200 200 200 200 200 300 300 300 300 300 400 400 400 400 400 500 500 500 500 500

This was the confederation of the Iroquoian tribes for the purpose of war and diplomacy.

League of 5 Nations

This was a tribe of skillful warriors who preyed on the sedentary Pueblo Indians.

Apache/Navajo

In AD 1492, this empire encompassed 25 million people and became enriched by redistributing the wealth of conquest.

Mexica

These were made by the Mexica to honor their god.

Human Sacrifices

This was the approximate Native American population of the “New World” in North America at the time of Columbus’ arrival.

4 million

These refrained from exploration for they already had lucrative trade routes to the East.

Italian city states

This man’s dispute with the Catholic Church revolved around the way to achieve salvation.

Martin Luther

This system was a way to reward conquistadors.

Encomienda

The most important treasure that the Spain took from the New World was this.

Indian labor

This expression referred to the tax paid on conquered land to the Spanish crown.

“The Royal Fifth”

The Chesapeake social structure was polarized based on the ownership of this by the 1670s.

Land

This labor source was advantageous because they could be controlled politically.

Slaves

This erupted in 1676 as a dispute over Indian policy and ended as a conflict between the planter elite and the small farmers.

Bacon’s Rebellion

This colony was primarily settled by colonists from other colonies.

Carolina

This economic system puts the welfare of the imperial power above that of the colonies.

Mercantilism

These brought together the townspeople who partook in politics.

Town Meetings

Subsistence farming, fishing and timber were the economic base for these colonies.

New England

This measure allowed unconverted children of the visible saints to have their own children baptized in the Puritan church.

Halfway Covenant

These regulated colonial trade to raise money for the crown and eliminate foreign competition.

Navigation Acts

This 1688 event influenced colonists to rise up against royal authority in Massachusetts, NY and Maryland.

The Glorious Revolution

Under the Navigation Acts, this could collect taxes on colonial goods.

Monarch/crown

During the 18th century, colonists saw themselves as both colonists and as subjects of this European country.

Britain

One unifying experience of all of the 3 colonial regions were

Agricultural roots/ Decreased reliance on religion/ British Identity

This did not increase church attendance but tried to address the decreased role of religion in the colonies.

The Great Awakening

This southern social class dominated both the politics and economy of the area.

Slaveholding Gentry