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Colonization of America
Unit 1 Final Exam Review Colonization of America
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Agricultural Revolution
1. Agricultural Revolution—time when people started raising crops for food, causing civilizations to grow
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The Columbian Exchange
2. Columbian Exchange—transfer of plants, animals, diseases, etc. between the “Old World” and “New World,” starting in 1492
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Fall of the Spanish Armada
3. Fall of the Spanish Armada—in 1588, this event opened America to be settled by England, not just Spain
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Southern Colonies 4. Southern colonies—had a warm, fertile environment and economy based on agriculture, especially tobacco
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Jamestown 5. Jamestown—the first English settlement in America, located in Virginia, almost collapsed during the “starving time”
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Tobacco 6. Tobacco—saved Jamestown from collapse, it was initially harvested by indentured servants and later by slaves
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House of Burgesses 7. House of Burgesses—the first representative government in the colonies, located in Jamestown, Virginia
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Headright System 8. Headright System—gave wealthy planters land for bringing indentured servants to America, but helped cause Bacon’s Rebellion
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Indentured Servants 9. Indentured Servants—worked for wealthy planters 4-7 years in exchange for transportation to America
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Bacon’s Rebellion 10. Bacon’s Rebellion—caused wealthy southern planters to turn from indentured servants to slaves as a source of labor
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New England Colonies 11. New England colonies—valued religion, had a cold, rocky climate, and had economy based on fishing and shipbuilding
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Mayflower Compact 12. Mayflower Compact—agreement between Pilgrims at Plymouth to create a government that used majority rule
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Fundamental Orders of Connecticut
13. Fundamental Orders of Connecticut—the first written constitution in the American colonies, it foreshadowed the United States Constitution
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Massachusetts Bay colony
14. Massachusetts Bay colony—founded as a place for Puritans to practice their religion and be a “city upon a hill,” a Christian example to the world
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Roger Williams 15. Roger Williams—forced to leave Massachusetts Bay because he disagreed with Puritan leaders and believed in freedom of religion
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King Philip’s War 16. King Philip’s War—fought largely over desire for land, this victory for colonists represented the last resistance of Native Americans in New England
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Quakers 17. Quakers—non-violent religious group in Middle colonies that believed in religious freedom and equality between races, sexes, and with Native Americans
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Triangular Trade 18. Triangular Trade—network of trade that occurred between the Caribbean (West Indies), Africa, and the American colonies
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Mercantilism 19. Mercantilism—a country’s policy to gather more wealth to itself and become powerful, which England used with the colonies
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Navigation Acts 20. Navigation Acts—England’s mercantilist laws that controlled colonial trade to benefit England that caused many colonists to smuggle, creating tension
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Great Awakening 21. Great Awakening—time period of religious revival in the English colonies in the 1700s
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The Enlightenment 22. The Enlightenment—movement that emphasized science, reason, logic, and natural rights; many of its ideas helped cause the American Revolution
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John Locke 23. John Locke—Enlightenment thinker who wrote about natural rights—life, liberty, and property
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Compact Theory 24. Compact Theory—the idea that if government does not protect its citizens’ natural rights, they have a right to abolish it
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Zenger Trial 25. Zenger Trial—newspaper editor is found not guilty after criticizing the government, setting precedent for freedom of the press
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