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Published byBlake Farmer Modified over 9 years ago
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Thursday, Sept. 26 1. Get out your History Spiral put your binder on the floor 2. Update your Table of Contents if you did not yesterday DateTitleEntry # 9/23Warm-Ups Sept. 23-2719 9/2313 colonies cartoon notes 20 9/24Colonial Economics video 21 9/24Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade notes22 9/24Roots to Representative Government notes23 3. Turn to entry # 19: Write and answer the following: #4 Sept., 9/26 – Look at the map on p. 104. Which Southern colonies grew both rice and indigo?
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Roots of Representative Government I.Magna Carta *1215 – guaranteed rights to noblemen -property could not be seized, could not be taxed, jury trial, witness to be put on trial 4 Questions and a summary
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Roots of Representative Government I.Magna Carta *1215 – guaranteed rights to noblemen -property could not be seized, could not be taxed, jury trial, witness to be put on trial II.Parliament *England’s chief law making body – colonist role model for representative government (House of Burgesses) 4 Questions and a summary
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Roots of Representative Government I.Magna Carta *1215 – guaranteed rights to noblemen -property could not be seized, could not be taxed, jury trial, witness to be put on trial II.Parliament *England’s chief law making body – colonist role model for representative government (House of Burgesses) III. English Bill of Rights * agreement to respect the rights of English citizens and Parliament 4 Questions and a summary
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Roots of Representative Government I.Magna Carta *1215 – guaranteed rights to noblemen -property could not be seized, could not be taxed, jury trial, witness to be put on trial II.Parliament *England’s chief law making body – colonist role model for representative government (House of Burgesses) III. English Bill of Rights * agreement to respect the rights of English citizens and Parliament *King/Queen could not cancel laws or impose taxes without consent of Parliament 4 Questions and a summary
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Roots of Representative Government I.Magna Carta *1215 – guaranteed rights to noblemen -property could not be seized, could not be taxed, jury trial, witness to be put on trial II.Parliament *England’s chief law making body – colonist role model for representative government (House of Burgesses) III. English Bill of Rights * agreement to respect the rights of English citizens and Parliament *King/Queen could not cancel laws or impose taxes without consent of Parliament * No excessive fines or punishment 4 Questions and a summary
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Roots of Representative Government I.Magna Carta *1215 – guaranteed rights to noblemen -property could not be seized, could not be taxed, jury trial, witness to be put on trial II.Parliament *England’s chief law making body – colonist role model for representative government (House of Burgesses) III. English Bill of Rights * agreement to respect the rights of English citizens and Parliament *King/Queen could not cancel laws or impose taxes without consent of Parliament * No excessive fines or punishment -People could complain about gov’t without fear of being punished 4 Questions and a summary
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Roots of Representative Government I.Magna Carta *1215 – guaranteed rights to noblemen -property could not be seized, could not be taxed, jury trial, witness to be put on trial II.Parliament *England’s chief law making body – colonist role model for representative government (House of Burgesses) III. English Bill of Rights * agreement to respect the rights of English citizens and Parliament *King/Queen could not cancel laws or impose taxes without consent of Parliament *No excessive fines or punishment *People could complain about gov’t without fear of being punished *Government was to based on laws passed by Parliament, not on desires of the ruler 4 Questions and a summary
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Roots of Representative Government IV. Salutary Neglect *Hands off policy -Trade, use of money, and apprentice laws that were passed in England were not enforced in the colonies 4 Questions and a summary
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Roots of Representative Government V.Salutary Neglect *Hands off policy -Trade, use of money, and apprentice laws that were passed in England were not enforced in the colonies -Colonists got used to acting on their own 4 Questions and a summary
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