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2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt 2pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt Vocabulary Governing the Colonies NE, Middle & Southern Colonies Slavery and New Ideas Hodge Podge
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the belief that the colonies existed to serve the economic needs of the parent country.
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Mercantilism
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Recognition that other people have equal rights to differing opinions, especially when dealing with religious beliefs.
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Tolerance (Toleration)
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Route across the Atlantic Ocean from West Africa to the Americas; it was the route of the African American slave trade
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Middle Passage
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the upper class of colonial society and included merchants, owners of large farms, royal officials and lawyers.
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Gentry
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the principle that a person cannot be held in prison without being charged with a specific crime.
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Habeas Corpus
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This document provided 8 standards, which included Rule of Law, Balance of Power and Due Process, which were incorporated into the U.S. Constitution.
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Magna Carta
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This legislative body became the first legislature in North America.
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House of Burgesses
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These laws tried to guarantee more exclusive trade between England & the colonies.
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Navigation Acts
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Preventing the King from having a standing army during peace time, allowing Parliament to approve taxes, and ensuring Parliament was the law making authority, were all rights given under this document:
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English Bill of Rights
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The trial of this person led to the idea of Freedom of the Press in the Colonies.
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John Peter Zenger
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This document was signed by the Pilgrims, before going ashore, where they agreed to make laws for the good of the colony and to obey those laws
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Mayflower Compact
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A puritan preacher who was exiled and began a new colony around nearby Rhode Island.
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Roger Williams
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The 4 colonies which made up “The Middle Colonies”
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New York, Pennsylvania, Delaware, New Jersey
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This English religious group was considered dangerous and radical because they would not swear an oath, pay taxes to the Church of England, or serve in the military
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Quakers
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South Carolina was settled by Englishmen who had also colonized this area of the world
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Barbados
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The first slaves were brought to the Americas by these two nations:
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Spain and Portugal
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This Puritan dissenter was put on trial for not following Puritan laws; she was banished to Rhode Island and later killed in NY during an attack by Native Americans.
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Anne Hutchinson
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This movement brought a new religious fervor to the English Colonies, and focused on an individual’s direct relationship with God, no priest required.
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The (First) Great Awakening
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This religious group started the public school system, as we know it, in North America
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Puritans
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This Colony (and eventually one of the first 13 States) was the location of the first public schools in America.
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Massachusetts
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The first colleges in the British Colonies were created for this reason:
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To educate men so that they could become ministers
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The 5 colonies which made up the Southern Colonies
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Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia
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She was an enslaved African in Boston, who became a published poet at the age of 14
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Phyllis Wheatley
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This Colony becomes known as the “Sewer” because it was seen by the Puritans as a dumping ground for unbelievers and religious dissenters
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Rhode Island
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Spain’s main reason for expanding it’s territory into what is now the SW United States was for this reason:
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To protect Mexico from other European Powers
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Final Jeopardy Category: Out West
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Provide four current cities in the United States which were started as Spanish Missions.
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- San Antonio - San Diego - Los Angeles - San Francisco - San Luis Obispo
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