document
... them cheaper so England and Holland will buy them) 3. Coordinate colonies to serve interests of French economy: Colonies were for the benefit of the mother country ENGLAND WILL COPY FRENCH MODEL ...
... them cheaper so England and Holland will buy them) 3. Coordinate colonies to serve interests of French economy: Colonies were for the benefit of the mother country ENGLAND WILL COPY FRENCH MODEL ...
Chapter 1 New World Beginnings I. The Shaping of North America
... whole region for their King Louis and naming the area “Louisiana” after his king. This started a slew of place-names for that area, from LaSalle, Illinois to “Louisville” and then on down to New Orleans (the American counter of Joan of Arc’s famous victory at Orleans). vii. “Black Legend” – The Blac ...
... whole region for their King Louis and naming the area “Louisiana” after his king. This started a slew of place-names for that area, from LaSalle, Illinois to “Louisville” and then on down to New Orleans (the American counter of Joan of Arc’s famous victory at Orleans). vii. “Black Legend” – The Blac ...
The Middle Colonies later became the states of New
... important ports. While the Middle Colonies had far more industry than the Southern Colonies, it still did not rival the industry of New England. The Middle Colonies were the most ethnically diverse British colonies in North America, with settlers coming from all parts of Europe, many as indentured s ...
... important ports. While the Middle Colonies had far more industry than the Southern Colonies, it still did not rival the industry of New England. The Middle Colonies were the most ethnically diverse British colonies in North America, with settlers coming from all parts of Europe, many as indentured s ...
The Great Migrations, The Scramble for Africa
... - Europeans were 38% of the world’s population by start of WWI C. Growing numbers increased desire for expansionForce behind emigration - More people led to pressure on the land, led to land hunger, overpopulation - Millions of countrypeople went to cities and abroad for work and economic opportuni ...
... - Europeans were 38% of the world’s population by start of WWI C. Growing numbers increased desire for expansionForce behind emigration - More people led to pressure on the land, led to land hunger, overpopulation - Millions of countrypeople went to cities and abroad for work and economic opportuni ...
Social Studies Unit 3 Lesson 7 Title: Colonial Governments Main
... Colonists saw themselves as having same rights as English citizens (VA Charter) King appointed governors so governors & assemblies were often in disagreement since assemblies supported colonial self-government and the governors were the mouthpiece of the king CT & RI elected their own governors – go ...
... Colonists saw themselves as having same rights as English citizens (VA Charter) King appointed governors so governors & assemblies were often in disagreement since assemblies supported colonial self-government and the governors were the mouthpiece of the king CT & RI elected their own governors – go ...
CHAPTER 4 Experience of Empire: Eighteenth
... III. THE IMPACT OF EUROPEAN IDEAS ON AMERICAN CULTURE The seaboard colonists also lived in an expanding, changing world. A. Provincial Cities The vast majority of Americans lived in small towns or isolated farms, but some urban areas began to develop. Boston, Newport, New York, Philadelphia and Char ...
... III. THE IMPACT OF EUROPEAN IDEAS ON AMERICAN CULTURE The seaboard colonists also lived in an expanding, changing world. A. Provincial Cities The vast majority of Americans lived in small towns or isolated farms, but some urban areas began to develop. Boston, Newport, New York, Philadelphia and Char ...
Quarter One Cumulative Test
... b. New Mexico’s Pope’s Rebellion (1680) c. South Carolina’s Stono Rebellion (1739); d. New England’s King Philip’s (Metacom’s) War (1675); ...
... b. New Mexico’s Pope’s Rebellion (1680) c. South Carolina’s Stono Rebellion (1739); d. New England’s King Philip’s (Metacom’s) War (1675); ...
Comparing Regional Cultures
... in 1650, New England had six males for every four females, compared with four men for every woman in the Chesapeake area. European immigrants seemed to prefer the Middle Colonies most of all. These colonies became the most ethnically and culturally diverse region in the entire British Empire. In add ...
... in 1650, New England had six males for every four females, compared with four men for every woman in the Chesapeake area. European immigrants seemed to prefer the Middle Colonies most of all. These colonies became the most ethnically and culturally diverse region in the entire British Empire. In add ...
European Exploration Colonization
... Europe took over almost all of North and South America. Between 1750-1900, they did the same in Asia and Africa. They claimed to have done so to spread Christianity and their idea of civilization. The greatest immediate changes that resulted from this conquest and colonization were that the natives ...
... Europe took over almost all of North and South America. Between 1750-1900, they did the same in Asia and Africa. They claimed to have done so to spread Christianity and their idea of civilization. The greatest immediate changes that resulted from this conquest and colonization were that the natives ...
1 Global inequality – huge divide in wealth distribution in world
... -Missionaries tried to help the conditions -Mita: another form of labor extraction - male population forced to work in the silver mines – resulted to many deaths -Land & Plantation Production: sugar plantation (1520’s onwards) used African slaves Wider impacts of colonialism In Spain & Portugal -Mer ...
... -Missionaries tried to help the conditions -Mita: another form of labor extraction - male population forced to work in the silver mines – resulted to many deaths -Land & Plantation Production: sugar plantation (1520’s onwards) used African slaves Wider impacts of colonialism In Spain & Portugal -Mer ...
THE 13 ORIGINAL COLONIES
... was based on the “purity and conscience of liberty of worship. There was no tolerance for religions other than the Christian religion. • When the Pilgrims landed they drafted the Mayflower Compact to work for the good of the colony. There was no separation of church and state in Massachusetts. Only ...
... was based on the “purity and conscience of liberty of worship. There was no tolerance for religions other than the Christian religion. • When the Pilgrims landed they drafted the Mayflower Compact to work for the good of the colony. There was no separation of church and state in Massachusetts. Only ...
Middle Colonies
... They named the colony New Jersey, after the island of Jersey in the English Channel, where Carteret was born. ► To attract settlers to the colony, they offered large tracts (area of land) and generous terms. They were promised freedom of religion, trial by jury, and a representative assembly. ...
... They named the colony New Jersey, after the island of Jersey in the English Channel, where Carteret was born. ► To attract settlers to the colony, they offered large tracts (area of land) and generous terms. They were promised freedom of religion, trial by jury, and a representative assembly. ...
From Discovery to Independence: An Outline of American History
... An Errand* into the Wilderness: The Colonial Beginnings of North America The beginnings of European civilization in North America were conspicuously different from those of Central and South America. There are mainly two reasons for this: first, North America lacked the gold and silver that its six ...
... An Errand* into the Wilderness: The Colonial Beginnings of North America The beginnings of European civilization in North America were conspicuously different from those of Central and South America. There are mainly two reasons for this: first, North America lacked the gold and silver that its six ...
PDF sample
... colonists became discouraged and returned to Britain. Thereafter the Plymouth Company folded. The Virginia Company of London, in 1607, sent out an expedition of three ships with 104 men to plant a colony some forty miles up the James River from Chesapeake Bay. Like the river on which it was located, ...
... colonists became discouraged and returned to Britain. Thereafter the Plymouth Company folded. The Virginia Company of London, in 1607, sent out an expedition of three ships with 104 men to plant a colony some forty miles up the James River from Chesapeake Bay. Like the river on which it was located, ...
File
... Separation of Church and State- the church and the state (government) are organized separately- Roger Williams started Rhode Island this way and today it is separate because of the First Amendment. ...
... Separation of Church and State- the church and the state (government) are organized separately- Roger Williams started Rhode Island this way and today it is separate because of the First Amendment. ...
expansion in the 18th century - AP EURO
... states like France sought an economic system that primarily benefited the state. -- For example, the intendant system was extended throughout the French empire. ...
... states like France sought an economic system that primarily benefited the state. -- For example, the intendant system was extended throughout the French empire. ...
Unit 1 NOTES
... These people became the ________middle___ class. Middle class means people who are between the ____upper_______ and working class. The middle class contributed heavily to the growing market in Europe. The middle class became the ones who created _____private_______ businesses. Risk- the Starbucks st ...
... These people became the ________middle___ class. Middle class means people who are between the ____upper_______ and working class. The middle class contributed heavily to the growing market in Europe. The middle class became the ones who created _____private_______ businesses. Risk- the Starbucks st ...
Settling the Northern Colonies 1619-1700 Chapter 3
... New Haven Merged with the more democratic Connecticut Valley settlement in 1662 King Philip’s War 1675-6 Metacom led his Wampanoag Indians forming an alliance with other tribes & attacked Puritans villages Indians were defeated & most were sold off as slaves. Seeds of Colonial Unity & Independ ...
... New Haven Merged with the more democratic Connecticut Valley settlement in 1662 King Philip’s War 1675-6 Metacom led his Wampanoag Indians forming an alliance with other tribes & attacked Puritans villages Indians were defeated & most were sold off as slaves. Seeds of Colonial Unity & Independ ...
Colonial Cooking
... early American colonists; game, fish, berries and Indian crops (corn, squash, pumpkin). It took some time for the colonists to change their old eating habits and adapt to the new foods available. Settlers brought wheat and rye seeds with them to grow in America but found these crops were difficult t ...
... early American colonists; game, fish, berries and Indian crops (corn, squash, pumpkin). It took some time for the colonists to change their old eating habits and adapt to the new foods available. Settlers brought wheat and rye seeds with them to grow in America but found these crops were difficult t ...
Reading Summaries
... - densities similar across the world before 1492 - epidemics of disease changed the migration dynamics – made more people want to come to America - disease from Europe and Africa killed off swaths of natives, huge labor shortage - epidemic either means better bargaining or more slavery - transoceani ...
... - densities similar across the world before 1492 - epidemics of disease changed the migration dynamics – made more people want to come to America - disease from Europe and Africa killed off swaths of natives, huge labor shortage - epidemic either means better bargaining or more slavery - transoceani ...
Untitled - cloudfront.net
... PLANTATION ECONOMY: This referred to the inefficient, slave-centered economy of the South where d land was used to grow large amounts of cash crops for export. TRIANGULAR TRADE: This was the Atlantic trade in which slaves and gold from Afiica; sugar, molasses, lumber, and nun from the West Indies an ...
... PLANTATION ECONOMY: This referred to the inefficient, slave-centered economy of the South where d land was used to grow large amounts of cash crops for export. TRIANGULAR TRADE: This was the Atlantic trade in which slaves and gold from Afiica; sugar, molasses, lumber, and nun from the West Indies an ...
Chapter 17 REVOLUTION AND ENLIGHTENMENT
... independence, they were more focused on their own interests and not the others. The Articles of Confederation was approved in 1781. It did not provide for a strong centralized government and it lacked the power to deal with the nation’s problems. In 1787, 55 delegates decided to scrap the Articles a ...
... independence, they were more focused on their own interests and not the others. The Articles of Confederation was approved in 1781. It did not provide for a strong centralized government and it lacked the power to deal with the nation’s problems. In 1787, 55 delegates decided to scrap the Articles a ...
The Age of Exploration 2013
... – This water route cut costs by 80% over the land route and allowed more Europeans to have access to these goods, and a greater demand for them. • Portuguese were now outpacing the Italians in ...
... – This water route cut costs by 80% over the land route and allowed more Europeans to have access to these goods, and a greater demand for them. • Portuguese were now outpacing the Italians in ...
The Atlantic World and Absolute Monarchs in Europe
... During the 1530s and 1540s, the Spanish Crown divided the American empire into two immense regions, known as viceroyalties, each ruled by a viceroy appointed by the king. The viceroyalty of New Spain consisted of Mexico, Central America, and the Caribbean islands. The viceroyalty of Peru included al ...
... During the 1530s and 1540s, the Spanish Crown divided the American empire into two immense regions, known as viceroyalties, each ruled by a viceroy appointed by the king. The viceroyalty of New Spain consisted of Mexico, Central America, and the Caribbean islands. The viceroyalty of Peru included al ...
Terms for Those Owning or Controlling Those in Servitude
... …2 : a settlement in a new country or region [Note: this is why the Separatists used the term about their new settlement in
Plymouth, Massachusetts.]
3 a : a place that is planted or under cultivation b : an agricultural estate [See the indented definition below.] usually worke ...
... …2 : a settlement in a new country or region