Download - Riverside Secondary School

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Economic history of World War I wikipedia , lookup

List of World War I memorials and cemeteries in Artois wikipedia , lookup

Technology during World War I wikipedia , lookup

Home front during World War I wikipedia , lookup

Allies of World War I wikipedia , lookup

History of the United Kingdom during the First World War wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
World War I
Chapter 2 Examinable Terms (in rough order as they appear in Counterpoints)
• Julian Byng
• Vimy Ridge
• Passchendaele
• Arthur Currie
• John McCrae (NOT IN TEXT)
• Women in the war
• “Bluebirds”
• Canadian Army Medical Corps
• Ace
• Royal Flying Corps
• Billy Bishop
• Billy Barker
• Ray Collishaw
• Roy Brown
• Merchant marines
• Imperial Munitions Board
• Victory Bonds
• Income tax
• Women’s suffrage
• Nellie McLung (TEXT P. 6)
• Propaganda
• Mont Blanc
• Halifax Disaster
• Conscription Crisis of 1917
• Conscientious objector
• Henri Bourassa
• Robert Borden
• Military Voters Act
• Wartime Elections Act
• Wilfrid Laurier
• Union Government
• Armistice – Nov. 11th, 1918
• Paris Peace Conference
• Treaty of Versailles
• League of Nations
• Collective security
• Triple Alliance/Central Powers
• Triple Entente/Allies
• British declaration of war
• Aboriginal enlistment
• Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF)
• Sam Hughes
• Shell Committee
• Ross rifle
• Internment camps
• War Measures Act
• Machine guns
• Artillery
• Tanks
• Fighter planes
• U-boats
• Gas warfare
• Attrition (NOT IN TEXT)
• Trench warfare
• Trench foot
• Second Battle of Ypres
• First Battle of the Somme
• Royal Newfoundland Regiment
• Field Marshall Douglas Haig
*NOTE: These terms are UNLIKELY to appear in any multiple-choice questions on the
Provincial Exam, but they can be discussed in the written response section and may appear
on the unit test.
• Archduke Franz Ferdinand
• Imperialism
• Nationalism
• Militarism
• Alliance system
• Bosnia
• Serbia
• Black Hand
• Gavrilo Princep
• Sarajevo
• Ottoman Empire
• Patriotism
• “Balance of Power”
• H.M.S. Dreadnought
• Lusitania
• U.S.A. enters WWI
• Russian Revolution
• “War Guilt Clause”
• Reparations
• Military restrictions on Germany
• German territorial losses
• President Woodrow Wilson
• Premier Georges Clemenceau
• P.M. David Lloyd George
• Wilson’s “14 Points”
• Sanctions
• Spanish Flu
Be able to:
1. Explain how Canada’s identity has evolved politically, economically and socially from 19142000.
2. Explain to what extent did Canada become a more autonomous (independent) nation
between 1914 and 2000?
3. Explain to what extent was Canada a major participant in World War I?
4. Describe the impact of World War I on Canada’s home front.
5. Describe the evolution of women’s rights in Canada between 1914 and 2000.
Vocabulary list Chapter 1-2:
Imperialism
Nationalism
Head Tax
Komagata Maru
Residential schools
Militarism
Triple Entente
Triple Alliance
Alliance system
Allied Powers
Austro-Hungarian Empire
Archduke Franz Ferdinand
Bosnia
Pan-Slavism
Serbia
Gavrilo Princip
Sarajevo
Ottoman Empire
Patriotism
Balance of power
Dreadnaught
Belgian neutrality
Schlieffen Plan
Women in war
Valcartier
Canadian Expeditionary Force
Shell Committee
Ross/Lee- Enfield Rifles
Internment camps
Trench Warfare
British declaration of war
French-Canadian attitudes in WWI
Women’s suffrage
War Measure’s Act
Total war
Machine guns
Tanks
Fighter planes
U-Boats
Gas warfare
War of attrition
Battle of Ypres
Battle of Somme
Vimy Ridge
Passchendaele
Royal Newfoundland Regiment
Hundred Days
Field Marshall Haig
Arthur Currie
Billy Bishop, William Barker, Roy Brown
Victory Bonds
Ace
Rationing
Propaganda
Mont Blanc
Halifax Explosion
Conscription crisis
Conscientious objector
Henri Bourassa
Robert Borden
Royal Flying Corps
Lusitania
Merchant Marine
Income tax
Military Voters Act (1917)
Wartime Elections Act (1917)
Military Service Act (1917)
US entry into the war
Russian Revolution
Armistice
Paris Peach Conference
Treaty of Versailles
War Guilt Clause
Reparations
German territorial losses
Woodrow Wilson
Premier Clemenceau
PM Lloyd George
14 points
League of Nations
Collective security
Be able to:
1. Explain how Canada’s identity has evolved politically, economically and socially from 1914- 2000.
2. Explain to what extent did Canada become a more autonomous (independent) nation between 1914
and 2000?
3. Explain to what extent was Canada a major participant in World War I?
4. Describe the impact of World War I on Canada’s home front.
5. Describe the evolution of women’s rights in Canada between 1914 and 2000.