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Campbell Biology 9th Edition - Chapter 16 Flashcards

The Molecular
Basis of Inheritance

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431856450DNA replicationthe process of making a copy of DNA
431856451transformationthe transfer of genetic material in the form of DNA fragments from one cell to another or from one organism to another
431856452bacteriophagea virus that infects bacteria
431856453virusultramicroscopic infectious agent that replicates itself only within cells of living hosts
431856454double helixtwo strands of nucleotides wound about each other; structure of DNA
431856455antiparallelThe opposite arrangement of the sugar-phosphate backbones in a DNA double helix.
431856456semiconservativemethod of replication that implies that each new strand of DNA is half original and half new
431856457origin of replicationSite where the replication of a DNA molecule begins, consisting of a specific sequence of nucleotides.
431856458replication forkA Y-shaped region on a replicating DNA molecule where new strands are growing.
431856459helicasean enzyme that untwists the double helix at the replication forks, separating the two parental strands and making them available as template strands
431856460single strand binding proteinsProteins that bind to and stabilize the signle strands of DNA exposed when helicase unwinds the double helix in preparation for replication.
431856461topoisomeraseA protein that functions in DNA replication, helping to relieve strain in the double helix ahead of the replication fork.
431856462primerAn already existing RNA chain bound to template DNA to which DNA nucleotides are added during DNA synthesis., a short segment of DNA that serves as the starting point for DNA synthesis
431856463primaseAn enzyme that joins RNA nucleotides to make the primer.
431856464DNA polymeraseenzyme involved in DNA replication that joins individual nucleotides to produce a DNA molecule
431856465leading strandthe new continuous complementary DNA strand synthesized along the template strand in the mandatory 5' --> 3' direction
431856466lagging strandA discontinuously synthesized DNA strand that elongates in a direction away from the replication fork.
431856467okazaki fragmentsShort fragments of DNA that are a result of the synthesis of the lagging strand during DNA replication.
431856468DNA ligasean enzyme that eventually joins the sugar-phosphate backbones of the Okazaki fragments
431856469mismatch repairThe cellular process that uses special enzymes to fix incorrectly paired nucleotides.
431856470nucleaseAn enzyme that hydrolyzes DNA and RNA into their component nucleotides.
431856471nucleotide excision repairThe process of removing and then correctly replacing a damaged segment of DNA using the undamaged strand as a guide.
431856472telomeresRepeated DNA sequences at the ends of eukaryotic chromosomes.
431856473telomeraseAn enzyme that catalyzes the lengthening of telomeres. The enzyme includes a molecule of RNA that serves as a template for new telomere segments.
431856474histonesprotein molecules around which DNA is tightly coiled in chromatin
431856475nucleosomesbead-like structures formed by histones and DNA, 10nm
431856476nucleoidA dense region of DNA in a prokaryotic cell.
431856477chromatinlong strands of DNA found in the eukaryotic cell nucleus; condense to form chromosomes
43185647830nm fibernucleosomes associate with each other to form a more compact structure - results from interactions between adjacent histone H1 proteins
431856479looped domains30-nm fiber forms loops that attach to a protein chromosome scaffold, making up a 300-nm fiber
431856480heterochromatinNontranscribed eukaryotic chromatin that is so highly compacted that it is visible with a light microscope during interphase
431856481euchromatina region of DNA that is uncoiled and undergoing active transcription into RNA

Chapter 9 : Cellular Respiration and Fermentation Flashcards

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482571759fermentationpartial degradation of sugars or other organic fuels that occurs w/o the use of oxygen
482571760organic moleculespossess potential energy as result of the arrangment of electons in the bonds between their atoms
482571761fuelscompounds that can participate in exergonic rxns
482571762enzymeshelps cells to systematically degrade complex organic molecules that are rich in PE to simpler waste products that have less energy
482571763energysome of it taken out of chemical storage (from PE in bonds of complex compounds) and used to do work while the rest is dissipated as heat
482571764aerobic respirationoxygen consumed as a reactant along with the organic fuel most euk/prok cells carry out
482571765anaerobic respirationw/o oxygen some prokaryotes carry out
482571766cellular respirationincludes both aerobic and anaerobic processes usually refers to aerobic fuel = food (Glucose) exhaust = CO2, H2O + Energy
482641113redox reactionsin chemical rxns, transfer of 1+ e- from one reactant to another
482641114oxidationloss of electrons
482641115reductionaddition of electrons negative electrons (e-) added to an atom ______the amount of positive charge of the atom
482641116reducing agentgives off an electron & reduces substance, which accepts the donated electron Na + Cl -> Na+ Cl- Na in this case -> gives up e-
482641117oxidizing agentelectron acceptor Na + Cl -> Na+ Cl- Cl in this case -> gains an e-
482641118redox reactionsnot all rxns involve the complete transfer of electrons from one substance to another; some change the degree of e- sharing in covalent bonds i.e. CH4 + 2O2 -> CO2 + Energy + H20 pg 211 (STUDY AGAIN)
482641119energymust be added to pull an electron away from an atom more electronegative an atom=> more ____ needed to pull electrons away from it
482641120electronloses PE when it shifs from a less electronegative atom toward a more electronegative one
500028279ATPwithin cellular respiration ____ is made within the cytosol and within the mitochondria
500028280exergonic reactionG<0 - cells harvest 1/2 energy from rxn to make atp - cells break down rxn into smaller steps - drives most production
500028281Glycolysisoccurs in cytosol, Produces NADH carrying electrons and Glucose becomes Pyruvate + ATP
500028282cell respiration outputsC02, H20, and ATP (powers most cells)
500028283cell respiration inputsorganic molecules (glucose, etc) & 02
500028284fermentationcatabolic process partial degradation of sugars or other organic fuel that occurs w/o the use of oxygen not as efficient as cell resp
500028285exergonicbreakdown of glucose is what type of reaction with free energy change (G) = -686kcal less energy in the products than in the reactants, use ATP to fuel
500028286relocation of electrons releases energy storedhow do the catabolic pathways that decompose glucose and other organic fuels yield energy?
500028287ATPreleased energy from e- transfer used to synthesize _____
500028288electronegative atomsattract electrons, tend to be oxidizing agents (stronger they tend to pull on electrons and more energy neede to take an e- away from it)
500028289NAD+- a coenzyme that acts an electron carrier, oxidized form - carries Hydrogen atoms stripped from Glucose molecule
500028290hydrogenorganic molecules with abundance of __________ = excellent fuels - because their bonds are a source of "hill top" electrons- whose potential energy may be released as these electrons fall down an energy gradient when they are transferred to oxygen
500028291NADHreduced form of NAD, formed from NADH + 2H
500028292dehydrogenasdelivers pair of hydrogen atoms (2 electrons and 2 protons)dehydrogenase enzyme that delivers pair of hydrogen atoms (2 electrons and 2 protons) and delivers it to coenzyme (NAD+) in the form of 2e and 1 proton, other proton released
500028293NAD+has 2e and 1 proton neutralized when reduced to NADH
500028294NADHrespresents stored energy that can be tapped to make ATP when e- fall down an energy gradient from _____ to oxygen
500220413combustion reactionbetween H2 and O2 - release of energy (explosion) is when electrons of the hydrogen "fall" closer to the electronegative O atoms somewhat similar to cell resp - but H atoms are from organic molecules and no explosion due to electron transport chain "breaking the fall" of electrons
500220414electron transport chainnumber of molecules mostly proteins, built into the inner membrane of the mitochondria of eukaryotic cells and the plasma membrane of aerobically respiring prokaryotes
500220415top of electron transport chaine- removed from glucose are shuttled by NADH to the "top", higher energy end of he chain
500220416bottom of electron transport chainat "bottom" - lower energy end, O2 captures these electrons along with hydrogen nuclei, forming water
500220417electron transport chain"Breaks fall" of electrons to oxygen into several energy-releasing steps hence no explosive process
500220418oxygenterminal electron acceptor at the end of the electron transport chain
500220419electron transport chaineach carrier is more electronegative than the last and oxidizes its "uphill" neighbor until you reach oxygen (very electronegative)
500220420exergonice- transfer from NADH to oxygen is a ______ reaction
500220421cellular respirationgylcolysis -> pyruvate oxidation -> oxidative phosphorylation
500220422pyruvate oxidationin eukaryotes -> pyruvate enters the mitochondrion and is oxidized to a compound called acetyl CoA
500220423acetyl CoAarises from pyruvate being oxidized in mitochondrion
500220424citric acid cyclebreakdown of glucose to CO2 is completed input : Acetyl CoA produces NADH and FADH2 carrying e- as well as ATP also known as the Kreb's cycle
500220425enzymeends in "kinase" => phosphorylates substrates, adds phosphate group, many need in each step of Gylcolysis
500220426oxidative phosphorylationATP synthesis powered by redox rxns of the e- transport chain energy released at each step along the chain can be used to convert ADP -> ATP
500220427inner membrane of the mitochondrionwhere e- transport and chemiosmosis occurs = both process constitute oxidative phosphorylation
500220428oxidative phosphorylationaccounts for 90% of ATP generated by respiration
500220429substrate-level phosphorylationsmaller amount of ATP formed directly in a few reactions of glyclolysis and citric acid cycle
500220430substrate-level phosphorylationenzyme tranfsers phosphate group from a substrate molecule to ADP, rather than adding inorganic phosphate to ADP as in in oxidative phosphorylation
500220431glycolysisin two phases : energy investment and energy payoff Glucose - 6 carbon sugar, broken down into two 3 carbon-sugars => these sugar molecules are then oxidized and their remaining atoms rearranged to form 2 molecules of pyruvate
500220432energy investment phase of gylocolysiscell spends ATP but paid off in other phase 2 ATP used, 4 formed -> net = 2
500220433Glycolysis2 ATP + 2 NADH (+ 2H)= net energy yield
500220434phosphofruktokinasekey enzyme in glycolysis, important for regulation step 3 cell turns up/on & off allosterically regulated, highly regulated
500220435Piphosphate from environment
500220436phosphofruktokinasetransfers a phosphate group from ATP to teh opposite end of the sugar, investign a second molecule of ATP - key step for regulation of glycolysis
500220437pyruvatemost energy in this type of molecule ??
500220438pyruvate oxidationmoved into mitochondria from cytosol - need tranpsort protein to go into mitochondria some diseases where protein doesnt work, or due to environmental agents
500220439pyruvate entering mitochondria1. Carboxyl group removed as CO2 from pyruvate, 2. Harvests energy: The rest of the 2 Carbon fragment oxiized, forming Acetate, electrons transfered to NAD+ and stored in NADH + 2H form 3. Becomes Acetyl CoA : CoA (coenzyme A) attaches and forms acetyl CoA 4. CoA clipped of and not used, just before entering Mitochondrion
500220440acetyl coAhigh potential energy (will take a exergonic rxn to yield lower energy products)
500220441citric acid cycleoxidizes organic fuel derived from pyruvate
500220442inputs of citric acid cycleacetyl CoA
500220443outputs of citric acid cycle6 CO2 (one removed in oxidation of pyruvate) 2 ATP per turn (substrate level phosphorylation, 1per 1 pyruvate) 8 NADH and 2 FADH2 - reduced forms of NAD+ and FAD, where most chemical energy stored in, carrying electrons
500220444matrix of mitochondriawhere citric acid cycle occurs
500220445mitochondria membranewhere oxidative phosphorylation occurs
500220446oxidative phosphorylationchemiosmosis couples electron transport to ATP synthesis fueled by energy released in e- transport chain
500220447electron transport chainfrom top to bottom - more stored energy to less energy NADH -> NAD+ FADH2 -> FAD 2 e- (from NADH and FADH2) 2H+ + 1/2 O2 H20
500220448electron transport chainin oxidative phosphorylation - pumps protons (H+) to create an H+ gradient accross membrane more outputs: NADH -> NAD+ FADH2 -> FAD 2 e- (from NADH and FADH2) 2H+ + 1/2 O2 H20
500220449ATP synthaseprotein between mito matrix and intermembrane space of mitochondria, enzyme that makes ATP from ADP and inorganic phosphates acts as ion pump
500220450ATP synthaserotated by flow of protons - proton gradient and uses energy takes phosphate group (ADP) and Pi - physically puts together
500220451high H+ concentration=> diffuse into the mito matrix and rotates ATP synthase to drive phosphorylation of ADP
500220452problems with protonssome diseases poke holes in the membrane, allow H+ to flow out, => gradient reduced, ATP output reduced
500220453proton-motive forceH+ gradient
500220454chemiosmosisenergy stored in the form of H+ gradient (proton-motive force) drives cellular work such as ATP synthesis (by flowing through it and cause ATP synthase to rotate)
500220455Glucose molecule6 carbon sugar yields 30-38 ATP, usually 36-38
500220456phosphofructokinasemajor regulator in Cellular Respiration - stimulated by AMP - inhibited by ATP produced or from citrate (from citric acid cycle)
500245877oxygenwith out it there to pull electrons down chin, than oxidative phosphorylation usually ceases unless fermentation or anaerobic respiration start up
500245878electron transport chainfermentation vs anaerobic respiration - what is the difference? anaerobic respiration uses an ______ but fermentation doesn't
500245879types of fermentationdepends on what end products are formed after pyruvate when no oxygen is present
500245880alcohol fermentationpyruvate is converted to ethanol, CO2 released, NADH is oxidized to NAD+
500245881cellular respiration regulationATP exists in equilibirum with ADP + Pi & AMP + Pi hence the regulators on phosphofructokinase
500245882goal of fermentationregenerated NAD+ => can go on with Glycolysis not the only output of fermentation but dependso n the cell type
500245883lactate and ethanol outputboth regenerate NAD+
500245884other organic fuelsenter cell respiration in different pathways and during different steps carbs - enters glycolysis step faty acid- enters Acetyl CoA, or gycolysis proteins - can enter in many parts of process
500245885lactic acid fermentationpyruvate reduced by NADH to form lactate as end product, No release of CO2

AP US History - Unit 3 Flashcards

Terms from the 3rd Unit (Ch. 12-16) of the Enduring Vision text book. Use these to study for your AP US History Exam.

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502745027William Lloyd GarrisonEmotionally high-strung, spiritual child of the Second Great Awakening. He published in Boston the first issue of his militantly antislavery newspaper The Liberator. Most conspicuous, vilified, and nonresistant of the abolitionists. It was his relentlessness that led to his shattering abolitionists blast. His work led to that of other abolitionists such as Wendell Phillips and David Walker.
502745028Nat TurnerSlave in Virginia who started a slave rebellion in 1831 believing he was receiving signs from God His rebellion was the largest sign of black resistance to slavery in America and led the state legislature of Virginia to a policy that said no one could question slavery.
502745029Dred ScottThis was a court case that began in Missouri between a slave "Dred Scott" vs. his master and later the supreme court arguing that because he had lived in the free state of Wisconsin he should be free. However, the supreme court's verdict on this controversial case was that since he was property he could be taken anywhere and that he had no right to sue as he was not a citizen. This decision was important because it angered the northern people who claimed the verdict violated the terms of the Missouri Compromise. It sparked conflict between the North and south and became a primary cause leading up to the Civil War.
502745030Johnson's Plan for ReconstructionMajority of white men must swear oath of loyalty, new government must ban slaver and ratify 13th Amendment, Confederate officials may vote and hold office.
502745031Uncle Tom's CabinWritten by Harriet Beecher Stowe in 1853 that highly influenced England's view on the American Deep South and slavery. a novel promoting abolition. intensified sectional conflict.
502745032Manifest DestinyThe Manifest Destiny was an emotional upsurge in American believing they should spread their democratic government over the entire North America and possibly extend into South America. The campaign of 1844 relied heavily on this new surge. James Polk represented the Democrats while Henry Clay was nominated by the Whigs. The campaign and mudslinging was as harsh and spread all over the continent.
502745033Tenure of Office Act1866 - enacted by radical congress - forbade president from removing civil officers without senatorial consent - was to prevent Johnson from removing a radical republican from his cabinet
502745034Deep South vs. Upper South`Deep south was more into slaves than the upper south was. They relied on slaves more.
502745035Reconstruction Act of 1867a.) put the South under military rule b.)Ordered states to hold new elections for deleagates to create new state constitutions c.) Required all states to allow all qualified male voters to vote in elections d.) Barred those who supported the Confederacy from voting. e.) Required southern states to guarantee
502745036Freeport DoctrineDouglas's response to Lincoln's question regarding people voting on slavery and being overruled by the Supreme Court. It stated that no matter how the court ruled, slavery will stay down if the people vote it down. This response in the Lincoln-Douglas trials resulted in Douglas defeating Lincoln for Senate in Illinois.
502745037John BrownHe was a militant abolitionist that took radical extremes to make his views clear. In May of 1856, he led a group of his followers to Pottawattamie Creek and launched a bloody attack against pro-slavery men killing five people. This began violent retaliation against he and his followers. This violent attack against slavery helped give Kansas its nick name, "bleeding Kansas". There have been a variety of interpretations of what He's position in history should be. The verdict seems to be a national hero who fought for the rights of slaves and died for them as a white man. His strength to except death for his cause brought strength to the ideological movement during the Civil War which gave people a reason to fight.
502745038Fort SumterThe most important of only two southern forts that remained in the "stars and stripes" after the secession. However, only lasted until the middle of April 1861 as when Lincoln sent reinforcements they were attacked in one of the first official battles of the war. _________________ demonstrates how the country was truly divided and the small amount of support located in the South. When Lincoln sent reinforcements Jefferson Davis saw it as an act of war and attacked the troops for one of the first official battles of the war.
502745039Mexican Warafter disputes over Texas lands that were settled by Mexicans the United States declared war on Mexico in 1846 and by treaty in 1848 took Texas and California and Arizona and New Mexico and Nevada and Utah and part of Colorado and paid Mexico $15,000,000
502745040Compromise of 1877Ended Reconstruction. Republicans promise 1) Remove military from South, 2) Appoint Democrat to cabinet (David Key postmaster general), 3) Federal money for railroad construction and levees on Mississippi river
502745041Election of 1860Virtually 2 elections. One in the North and one in the south. An election Where Lincoln had victory in the southern states. The issue depended on slavery because the North and South had different opinions.
502745042Wilmot ProvisoFateful amendment that stated slavery will not exist in territory from Mexico. It was another North vs. South battle of the congress. Came to symbolize the issue of slavery in different territories.
502745043Election of 1864Lincoln vs. McClellan, Lincoln wants to unite North and South, McClellan wants war to end if he's elected, citizens of North are sick of war so many vote for McClellan, Lincoln wins.
502745044Lincoln's Plan for Reconstruction10% of voters from the last election had to pledge to support the union. Pardon all Confederates except high-ranking officials and those who were cruel to prisoner's of war.
502745163Black CodesLaws passed in the south just after the civil war aimed at controlling freedmen and enabling plantation owners to exploit african american workers
502745045Bull RunThis was the first battle of the Civil war. Fought by the ill prepared Union army it was a heavy defeat by the Confederates. This battle showed that the Lincoln had been wrong to claim this would be a quick and easy war. The defeat put it into perspective showing that the Union forces were no match skill wise to the Confederate army and they would have to depend on only number.
502745075Monitor v. MerrimackWas a battle between two ironclad ships, lasts five days and has no winner but changes the paradigm of naval warfare
502745049VicksburgThis was a Union Victory coming the day after Gettysburg in Mississippi and was the South's lifeline o the western sources of supply. The significance of back to back victories for the North was monumental as it convinced many of Republican success. The most important aspect of this victory is it ended any hope of Britain interfering on the side of the South. It also tipped the scale in favor of the abolitionists.
502745047GettysburgThe sight of a gigantic war with Meade and his 92,000 troops and Lee's 76,000 troops in which by sheer number the North was Victorious. The devastation at Gettysburg broke the back of the Confederate attack and broke the heart of the Confederate Cause.
502745071The Seven Days' BattleLaunched by general Robert E. Lee from June 26-July 2, 1862.The Confederates were winning and drove McClellan back to the sea. Lincoln then fired McCellan.
502745076AntietamA critical battle where two Union soldiers found Lee's battle plans that were dropped on the ground.This helpful evidence Helped McClellan halt Lee at the battle. Most desicive even in the civil war. This victory lead to the emancipation Proclimation.
502745060Appomattox CourthouseWhere Grant cornered Lee in 1865, ending the Civil War. This reunited the Union, and freed the slaves, although they were not to attain full liberty for a long while.
502745077Emancipation ProclamationDeclared that the slaves were forever free in the confederate states that were still in rebellion. Put an end to the war and helped preserve the union later came the 13th amendment.
502745119Kansas-Nebraska ActSplit Nebraska into two different states, Kansas and Nebraska, leaving the issue of slavery to be determined by popular sovereignty. One of the most momentous measures ever to pass congress. Greased the slippery slope to the Civil War. Resulted in the Republican Party.
502774220ScalawagsSouthern whites who supported republican policy through reconstruction.
502745067Lincoln's Goal for the Civil Warto preserve the Union, he believed Constitution didn't give President power to abolish slavery. Knew some Northerners and Border State residents were against abolition.
502745091Know-NothingThis party organized by "Nativists" in outrage of all the Irish and German immigrants flooding the country. Were a group of people who opposed the increasing immigration levels and attempted to write legislation for rigid restrictions on immigration and naturalization and for laws authorizing The deportation of alien paupers. This was just an example of a group of people attempting to thwart the increase of immigration which has continued to make-up America.
502745054The Thirteenth Amendmentforbid slavery, making slavery and involuntary servitude both illegal. The Amendment was ratified in 1865, after the war was over. The South had to ratify it to be readmitted to the Union. The Thirteenth Amendment was the first step in a long journey towards racial equality.
502745107Crittenden Amendment/ CompromiseAn effort by Senator James Henry Crittenden of Kentucky to appease south. Slavery in the territories was prohibited north of 36 and 30. Was rejected by Lincoln because he completely opposed the expansion of slavery.
502745053The Fourteenth AmendmentDeclares that all persons born in the U.S. are citizens and are guaranteed equal protection of the laws.
502745051The Fifteenth AmendmentPassed in 1869, it gave Blacks their right to vote.
502745048Ulysses S. GrantA western general who replaced McClellan because of his inconsistency and led the Union to victory. Although he was just a subpart student at WestPoint he still proved more effective in her field. He had a drinking problem admired by Lincoln. Grant gave Lincoln a general that he could depend on which greatly helped the Union in its quest for Victory. He was very aggressive and new men needed to be sacrificed for victory. He once said when asked about Grant's drinking problem "Give me 100 barrels of what he's drinking and I'll give it to the rest of my officers".
502745046General George C. McClellanHe was the "on again off again" general of the Union army and a WestPoint Graduate. He was known for his brilliant organization skills and beloved by his troops for his willingness to be conservative in an effort to save lives. __________'s conservativism prevented him from having as much as an effect as Lincoln hoped for as he never did a good enough job. This led to him being fired and reinstated multiple times until he was permanently replaced by Grant.
502745050William Tecumseh ShermanRed-haired and red-bearded he captured Atlanta in September 1864 and burned the city in November. He was a pioneer of "Total War" as he was very destructive and aggressive. __________'s "total war" mentality angered the South who felt he was further provoking war. However it is undeniable that his methods were very effective.
502745120Republican PartySprang up, partly to oppose the Kansas-Nebraska Act, in the Midwest, notably Wisconsin and Michigan, as a mighty moral protest against slavery. Brought together disgruntled Whigs, Democrats, Free-Soilers, Know-Nothings, and other opposers of the Kansas-Nebraska Act. Still one of the two dominant political parties to this day.
502745052Wade-Davis Billan 1864 plan for Reconstruction that denied the right to vote or hold office for anyone who had fought for the Confederacy...Lincoln refused to sign this bill thinking it was too harsh.
502745055Congressional Reconstruction• Passed 14th and 15th amendments • Military reconstruction act divided the south into five military districts • New state constitutions required to guarantee voting rights • Military rule protected voting rights for African Americans • Empowered African Americans in government and supported their education
502745063John Wilkes BoothThe man that shot Lincoln in the head at Ford's Theater. A half-crazed (according to the book, I don't know what to believe after reading that chapter from Lies My teacher Told Me...) Pro-Southern actor. First man ever to assassinate an American President.
502745064Share CroppingAfrican Americans and poor whites would work on a land owned by another in return for small pay or some crops.
502745096Stephen A. DouglasA squat, bull-necked, heavy-chested, self-made Senator. Supported the democratic concept of dividing Nebraska into Kansas and Nebraska, the issue of slavery in each state determined by popular sovereignty. He delivered a counterstroke to offset the Gadsden thrust for souther expansion westward.
502745135James K. PolkFirst "dark horse" presidential candidate. He defeated Henry Clay in 1844 election. Developed a successful four-point program which lowered tariffs, restored the independent treasury, and led to the acquisition of California and Oregon.
502745109"Popular Sovereignty"This was the idea presented by Crass to leave it up to new territories on deciding whether or not they wanted to enter as slave states, however this contradicted the Missouri compromise which restricted slaver over the 36 30 line. This angered many people as it directly contradicted the Missouri Compromise, however it did settle some of the disputes between the majority of the slave states vs. free states. It gave the Free states a better opportunity to outnumber the slave states, but many conflicts still arose.
502745095Sumner v. BrooksAs a senator from Mass., he was a leading abolitionist. His speech, "The Crime Against Kansas." was an assault of the pro-slavery South Carolina and the South in general. The insult angered Preston Brooks of South Carolina. Brooks walked up to his desk and beat him unconscious. This violent incident helped touch off the war between the North and the South.
502745065Compromise of 1850Series of legislation addressing slavery and the boundaries of territories acquired during the Mexican-American War. California was admitted as a free state, Texas received financial compensation for relinquishing claim to lands West of the Rio Grande river, the territory of New Mexico was organized with popular sovereignty, the slave trade was abolished in Washington, D.C., and the Fugitive Slave Law was passed It temporarily defused sectional tensions in the United States, postponing the secession crisis and the American Civil War. Also repealed the compromise of 1820.
502745092"Bleeding Kansas"This was the name given to the conflict between Northern and Southern immigrants to Kansas which resulted in conflicts concerning popular sovereignty. There would be constant battle between abolitionists and anti-abolitionists to try to make Kansas join their respected beliefs. One could go as far as to say that this conflict was the start as the Civil War as it was battle between North and south. It showed how there was no turning back and the only solution would have to come from the blood of the citizens.
502745066Sherman's MarchGeneral Sherman lead a force from Chattanooga, Tennessee to South Carolina destroying everything the Confederates could use to survive. He set fire to South Carolina's capital, Columbia.
502745068Andrew JohnsonWas Lincoln's vice-president, and became president after Lincoln was shot. Through the questionable crucifixion thesis he is though to have taken the bullet of Lincoln's inevitable fate of impeachment. The first US president to be impeached.
502745069Border Statesin the civil war the states between the north and the south: delaware, mayland, kentucky, and missouri
502745087Robert E. Lee/Stonewall Jackson_________ was the first-rate, gray-haired commander of the South whose chivalry and honor embodied southern ideal. His chief lieutenant was _____2_____, a black-bearded man, a gifted tactical theorist, and a master of speed and deception. Due to these two men the South had the advantage in military leadership, the North winning mostly due to luck and numbers.
502745093Lecompton ConstitutionThis was a manipulative document designed by the pro-slavery members of Kansas after they realized that there were too many abolitionists for it to be a slave state. It sated that any if anyone voted against slavery in Kansas that all the slaves already present would remain slaves along with their offspring. This was another example of how the manipulative south would go to any extreme to maintain slavery in the Union. This conflict helped bring about the Civil War.
502745094James BuchananThe fifteenth president of the U.S., _______ was highly influenced by the South. Regime's legacy relied heavily on the notorious Lecompton Constitution. Buchanan's antagonizing of the Douglas Democrats in the North divided the once-powerful Democratic Party. This left the door open for the Republicans, who would gather behind Abraham Lincoln.
502745097Harper's FairyOctober of 1859; John Brown of Kansas attempted to create a Southern-wide slave revolt. He planned to ride down the river and provide slaves with guns, but the slaves were not organized. Brown was captured and hanged. This was just another reason for the South to separate from the North, which, in their opinion, was full of John Browns. John Brown became a martyr to the northern abolitionist cause.
502745099Panic of 1857An economic crash that arose due to the inflation caused by inpouring California gold. The demands of the Crimean War over-stimulated grain growth and land speculation, and when the collapse came over five thousand businesses failed. Northern farmers were hard-hit by the panic, while the South basically went untouched. Also the panic created a clamor of higher tariff rates.
502745101Lincoln-Douglas DebatesLincoln challenged Douglas, probably the nations most devastating debater, to a debate. Lincoln brought up the question of whether or not a territory could vote slavery down without the Supreme Court overruling. Douglas responded with what's known as the Freeport Doctrine, stating that no matter how the court ruled, if people vote slavery down it will stay down. Although Lincoln was defeated in the running for Illinois, the rippling effect of these debates led to his potential Republican nomination for President.
502745106Jefferson DavisPresident of the confederacy from Kentucky who was in favor of the expansion of slavery. "All we ask is to be left alone" The republicans still won control over congress. He was the rival of Lincoln.
502745110Zachary TaylorTaylor was a general and hero of the Mexican-American war. He was elected to the presidency in 1848, representing the Whig party and was a good soldier but poor administrator. He was in office during the crisis of California's admittance to the Union but died in office before a compromise could be worked out, and left vice president Filmore to finalize a deal between the hostile north and south. His significance as president was that he was one of the last Whigs and didn't solve the problem of sectionalism in the country which caused the civil war.
502745113Personal Liberty LawsAfter S. Carolina made it a penal offense for any state official to enforce new federal stature, other states passed "personal liberty laws", which denied local jails to federal officials. Hampered federal law enforcement. Illustrated the struggle between state and federal power.
502745115Henry ClayEngineer of the Compromise of 1850, which was his third great compromise. Suggested that the North should yield by enacting a more feasible fugitive-slave law. The "Great Pacificator" was responsible for three of the most important compromises in American history. Without ___________, it is plausible to say the Civil War would have occurred much earlier.
502745117Gadsden PurchaseThe purchase of land in the Southern part of the New Mexico Territory. Allowed the completion of the Southern Pacific Railroad. With the new territory, the South could build its coveted railroad that would give them direct connection to the raw materials of the West.
502745123Ostend ManifestoAmerican ministers in Spain, England, and France had a confidential meeting attempting to acquire Cuba for $120,000,000. This secret quickly leaked and Northerners rose against manifesto of Brigands. Helped territorial expansion.

European History AP - ch 18 Scientific Revolution Flashcards

Vocab for class at Niceville HS. The list is chapter 18.

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443305014Aristotelian World ViewMotionless earh was fixed at the center of the universe, God was beyond.
443305015Francis Bacon(1561-1626) English politician, writer. Formalized the empirical method. "Novum Organum". Inductive reasoning.
443305016Tycho Brahe(1546-1601) Established himself as Europe's foremost astronomer of his day; detailed observations of new star of 1572.
443305017Robert Boyle(1627-1691) Physicist, nothing can be known beyond all doubt.
443305018Andrew CelsiusInvented measurement of temperature - Celsius.
443305019Nicolaus Copernicus(1473-1543) Plish clergyman. Sun was the center of the universe; the planets went around it. "On the Revolution of Heavenly Spheres." Destroyed Aristotle's view of the universe - heliocentric theory.
443305020Heliocentric TheorySun is the center of the universe. Copernican.
443305021Geocentric TheoryEarth is the center of the universe. Aristotelian.
443305022Descartes(1596-1650) French philosopher, discovered analytical geometry. Saw Algebra and Geometry have a direct relationship. Reduced everything to spiritual or physical.
443305023Deductive ReasoningDescartes, doubt everything and use reasoning based on facts. Combined with empiricism to create scientific method.
443305024Inductive ReasoningBaconian empiricism. Based on speculations on other situations.
443305025Discourse on MethodsDescartes (1677) espoused deductive reasoning.
443305026EmpiricismBacon's theory of inductive reasoning.
443305027Gabriel FahrenheitDeveloped measurement of temperature with freezing at 32 degrees.
443305028Galileo GalileiCreated modern experimental method. Formulated the law of inertia. Tried for heresy and forced to recant. Saw Jupiter's moons. Wrote "Dialogue on the Two Chief Systems of the World".
443305029Gresham CollegeLocated in England. Leading place for the advancement of science. First time scientists had an honored roll in society; center of scientific activity.
443305030William HarveyEnglishman who announced blood circulates throughout the body.
443305031Carl LinnaeusSystem Nature - developed methods to classify and name plants and animals.
443305032Natural LawUniversal law that could be understood by applying reason; letting people govern themselves.
443305033Isaac NewtonEnglish scientist. 3 Laws of Motion. Mathematics Principal of Natural PHilosophy (1687).
443305034Ptolemy's SystemLast great ancient astronomer; there was a place for God. Complicated rules used to expalin minor irregulatiries in the movement of the planets.
443305035The Royal Society of LondonEstablished by Charles II in 1662; purpose to help the sciences.
443305036Discourses on the Origins of InequalitiesRousseau, discussed the innocence of man and his corruption by society.
443305037VoltaireFrench, perhaps greatest Enlightenment thinker. Deist. Mixed glorification and reason with an appeal for better individuals and institutions. Wrote "Candide". Believed enlightened despot best form of government.
443305038DeismGod built the Universe and let it run. Clockmaker theory.
443305039Enlightened despotEnlightened ruler. Catherine the Breat, Frederick the Great.
443305040HumanitarianismPromoting human welfare and social reform.
443305041Second Treatise of GovernmentsWritten by Locke, government created to protect life, liberty, and property.
443305042Essay Concerning Human UnderstandingWritten by Locke, tabula rasa theory.
443305043RococoArt style that focuses on pastels, ornate interiors, and sentimental portaits.
443305044The Spirit of LawsMontesquieu, about separation of powers.
443305045The Social ContractRousseau, suggestions in reforming the political system and modeled after the Greek polis.
443305046CandideVoltaire, satirizing society and organized religion in Europe.
443305047MontesquieuFrench philosopher. Wrote "The Spirit of Laws". Said "Power checks power". Separation of powers. Form of government varies according to climate.

AP European History: Reformations Flashcards

Jasper High School | 2012

Terms : Hide Images
463435341predestinationidea that God has already decided who will/won't go to Heaven; Calvinist belief
463435342Egalitarianmovement based on the ideal that people in all aspects (especially gender) were equal in the eyes of God
463435343Priesthood of BelieversProtestant doctrine that says that Christians all have equal potential to minister for God, and they all have the responsibility to do so; goes against the heirarchy within the Church; idea espoused by Luther and his followers; believers can do well without attachment to the Church
463435344transubstantiationRoman Catholic doctrine that says that during the Eucharist (communion), the wine/bread actually changes into Jesus's blood/body; rejected by Luther; Zwingli thinks that it's purely symbolic, disagreed with Luther
463435345laityChristians who weren't part of the clergy; started to question the church because of corruption and gaining new knowledge
463435346justification by faithidea that the only way to be saved was to believe in God and Jesus; one of Martin Luther's ideals, which he didn't feel that the Catholic Church was upholding
463435347purgatoryplace Catholic goes after death to pay for sins before going to Heaven; indulgences were bought to lessen the time spent there (Luther disliked)
463435348indulgencespayment for sins in lieu of working them off in purgatory; sold by Church (especially Tetzel) to pay for St. Peter's Basillica in Rome; disliked by Luther because not mentioned in Scripture (also disliked buying salvation - justification by faith alone); originally for Crusaders who had fallen in battle
46343534995 Theses95 problems that Luther had with the Catholic Church; included indulgences; evidence of Luther's past education in law; embraced by humanists and other proponents of reform, making him famous
463435350excommunicationto be separated from the Church; Luther got excommunicated by the Church as a result of his beliefs and his unwillingness to recant (threatened by Papal Bull in 1920)
463435351Index of Prohibited Booksbooks that were banned by the Catholic Church because they thought that they would lead followers astray; part of the Counter Reformation; against humanism
463435352Electchosen as an object of divine grace; people already chosen by God to go to Heaven; Calvinist belief
463435353AnabaptistsSwitzerland | radical reformers who wanted more visible moral transformation in Christianity; separated from society for form "perfect community"; wanted solely adult baptism; take of city of Munster as radicals (crushed by other Christian armies)
463435354Anglican ChurchEngland | church created by the Act of Succession by Henry VIII
463435355Anne BoleynEngland (c.1501) | Catherine of Aragon's lady-in-waiting; Henry VIII likes her, tries to get his marriage with Catherine annulled (fails); leads ot the Reformation Parliament, king becomes head of the Church; second wife of Henry VIII (eventually beheaded)
463435356Catherine of AragonEngland (1485) | daughter of Ferdinand and Isabella; first wife of Henry VIII; many failed pregnancies; divorced from Henry VIII; daughter was Mary
463435357Charles I / Charles VISpain/Holy Roman Empire (1500) | ruler of Spain and the Holy Roman Emperor, also rules a lot of territory in the Western hemisphere; wars/gets distracted by French and Ottomans; against the Reformation with Augsberg Interim; eventually settles for Peace of Augsberg, surrendering quest for European religious unity
463435358English CalvinistsEngland | founded by John Calvin; believed in predestination and re-ordering society morally; worked in Geneva (at first were exiled), transforming it
463435359Frederick the WiseSaxony (1463) | elector of Saxony who supported Luther and gave him shelter
463435360Henry VIIIEngland (1491) | King of England who defended Catholocism (Defender of the Faith) against Luther; becomes supreme head of church; has 6 wives; only after his death does the Reformation really work in England
463435361HuguenotsFrance | French Calvinists; later fled France because of series of religious persecutions
463435362Ignatius LoyolaSpain (1491) | organizer of Jesuits/Society of Jesus; served church as a soldier of Christ; had "spiritual exercises": spiritual self-mastery over one's feelings and behavior; emphasized perfect discipline and self-control with the Church
463435363Jan HussCzechoslovakia (1369) | first church reformer; like Wycliffe, wanted to clean up church and translate the Bible into the vernacular; "heretic"
463435364JesuitsRome/Papal States | instrumental to Counter-Reformation's success; organized by Loyola; thought Protestants were disobedient to the Church
463435365Johann TetzelGermany (1465) | sold indulgences to help pay for St. Peter's Basilica; Luther did not like him
463435366John WycliffeEngland (1328) | like Huss, was dissident of the Catholic Church and wanted to translate Bibles into English/the vernacular
463435367Martin LutherGermany (1483) | vanguard of the Protestant Reformation; believed in Scripture as sold authority; justification by faith; vernacular language; also wanted universal compulsory education; wrote 95 Theses
463435368Max WeberGermany (1864) | sociologist, author of //The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism//; thought there was a relationship between Calvinism and the development of capitalist societies
463435369PrebyteriansScotland | originated from Calvin's teachings, especially because of Geneva
463435370Schmalkaldic LeagueHoly Roman Empire | Lutheran defense alliance formed as a result of the Diet of Augsberg's order; German princes who supported Luther; achieved stalemate with the HRE
463435371Ulrich ZwingliZurich, Switzerland (1484) | leader of Swiss Reformation, influenced by northern humanist Erasmus; disliked indulgences and campaigned against clerical celibacy; believed in authority of the Bible; disagreed with Luther over the Eucharist; executed in the 2nd civil war
463435372Act of Succession1534 | requested by Henry VIII; made Catherine of Aragon and Anne Boleyn's children legitimate heirs to the throne; if Edward dies Mary = heir, then Elizabeth if something happens to Mary; continued Tudor family line
463435373Act of Supremacy1534 | declared Henry VIII "the only supreme head in earth of the Church of England"; monarchs are head of church
463435374Council of Trent1545-1563 | council to reassert church doctrine; met in Trent in N. Italy; reforms about internal church discipline (curtail simony); did not give concessions to Protestantism; revived parish life
463435375Diet of Worms1521 | presided over by Charles I / V; Luther presents views in front of it, they ask him to recant, he refuses (against his beliefs), he becomes an outlaw
463435376German Peasants' Revolt1524-1525 | peasants thought the reformation = social revolution; Luther was sympathetic but condemned revolution because it was un-Christian, told princes to crush it; thousands of peasant deaths
463435377Papal Bull1520 | Exsurge Domine; issued by Pope to Luther, censuring some of his 95 Theses and threatening him with excommunication unless he recanted (he didn't)
463435378Peace of Augsburg1555 | makes division of Christendom permanent; says ruler of land determines its religion (discontent? relocate to another region); recognized Lutheranism, but didn't officially recognize anabaptists/Calvinists

AP European History - Cumulative Final Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
380936214humanismthe scholarly interest in the study of the classical texts, values, and styles of Greece and Rome. Contributed to the promotion of a liberal arts education based on the study of the classics, rhetoric, and history
380936215Dantewas an Italian poet, prose writer, literary theorist, moral philosopher, and political thinker, best known for writing the "Divine Comedy" - considered the greatest literary work composed in the Italian language and a masterpiece of world literature
381001223Petrarch1304-1374, known as the "father of humanism" saw himself as living at the start of a new golden age of intellectual achievement - a rebirth. From these initial thoughts developed a mass understanding of a need to bring back antique lifestyles and Latin classics
381001224civic humanismmodern term for the moral, social and political philosophy that in the course of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries began to be articulated in Italian city-states and most notably in Florence (Humanists believed education should promote individual virtue and public service)
381001225Lorenzo Mediciwas an Italian statesman and de facto ruler of the Florentine Republic during the Italian Renaissance. Known as ____ the Magnificent , he was a diplomat, politician and patron of scholars, artists, and poets. Perhaps what he is most known for is his contribution to the art world, giving large amounts of money to artists so they may create master works of art
381001226Christine de Pizanremembered as Europe's first feminist, a prolific write who became the first woman in European history to earn a living as an author
381001227Tudorswas a European royal house of Welsh origin that ruled the Kingdom of England and its realms, including the Lordship of Ireland, later the Kingdom of Ireland, from 1485 until 1603. First monarch - Henry VII - this failed in 1603 with the death of Elizabeth I of England
381001228Aragon and Castiletwo regions brought together by Isabella and Ferdinand who married in 1469 and were able too subdue their realms, secure their borders, and venture abroad militarily, and Christianize the whole of Spain
381001229Christian humanismA branch of humanism associated with northern Europe. Like their Italian counterparts, the ______ humanists closely studied classical texts and sought to give humanism a specifically ______ content. (Ex. - Erasmus)
381001230encomiendaa formal grant of the right tot the labor of a specific number of Indians for a particular period of time. (a result of Colonization and conquest by Spanish conquistadors during the Age of Exploration)
381001231Columbian Exchange[1492] was a dramatically widespread exchange of animals, plants, culture, human populations (including slaves), communicable disease, and ideas between the Western and Eastern Hemispheres
381001232Wycliffe[1384] an Oxford theologian and a philosopher of high standing who became a major intellectual spokesman for the rights of royalty against the secular pretensions of popes. Lollards looked to the writings of him
381001233Pope Leo Xwas the last non-priest (only a deacon) to be elected Pope. He is known for granting indulgences for those who donated to reconstruct St. Peter's Basilica and his challenging of Martin Luther's 95 Theses
381001234Bishop AlbrechtElector and Archbishop of Mainz who had obtained permission from Pope Leo X to conduct the sale of indulgences in his diocese to obtain funds to repay his debts, as long as half the collection was forwarded to the Papacy.
381001235justification by faith alonethe belief that Luther insisted that faith was the only path to salvation: the righteousness that God demands did not result from charitable acts and religious ceremonies, but was given in full measure to any and all who believe in and trust Jesus Christ as their perfect righteousness satisfying to God.
381001236Charles Vwas ruler of the Holy Roman Empire from 1519 and, as Charles I, of the Spanish Empire from 1516 until his voluntary retirement and abdication in favor of his younger brother Ferdinand I and his son Philip II in 1556.
381001237Frederick IIIwas Elector of Saxony (from the House of Wettin) from 1486 to his death, who was notable as being one of the most powerful early defenders of Martin Luther, Lutheranism, and the Protestant Reformation
381001238Schmalkaldic Leaguewas a defensive alliance of Lutheran princes within the Holy Roman Empire during the mid-16th century. Although originally started for religious motives soon after the start of the Protestant Reformation, its members eventually intended for the League to replace the Holy Roman Empire as their source of political allegiance.
381001239Peace of Augsburgalso called the Augsburg Settlement was a treaty between Charles V and the forces of the Schmalkaldic League, an alliance of Lutheran princes, on September 25, 1555 - ended the civil war and gave each German prince the right to determine the religion of his state, either Roman Catholic or Lutheran *did not provide for the recognition of Calvanists and other religious minorities
381001240Zwingli[1484-1531] leader of the Swiss Reformation and widely known for his opposition to the sale of indulgences and to religious superstition
381001241Henry VIIIdevout Catholic (who opposed Luther) who reigned in England 1509-1547. Known as the "Defender of the Faith". Asked for an annulment but was rejected so in 1533 he defied the pope and married Anne Boleyn. This lead to the Act of Supremacy, declaring the English king to be Head of the Church of England *started Anglicanism
381001242Act of SuccessionMarch, 1534, Parliament passed the __________, vesting the succession of the English Crown in the children of King Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn. This act, effectively, set Princess Elizabeth first in line for the throne, declaring Princess Mary a bastard
381001243Thirty-Nine Articlesestablished in 1563, the articles served to define the doctrine of the Church of England as it related to Calvinist doctrine and Roman Catholic practice
381001244Council of Trentcalled by Charles V in 1545 and they reaffirmed Catholic doctrines and church abuses, reasserted traditional practices, and resisted limiting papal authority
381001245Philip IIson of Charles V (HRE Emp) who was left with a vast empire (included Spain, Milan, Naples, the Netherlands, and the overseas empire in the Americas) *goals: wanted to advance Spanish power in Europe, champion Catholicism in Europe, and defeat Ottoman Turks
381001246Dutch Revolt[1568-1648] was the successful revolt of the Protestant Seventeen Provinces of the defunct Duchy of Burgundy in the Low Countries against the ardent militant religious policies of Roman Catholicism pressed by both Charles V and his son Philip II of Spanish Empire **marked the beginning of the Thirty Years' War and led to the formation of the independent Dutch Republic
381001247Union of Utrechtwas a treaty signed on 23 January 1579 in Utrecht, the Netherlands, unifying the northern provinces of the Netherlands, until then under the control of Habsburg Spain.
381001248Guisesa French ducal family, partly responsible for the French Wars of Religion; were Catholic, and Henry ____ wanted to end growing Calvinist influence. The assassination of ___ heightened passions and inspired Catholic attacks on Huguenots and their culture.
381001249politiquerulers who put political necessities above personal beliefs. [ex: Henry IV of France and Elizabeth I of England]
381001250Palatinatea region in south-western Germany inhabited by Calvanists at the time of the Thirty-Years War
381022527Defenestration of Praguethe time when Protestants threw two of the Holy Roman emperor's officials out of windows during the Bohemia Period during the 30 Years' War.
381022528Danish Periodone of the periods of the 30 Years' War where King Christian IV (Lutheran ruler of Denmark) intervened to support the Protestants but was crushed by the imperial armies. *result: Emperor Ferdinand issued the Edit of Restitution restoring all Catholic properties lost to the Protestants since 1552
381022529Gustavus Adolphuswas King of Sweden (1611-1632) and founder of the Swedish Empire; led his nation to military supremacy during the Thirty Years War, helping to determine the political as well as the religious balance of power in Europe; regarded as one of the greatest military commanders of all time
381022530Peace of Westphalia1648, treaty that ends the 30 Years War - each of the over 300 German states received the right to conduct diplomacy and make treaties, rulers were allowed to decide the religious faith in their territory, independence of the Dutch Repub and neutrality of Switz recognized, French annexed part of Alsace, Sweden received addition territory around the Baltic Sea
381022531Le Frondea series of rebellions against royal authority in France between 1649 and 1652. played a key role in Louis XIV's decision to leave Paris and build Versailles
381022532parlementFrench regional courts dominated by hereditary nobles. claimed the right to register royal decrees before they could become law
381027736mercantilismeconomic philosophy calling for close government regulation of the economy. emphasized building a strong, self-sufficient economy by maximizing exports and limiting imports. *balance of trade would enable a country to accumulate reserves of gold and silver
381027737War of Spanish Succession(1701-1714) was fought among several European powers, including a divided Spain, over the possible unification of the Kingdoms of Spain and France under one Bourbon monarch *played a key role in worsening financial and social tensions that would later erupt in the French Rev
381027738Long Parliamentwas established on 3 November 1640 to pass financial bills It received its name from the fact that through an Act of Parliament, it could only be dissolved with the agreement of the members and those members did not agree to its dissolution until after the English Civil War
381027739Roundheadsgroup during English Civil War that included: Puritans, townspeople, middle class businessmen, and people from Presbyterian-dominated London *favored Parliamentary monarchy and a Presbyterian church governed by elected presbyters or elders
381027740Cavaliersgroup during English Civil War that included: aristocrats, nobles, and church officials who remained loyal to the king *favored a strong monarchy and an Anglican Church governed by bishops appointed by the crown
383281882Glorious Revolution1688 - William and Mary came into power in England because Parliament invited them to come over and overthrow James II. Glorious cuz no blüd.
383281883Reasons for Dutch Golden AgeEconomic growth, shipbuilding, trade, rel freedom, became bankers
383281884Frederick IIIbuilt up Prussian military, known as Great Elector, support from Junkers in exchange for giving the permission to explot their serfs
383281885Pragmatic Sanctionthe doctrine Charles VII of Prussia decreed so that his daughter Maria Theresa ruled without opposition
383281886Romanovs-Time of Troublesafter Ivan the Terrible Russia had the Time of Troubles, then Romanovs came into power, Russia was isolated from Europe in TOT.
383281887Peter the Greatmodernized Russia by bringing over western customs, agriculture, he defeated Sweden in the Great Northern War, he built St. Petersburg which was a symbol of Russian Westernization, boyars had it pretty good, while serfs were exploited
383281888Serfdom in Russia & Eastern Europeserfs were exploited
383281889Keplercontinued work of Brahe, did some research and concluded that sun is in center while planets orbit the sun
383281890Principiaby Newton, brought together lots of research from various scientists all together into one book, including some of his own work
383281891Inductive Reasoningusing controlled experiments to explain natural laws, going from specific to general
383281892Descartesdeductive reasoning, observations can be misleading, starts with self-evident axiom known to be true, than just deduces logical explanations for everything else
383281893Tabula rasameans blank slate, made known by Locke
383281894Margaret Cavendishwas a poet, philosopher, writer of prose romances, essayist, and playwright who published under her own name at a time when most women writers published anonymously
383281895Pugachev's rebellionthe uprising of serfs while Catherin the Great was rulin Russia, this rebellion marked the ending of Catherine's Enlightenment reforms
383281896Joint-stock companiesThese were investments where lots of people pooled there money together into a company, and then gained interest based on how much they put in.
383281897Triangle Tradethe trade where Africans went to Americas to work, Americas gave their goods to Europe, Europe then went back to Africa and got more slaves for money.
383281898DeismGOD IS A CLOCKMAKER, God created the universe then left it to work by its own
383281899Beccariawrote On Crimes and Punishments -1738-1794; italian aristocrat and philosophe; applied critical analysis to the problem of making punishments both effective and just; wanted the laws of monarchs and legislatures to conform with the rational laws of nature; attacked both torture and capital punishment
383281900Rousseauchildren get an education, believed that community has the general will, and they can extract leaders from their throne, rulers are servants of the community
383281901Rococois an 18th-century artistic movement and style, which affected several aspects of the arts including painting, sculpture, architecture, interior design, decoration, literature, music and theatre. _______ developed in the early part of the 18th century in Paris, France as a reaction against the grandeur, symmetry and strict regulations of the Baroque ***playful, naughty
383281902Neoclassicism"classical" art and culture of Ancient Greece or Ancient Rome. ________ movement coincided with the 18th century Age of Enlightenment, and continued into the early 19th century
383281903War of Austrian Successionthe war that began under the pretext that Maria Theresa was ineligible to succeed to the Habsburg thrones of her father, Charles VI, because Salic law precluded royal inheritance by a woman—though in reality this was a convenient excuse put forward by Prussia and France to challenge Habsburg power [Frederick the Great violated the Pragmatic Sanction and attacked, Franch w/ Prussia VS. English w/ Austria] michaels def
383375142seven years' war1756-1763; frederick ii invaded saxony; invasion created a destructive alliance that frederick feared; france and austria made a new alliance dedicated to the destruction of prussia
383375143catherine iir 1762-1796; legally defined the rights and privileges of noble men and women in exchange for the assurance that the nobility would serve the state voluntarily
383375144partition of polandperpetrated by the russian empire, the kingdom of prussia, and habsburg austria; divided up the commonwealth lands among themselves progressively in the process of territorial seizures
383375145estates generalthe medieval french parliament; it consisted of three separate groups, or "estates": clergy, nobility, and commoners; last met in 1789 at the outbreak of the french revolution
383375146national assemblylegislature dominated by moderates and conservatives; little sympathy for the expensive national workshops, which they incorrectly perceived to be socialistic
383375147declaration of the rights of woman1791; olympe de gouges from montaban in northwest france became a major revolutionary radical in paris; ironically addressed to queen marie antoinette; much of the document reprinted the declaration of the rights of man and citizen, adding the word "woman" to the various original clauses
383375148assignatsgovernment bonds based on the value of confiscated church lands issued during the early french revolution
383375149civil constitution of the clergytransformed the roman catholic church in france into a branch of the secular state; reduced the number of bishoprics from 135 to 83; making one diocese for each of the new departments
383375150paris communewas a government that briefly ruled Paris from March 18 (more formally, from March 28) to May 28, 1871. It existed before the split between anarchists and Marxists had taken place, and it is hailed by both groups as the first assumption of power by the working class during the Industrial Revolution
383375151committee of public safety1793; carry out the executive duties of the government; eventually enjoyed almost dictatorial power; all revolutionary leaders were convinced republicans who had long opposed the more vacillating policies of the girondists
383375152directorythe second to last stage of the french revolution; refers to the neoclassical styles in the decorative arts and fashion that characterize the period
383375153edmund burke1729-1799; condemned the reconstruction of the french administration as the application of a blind rationalism that ignored the historical realities of political development and the concrete complexities of social relations
3833751541683 siege of viennabattle of the holy roman empire in league with the holy league versus the ottoman empire; battle marked the beginning of the political hegemony of the hapsburg dynasty
383375155leviathan1651; published by hobbes; his aim was to provide a rigorous philosophical justification for a strong central political authority; portrayed human beings and society in a thoroughly materialistic and mechanical way
383375156baruch spinoza1632-1677; jewish writer who lived in germany; set the example for a secularized version of judaism; looked to the power of human reason to reconceptualize traditional thought
383379851ancien regimeterm applied to the pattern of social, political, and economic relationships and institutions that existed in europe before the french revolution
383396862Walpoleengland's first prime minister
383429739vindication of the rights of womanmary wollstonecraft criticizes rousseau's view of women; portrayes that argument as defending the continued bondage of women to men and as hindering the wider education of the entire human race

AP European History Quarter 1 Exam Flashcards

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222745579the NetherlandsWhich nation or lands are associated with the customs of Joyeuse Entree?
222745580written by Henry VIII in which the Roman catholic Church's position on sacramental theology was supportedDefense of the Seven Sacraments was a tract...
222745581The Praise of FollyErasmus of Rotterdam was the author of...
222745582brought official recognition to Calvinism in the Holy Roman Empire and recognized the stattenssystem, the system in Europe of individual nation-states, each with its own agenda to pursueThe Peace of Westphalia, which ended the Thirty Years War...
222745583Council of TrentWhich Church Council met on-and-off for twenty years and made some cosmetic corrections to the worst abuses of the Church?
222745584William II of OrangeWhat Dutch stadholder rose up in rebellion against Phillip II after the Council of Blood was established in the Netherlands?
222745585Every human creature is subject to the Roman pontiff and there is no salvation outside the Catholic ChurchWhat is a concept found in the papal bull Unam Sanctum issued by Pope Boniface VIII in 1302?
222745586They had disillusions with the Church, and felt the Church might not be the true or only way to salvationWilliam Langland, the Lollards, John Wycliff, and John Huss all shared the same outlook on relgion. What was that?
2227455871648What year was the Peace of Westphalia written, ending the Thirty Years War?
222745588when the papacy was in avignon, franceWhat statement best characterizes the Babylonian Captivity?
222745589secular government in which religion plays no partWhat form of government would most likely win the approval of a politique?
222745590Jean Bodin"In every society there must be one power strong enough to give law to all other, with their consent if possible, without their consent if necessary." Who is the man behind this theory called the "theory of sovereignty?"
222745591a court designed to end the influence in the English Courts of powerful nobles against the poor commonersThe English Star Chamber was...
222745592a labor system dealing with Central/South American Natives setting a required set of number of days of labor from the Natives for the Spanish land ownersThe Encomienda System was...
222745593JewsFerdinand and Isabella's policies of Spanish nationalism led to the expulsion, from Spain, of large numbers of Spanish...
222745594the printing pressWhat was the most influential in the spread of Protestanism to the peasant population of Europe in the 16th century?
222745595The new merchant class of the Commercial Revolution was more interested in the secular world and less interested in religion, just like the pagan Italian RenaissanceWhat best characterized the relationship between the Commercial Revolution and the Italian Renaissance?
222745596EnglandWhat European nation, sailing and looking for a Northeast Passage, discovered the White Sea and began trading with Russia?
222745597to detect and stop heresy among the current clergy to prevent their conversion to ProtestantismWhat was the purpose of the Roman Inquisition during the period of the Catholic Reformation?
222745598Ignatius Loyola"To arrive at complete certainty, this is the attitude that we should maintain: I will believe that the white object I see is black if taht should be the desire of the hierarchical Church, for I believe that linking Christ our Lord the Bridegroom and His Bride the Church, there is one and same Spirit, ruling and guiding us for our souls' good. For our Holy Mother the Church is guided and ruled by the same spirit, the Lord who gave the Ten Commandments." This passage is from...
222745599British ParliamentWho made the decision to authorize and then carry out the execution of Mary Stuart, Queen of Scots?
222745600grace was bestowed on a select few individuals who were predestined to go to heaven and the rest were destined for hellJohn Calvin argued in his book, Institutes of the Christian Religion, that...
222745601FranceWhere di the St. Batholomew's Day Massacre, an incident of the mass executions of Protestants by the Catholic ruler, occur?
222745602Lorenzo VallaThis Italian Renaissance humanist and writer was a founder of the idea of textual criticism, the requirement of going back to the original Greek textual sources to ensure the language of translations is correct. He was able to prove that the document "The Donation of Constantine" was a forgery. Who is the Humanist?
222745603economic, political, and religious tensions in the relations between the Netherlands and SpainThe 16th century revolt in the Netherlands against Philip II was largely inspired by...
222745604textilesThe Domestic System was the beginning seed of expanding production of goods. Which goods were produced in the Domestic System?
222745605the influx of gold and silver into Europe from the New WorldA major cause of the Price Revolution of the 16th century was caused by..
222761650Thirty-Nine ArticlesElizabeth of England attempted to quiet religious controversies in her realm through a compromise creed of faith which made England finally and forever truly Protestant. What is the name of this document she issued?
222761652resumed annate payments to the papacy but continued to allow France to name its own priests and bishopsWhat did the Concordat of Bologna do?
222761653Spanish conquistador in the New World"We come here to serve God and King, but also to get rich." This quote best represents the view of a...
222761655Edict of NantesHenry IV provided French Hugenots with the right to practice their religion through the...
222761657WormsTo what city's "Diet" or council was Martin Luther supposed to surrender himself so he could be held for charges of heresy against the Catholic faith?
222761658Ignatius of LoyolaWho wrote the work, The Spiritual Exercises?
222761660Act of SupremacyThe Protestant Reformation began in England with Parliament passing this act in 1534 which declared the English king to be the "Protector and Only Supreme Head of Church and Clergy of England." What act is this?
222761662he pursued an anti-Hapsburg foreign policyAlthough Cardinal Richelieu was a leader of Catholic France, Richelieu supported Protestants everywhere, and especially in the Thirty Years War, because..
222761664PortugalWith papal encouragement, Spain in 1494 agreed to the treaty of Torsedellias and recognized that one other nation had valid claims to parts of South and Central America. Which nation was it?
2227616651588The Spanish Armada sailed for England in what year?
222761667It basically killed and disbanded the local guild system in EnglandDuring the time of Elizabeth I of England, Parliament passed the Statute of Artificers of 1563, putting into place for the first time government regulation that level of wages of apprentices and power over the admission of young men into apprenticeship into the various artisan crafts. What effect did this law have?
222761669it revived the classical Greek tradition of sculpture in the roundRenaissance sculpture differed from Medieval sculpture in that...
222761671it was elected monarchy, elected by only 7 or 8 the nearly 360 "states" of the Holy Roman EmpireThe Holy Roman Emperor was a weak title and a weak monarchy compared to the rest of Europe's monarchies because...
222761673act only in their political interest at the time of the crisis or issue, regardless of previous arrangements or alliancesAccording to Machiavelli, an effective rule and his government..
222761675Swedish king, Gustavus AdolphusWhat European, Protestant monarch came to the forefront of the Protestant forces in the third phase of the Thirty Years War against the Holy Roman Emperor's Catholic forces?
222761676Henry IV"Paris is worth a Mass," was said by...
2227616781555When was the Peace of Augsburg which ended the Schmalkaldic League War?
222940553Prince Eugene of SavoyThe person considered to be the founder of modern Austria was...
222940554courts of law, each one being a supreme court for its region, which uphold certain "fundamental rights" which they said the king could not overstep and would not enforce royal edicts which they declared unconstitutionalIn France, parlements are...
222940555Ottoman EmpireThe janissaries fighting force is the military of which nation?
222940556William and Mary"...That the raising or keeping of a standing army within the kingdom in the name of peace, unless it be with the consent of Parliament, is against the law...that no law shall be suspended by the king...no taxes shall be raised unless it be with the consent of Parliament..." The first English monarchs to accept and rule in accordance with this decree which was part of the Bill of Rights was...
222940557half sister SophiaIn order to seize the Russian throne, Peter the Great had to overthrow his...
222940558when military needs and military values permeate all other spheres of life in the nationdefinition of militarism
222940559Each czar is to write a will and name his own successor; it may be hereditary or notPeter the Great changed how the line of czars would be chosen after him. What was the new way of choosing a czar?`
222940561because everyone's armies were small, everyone had the same type of weapons, so small nations were militarily equal to large statesWhat is the one main fact that explains why small states were able to play an influential part of European affairs seemingly out of proportion to their size?
222940564Frederick William IThis Prussian leader begrudged every penny not spent on the Prussian army, was the first Prussian king to wear a military uniform as his daily clothes, created a special army unit of tall men, devised new forms of army discipline and maneuvering, invented a canton system of recruiting of soldiers and a cadet corps to train the sons of Junkers, and left his own son the best army in europe. Who was the Prussian leader?
222940566ottoman empire versus russiaBecause of a war between these two, and the desires of the neighborhood to keep the balance of power, instead of the winner getting control of the loser's land, Poland was instead sacrificed, resulting in the 1st Partition of Poland. Which two warring powers ultimately cause the 1st Partition of Poland?
222940568For the first time, the monarchy threatened to grant nobility onto several members of the House of Commons as a move to elevate them into the House of Lords to ensure the passage of the treaty in the House of Lords, which had been trying to block ratification of the treatyThe peace treaty ending the War of the Spanish Succession had an unusual effect on English history and the relationship of the monarchy to the Parliament. What is that unusual effect?
222940570it vindicated the principle of "rule of law" over arbitrariness by destroying the idea of divine right monarchyThe Glorious Revolution was significant because...
222940573Charles VI of Austria wanted to ensure all Austrian lands would be kept together and inherited by his daughter Marie TheresaWhy was the Pragmatic Sanction first issued in 1713?
2229405751688The Glorious Revolution happened in...
222940577France and Louis XIVJansenism, a Calvinist-type heresy in the CC, was a problem for which nation and leader?
222940580Ivan IV "the Terrible"Who was the first Russian ruler to use the title of Czar?
222940582Puritans in ParliamentJames I's statement "No bishop, no king," at the Hampton Court Conference was a defiant reply to the...
222940584Oliver CromwellFollowing the execution of Charles I, England was governed by...
222940586from the king's own property incomeFor the first 100 years of Prussia's rise to importance, how did the Prussian government get money to run the government of Brandenburg/Prussia?
222940589Louis XIV of FranceWhich leader of which nation said "I am the state," meaning that he/she was claiming the status as the sovereign ruler of the nation, and thus has, within the territorial boundaries of the nation, a monopoly over the administration of justice and the use of force; with this monopoly he/she can prevent private persons from passing legal judgments on others and prevent private armies, because either of these would constitute rebellion against the crown?
222940591Test Act required all officeholders to take communion in the Church of EnglandIn response to Charles II's issuance of the "declaration of Indulgences" on Dissenters, Parliament passed the Test Act. What did this act say, do, or require?
222940593gave Russia a "window on the West" on the Baltic SeaAs a consequence of the Great Northern War, Peter the Great...
222940595James IWho is the author of the work, The True Law of Free Monarchy?
222940597Holy Roman EmpireIus eundi in partes, the "right of sitting apart" in the legislative body when it came to religious matters, was seen in which nation?
222940598They comprised an elite military guard.What best characterizes the Russian streltsi?
222940599crippling the French economy further when the richer Huguenots that made up a significant portion of the business community simply moved to nations where they could continue to practice their faithLouis XIV's revocation of the Edict of Nantes had the economic consequence of...
222940600Frederick II "the Great"Which Prussian leader used his army and invaded Silesia, lands that were protected by the Pragmatic Sanction, thus sparking a succession war?
222940601was the only written Constitution England has ever had, devised during England's commonwealth eraThe Instrument of Government (1653)
222940602the Junker aristocracyhohenzollern authority in ruling Prussia depended on the cooperation and support of...
222940603achieve the necessary votes to execute the kinga major result of Pride's Purge was to...
222940604Dutch's William III of OrangeWhich nation's leader was the main engineer of the balance of power against the Universal Monarchy being pursued by Louis XIV of France?
222940605the liberum veto's ability to explode the Polish Diet, making government and governing impossibleWhat statement best explains the political and military decline of Poland by the late 18th century, making it such an easy target for partition by its neighbors?
222940606owned significant amounts of land which provided a private incomeAfter the passage of an act in 1710, elections for the British House of Commons was limited to those who...
222940607the Mongolian Golden Hordeuntil grad duke of muscoy ivan II "the great" led russian resistance and overthrew it, Russian national development was thwarted for over two centuries by...
222940608their defeat by the Russians at the Battle of PoltavaSweden emerged as a powerful European nation in the 17th and early 18th century until...
222940609weaken Dutch carrying trade and encourage that of EnglandThe english Navigation acts were designed to...
222940610Frederick William the Great ElectorThe rise of Prussia as a power began with which leader?
222940611the Prussian armyWhat was considered the first "all Prussian" institution?
222940612made each parish responsible for their own poor, requiring the poor to be condemned to remaining in their parish and unable to move to seek employment outside their parishThe act of settlement of 1662, a new poor law for britain...

AP US History - Vocab to 1783 Flashcards

Key terms for US History up to 1783

Terms : Hide Images
363325027Andros, EdmundGovernor of the Dominion of New England.
363325028Anglican ChurchAlso known as the Church of England, founded by Henry VIII. Began to resemble the Catholic church which upset many.
363325029AntinomianismBelief that faith alone is necessary to salvation in Christianity. A fundamental concept of Protestants (coined by Martin Luther).
363325030Bacon's RebellionA clash between East and West (unrest due to VA governor's friendly policies to Native Americans), this event in 1676 was seen as evidence against the dangers of the indentured-servant system.
363325031Battle of Saratoga1777 battle that concluded the American Revolution with the British losing.
363325032Boston MassacreIncident in Boston where British Army soldiers killed five civilian men; among those who were harassing the soldiers in protest to British oppression.
363325033Boston Tea PartyProtest by the Sons of Liberty to the British control and taxes on tea. Dumped tea into the Boston Harbor.
363325034Circular letterWritten by Samuel Adams in response to the Townshend Acts, circulated among representative bodies in the colonies by Massachusetts and argued that the colonists did not have representation.
363325035Coercive ActsThe Acts passed in 1774, following the Boston Tea Party, that were considered unfair because they were designed to chastise Boston in particular, yet affected all the colonies by the Boston Port Act which closed Boston Harbor until damages were paid.
363325036Columbian ExchangeCultural, biological, and social exchange between the New World and Europe; diseases, plants, and animals were exchanged during the 15th and 16th centuries.
363325037Continental CongressesA convention and a consultative body that met for seven weeks, from September 5 to October 26, 1774, in Philadelphia; it was the American's response to the Intolerable Acts; considered ways of redressing colonial grievances; all colonies except Georgia sent 55 distinguished men in all; John Adams persuaded his colleagues toward revolution; they wrote a Declaration of Rights and appeals to British American colonies, the king, and British people.
363325038Cortes, HernanHe was a Spanish explorer who conquered the Native American civilization of the Aztecs in 1519 in what is now Mexico.
363325039Dominion of New EnglandAttempt to consolidate colonial rule in New England under the control of one governor in 1688; it was dissolved after the Glorious Revolution in England when its sponsors were deposed.
363325040Edwards, JonathanJonathan Edwards, an American theologian and Congregational clergyman, whose sermons stirred the religious revival, called the Great Awakening. He is known for his " Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God " sermon.
363325041First Great AwakeningThe Great Awakening was a religious revival that occurred in the 1730's and 1740's. Priests held motivating sermons and the Old and New Lights resulted.
363325042Franklin, BenA wealthy printer and successful (and respected) intellectual as well as diplomat, he wrote the widely-circulated Poor Richard's Almanac and did pioneering scientific work (electricity). Also proposed Albany Plan.
363325043Great Migration (Puritan)1620-1640, the migration of primarily Puritans to Massachusetts and New England from England in search for freedom to practice Puritan religion. (Under King Charles I, James I)
363325044Halfway CovenantA Puritan church document; In 1662, the Halfway Covenant allowed partial membership rights to persons not yet converted into the Puritan church; It lessened the difference between the "elect" members of the church from the regular members; Women soon made up a larger portion of Puritan congregations.
363325045Headright systemThis became a means of attracting settlers to colonial America in which land was given to a family head (50 acres) and to anyone he sponsored coming tot he colony, including indentured servants.
363325046House of BurgessesThe House of Burgesses was the first representative assembly in the New World. The London Company authorized the settlers to summon an assembly, known as the House of Burgeses. A momentous precedent was thus feebly established, for this assemblage was the first of many miniature parliaments to sprout from the soil of America.
363325047Hutchinson, AnneWoman who argued against the religious order of Massachusetts Bay (women's role; worship of clergy) and moved to Narrangansett Bay after banishment in 1638--caused settlers to move into other settlements from Massachusetts Bay.
363325048Indentured servantsPeople in the New World bound to labor for a number of years, often, to pay for their passage to America. Primarily worked in the Chesapeake region.
363325049Iroquois ConfederacyConfederation of five (later six) Indian tribes across upper New York state that during the 17th and 18th centuries played a strategic role in the struggle between the French and British for mastery of North America,
363325050JamestownFirst permanent English settlement in the New World, established in 1607. Barely survived with help from natives and cultivation of tobacco.
363325051Joint-stock companyForerunner of the modern corporation; a venture in which stock was sold to high net-worth investors who provided capital and had limited risk. Many ventures involved in settling the New World.
363325052Letters from a PA FarmerA series of essays written by lawyer John Dickinson in 1767-1768 under "A Farmer." United colonists against Townshend Acts because he argued that colonies were sovereign in their internal affairs.
363325053Locke, JohnHighly influential Enlightenment thinkers of the 17th century. Stated that there was a "Natural Law" before any manmade ones and that all citizens have a right to life, liberty, and property. Influenced revolutionaries in the colonies.
363325054LoyalistA colonist in the new world who remained loyal to the British during the American Revolution.
363325055Maryland Act of Toleration1649 law of the Maryland Colony that mandated religious tolerance; provided for freedom of worship for all trinitarian Christians.
363325056Mayflower CompactWritten agreement in 1620 to create a "civil body politick" among the male settlers in Plymouth; it was the forerunner to charters and constitutions that were eventually adopted in all the colonies. (Democracy)
363325057MercantilismNationalist economic philosophy that promoted the development of colonies in order to increase a nation's treasury but which limited colonial economic development by restricting colonial manufacturing. Emphasized exports.
363325058Middle PassageMiddle segment of the forced journey that slaves made from Africa to America throughout the 1600's; it consisted of the dangerous trip across the Atlantic Ocean; many slaves perished on this segment of the journey.
363325059Navigation ActsActs that restricted trade in the colonies and emphasized mercantilism. In the 1660's England restricted the colonies; they couldn't trade with other countries. The colonies were only allowed to trade with England.
363325060Oglethorpe, JamesFounder of Georgia in 1733; soldier, statesman , philanthropist. Started Georgia as a haven for people in debt because of his interest in prison reform. Almost single-handedly kept Georgia afloat.
363325061Paine, ThomasThomas Paine was a passionate and persuasive writer who published the bestseller, Common Sense in 1776. Paine had the radical idea that the colonies should set up America as an independent, democratic, republic away from England. Over 120,000 copies of his book were sold and this helped spark the colonists rebellion later that year.
363325062Penn, WilliamWealthy aristocrat who converted to Quakerism in the late 1600s and took up evangelism, later creating a Quaker colony in America, named Pennsylvania.
363325063Pontiac's Rebellion1763 war launched by confederation of Native American tribes from the Great Lakes region, Illinois Country/Ohio country dissatisfied with British postwar policies in the Great Lakes region following the French and Indian War.
363325064Proprietary colonyA colony granted to an individual person or group by the British crown with full ownership rights.
363325065Pueblo Revolt1680 uprising of several pueblos of the Pueblo people against Spanish colonization of the Americas in the province of Santa Fe de Nuevo Mexico.
363325066PuritansThey were a group of religious reformists who wanted to "purify" the Anglican Church. Their ideas started with John Calvin in the 16th century and they first began to leave England in 1608. Later voyages came in 1620 with the Pilgrims and in 1629, which was the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
363325067Salutary neglectBritish policy of avoiding strict enforcement of parliamentary laws in America that started in 1607 and ended in 1763. Allowed colonists to regulate their own trade and ignore Navigation Acts and govern themselves.
363325068Smith, JohnFamous world traveler who took control of the bitterly divided Jamestown in 1608 and brought order by organizing raids on Indian villages.
363325069Sons of LibertyPolitical group of American patriots that were intended to protect the rights of the colonists during the 18th century. Best known for undertaking the Boston Tea Party.
363325070St. Augustine1565, earliest/oldest settlement in the U.S. (Florida) and discovered by Juan Ponce de Leon of Spain.
363325071Stamp ActAct passed by Parliament in 1765 that required colonists to pay for stamps going on many documents. Repealed in 1766 due to heated protests and boycotts.
363325072Stamp Act CongressMet in 1765 with 27 delegates from the colonies as a result of the Stamp Act; helped unify colonies against Britain.
363325073Stono RebellionSlave rebellion in South Carolina in 1739; tried to escape to Florida, but the rebellion was crushed; Negro Act was established limiting the 'privileges' of slaves.
363325074Sugar ActPassed in 1764, first to be passed by Parliament. Increased duties on foreign sugar as a way to raise revenue for the crown.
363325075Townshend ActPlaced a light import duty on glass, lead, paper, tea and was met with some protest from colonies. They evaded these through smuggling. Repealed in 1770 (except on tea).
363325076Treaty of TordesillasDivided the New World between Spain and Portugal--Spain receives west and Portugal receives east (Brazil) in 1494.
363325077Virtual representationTheory that claimed that every member of Parliament represented all British subjects, even those Americans in Boston or Charleston who had never voted for a member of the London Parliament.
363325078Williams, RogerThis person was banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1635 because he said that the government had no authority over the personal opinions of individuals; he called for the separation of church and state, founded Rhode Island as a colony for religious freedom, and was known for dealing fairly with native peoples by paying for their land.
363325079Winthrop, JohnPuritan leader and founder of the Massachusetts Bay Colony and wrote of his vision of a "city upon a hill" that would serve as an example to the rest of the world.

AP Human Geography Chapter 1 Flashcards

Human Geography: People, Place, and Culture by JF De Blij, Alexander Murphy, and Erin Fouberg; 8th Edition

Terms : Hide Images
447783834FieldworkTo answer geographic inquiry by visiting places to observe how people's actions and reactions change those places and how they vary across space
447783835Human Geographystudy of human phenomena; how people make places, organize space and society, interact with another here and across space, and make sense of others and ourselves in our locality, region, and world
447783836GlobalizationSet of processes that...without boundaries: • increase interactions • deepen relationships • heighten interdependence Set of outcomes...throughout the world: • unevenly distributed • differently manifested • varying across scales
447783837Physical Geographystudy of physical phenomena on Earth; spatial analysis of the structure, processes, and location of natural phenomena
447783838SpatialHow places and phenomena are laid out, organized, and arranged on Earth; how they appear on the landscape. Used by human and physical geographers
447783839Spatial Distributionphysical location of geographic phenomena across space
447783840Patterndesign of the spatial distribution; what processes create and sustain it
447783841Medical Geographystudy of health and disease from a geographical perspective; mapping the distribution of a disease to find the cause
447783842Pandemicworldwide outbreak of a disease
447783843Epidemicregional outbreak of a disease
447783844Spatial PerspectiveObserving variations in geographic phenomena across space
447783845Five ThemesDeveloped by the Geographic Educational National Implemention Project (GENIP):
447783846LocationHow geographical position of people and things affects what happens and why
447783847Location Theoryan element of contemporary human geography that seeks answers to a variety of questions(where a Target should be built)
447783848Human-Environmentrelationship between humans and physical world
447783849RegionPhenomena aren't evenly distributed, but concentrated; marked by a degree of formal, funtional, or perceptual homogeneity
447783850PlaceAll have unique human and physical characteristics; geo-graphers study the special character and meaning of places
447783851Sense of PlaceInfusing a place with meaning and emotion
447783852Perception of Placebelief or understanding about a place from books, movies, pictures, etc.
447783853MovementMobility of people, goods, and ideas across Earth
447783854Spatial Interactionhow places interact with another
447783855DistanceMeasurement of the physical space between two places
447783856AccessibilityThe degree of ease with which it is possible to reach a certain location from other locations.
447783857ConnectivityThe degree of direct linkage between places by transportation and communication
447783858LandscapeThe overall appearance of an area. Most are comprised of a combination of natural and human-induced influences.
447783859Cultural LandscapeThe visible imprint of human activity and culture on the landscape. Layers of buildings, forms, and artifacts sequentially imprinted by the activities of various human occupants.
447783860Sequent OccupanceCultural succession and its lasting imprint, contributing to the cumulative cultural landscape.
447783861CartographyThe art and science of making maps.
447783862Reference MapsMaps that show the absolute location of places and geographic features
447783863Thematic MapsMaps that tell stories, typically showing the degree of some attribute of the movement of a geographic phenomenon.
447783864Absolute LocationLocation determined by a frame of reference, usually latitude and longitude
447783865Global Positioning SystemSatellite-based system for determining the absolute location of places or geographic features.
447783866GeocachingA hunt for a cache, the GPS coordinates which are placed on the Internet by other geocachers.
447783867Relative LocationThe regional position or situation of a place relative to the position of other places.
447783868Mental Mapmaps we carry in our minds
447783869Activity SpaceThe space within which daily activity occurs.
447783870Generalized MapsInformation is always generalized on maps.
447783871Remote SensingCollecting data/info(that is almost instantly available) from instruments physically distant from the area or object
447783872Geographic Information SystemsComputer technology that lets spatial data be collected and analyzed.
447783873RescaleInvolve players at other scales to generate global support for their position.
447783874Formal RegionMarked by a certain degree of similarity
447783875Functional Regiondefined by the particular set of activities or interactions that occurs within it.
447783876Perceptual Regiononly exists as an idea, not as a physically demarcated entity(different people have different opinions)
447783877CultureThe sum total of the knowledge, attitudes, and habitual behavior patterns shared and transmitted by the members of a society(music, literature, art, etc.)
447783878Culture TraitA single element of normal practice in a culture, such as the wearing of a turban.
447783879Culture ComplexA related set of cultural traits, such as prevailing dress codes and cooking and eating utensils.
447783880Cultural HearthHeartland, source area, innovation center; place of origin of a major culture.
447783881Independent InventionA trait with many cultural hearths that developed independent of each other
447783882Cultural DiffusionThe expansion and adoption of a cultural element, from its place of origin to a wider area.
447783883Time-Distance DecayThe declining degree of acceptance of an idea or innovation with increasing time and distance from its point of origin or source.
447783884Cultural BarrierPrevailing cultural attitude rendering certian innovations; ideas or practices unacceptable or unadoptable in that particular culture.
447783885Expansion DiffusionAn innovation/idea develops in a hearth and remains strong there while also spreading outward.
447783886Contagious DiffusionA form of expansion diffusion where nearly all adjacent individuals are affected
447783887Hierarchical DiffusionA pattern in which the main channel of diffusion is some segment of those who are susceptible to/adopting what is being diffused (ex: new shoes)
447783888Stimulus Diffusioncultural adaptation is created as a result of the introduction of a cultural trait from another place; ideas indirectly promote local experimentation
447783889Relocation DiffusionActual movement of individuals who have adopted the idea/innovation, and carry it to a new(and maybe distant) locale, where they disseminate it(ex: migration)
447783890Geographic ConceptWays of seeing the world spatially that are used by geographers in answering research questions.
447783891Environmental DeterminismEnvironment(nature) affects human life(culture)
447783892IsothermLine on a map connecting point of equal temperature values.
447783893PossibilismHumans affect culture
447783894Cultural EcologyThe multiple interactions and relationships between a culture and the natural environment.
447783895Political EcologyThe environment/nature is affected by political and socioeconomic contexts

Myers Social Psychology Chapter 11, 14 and 15 Flashcards

Attraction and Intimacy
Social Psychology in the Clinic
Social Psychology in Court

Terms : Hide Images
525002141need to belongA motivation to bond with others in relationships that provide ongoing, positive interactions.
525002142proximity"Functional distance", powerfully predicts liking.
525382830ostracismActs of excluding or ignoring.
525382831anticipatory likingExpecting that someone will be pleasant and compatible.
525382832mere exposure effectThe tendency for novel stimuli to be liked more or rated more positively after the rater has been repeatedly exposed to them.
525382833implicit egotismWe like what we associate with ourselves.
525382834matching phenomenonThe tendency for men and woman to choose as partners those who are a "good match" in attractiveness and other traits.
525382835physical attractiveness stereotypeThe presumption that physically attractive people possess other socially desirable traits as well: What is beautiful is good.
525382836complementarityThe popularly supposed tendency, in a relationship between two people, for each to complete what is missing.
525382837reward theory of attractionThe theory that we like those whose behaviour is rewarding to us or whom we associate with rewarding events.
525382838ingratiationThe use of strategies, such as flattery, by which people seek to gain another's favor.
525382839erosPrimary love style for self-disclosing passion.
525382840ludusPrimary love style for uncommitted game playing.
525382841storgePrimary love style for friendship.
525382842passionate loveEmotional, exciting, intense love. A state of intense longing for union with another. These lovers are absorbed in each other, feel ecstatic at attaining their partner's love, and are disconsolate on loosing it.
525382843two factor theory of emotionHolds that when the revved up men responded to a woman, they easily misattributed some of their own arousal to her. Arousal x its label = emotion.
525382844companionate loveThe affection we feel for those with whom our lives are deeply intertwined.
525382845secure attachmentAttachments rooted in trust and marked by intimacy.
525382846preoccupied attachmentAttachments marked by a sense of one's own unworthiness and anxiety, ambivalence, and possessiveness.
525382847dismissive attachmentAn avoidant relationship style marked by distrust of others.
525382848fearful attachmentAn avoidant relationship style marked by fear of rejection.
525382849equityA condition in which the outcomes people receive from a relationship are proportional to what they contribute to it. Note: Equitable outcomes needn't always be equal outcomes.
525382850self disclosureRevealing intimate aspects of oneself to others.
525382851disclosure reciprocityThe tendency for one person's intimacy of self-disclosure to match that of a conversational partner.
525382852growth promoting listenersPeople who are genuine in revealing their own feelings, who are accepting of others' feelings, and who are empathic, sensitive, reflective listeners.
525400140ostracismDepressed mood, anxiety, and hurt feelings can all result from.
525400141physical attractivenessHatfield et al., (1966) found that the best predictor of whether students wanted a second date with someone they were randomly set-up with for a "Welcome Week" computer dance was their date's _______________
52540014270%Roughly what percent of infants display a secure attachment?
525400143ingratiationYou are speaking with one of your coworkers—praising them for having done a great job on a recent project. You then ask if they can help with one of your projects that is due tomorrow. This strategy is called
525400144reward theory of attractionThe theory that we like people who reward us or with whom we associate positive events is the:
525400145reward theory of attractionWhen romantic dinners, dates out, nice dinners at home, and vacations continue in a relationship, couples last longer and are happier because they associate the relationship with positive things. This is best posited by:
525400146proximityRepeated exposure to and interaction with others is called.
525400147passionate loveCouples who are absorbed in one another—gaze into each other's eyes longingly and would be devastated to lose their relationship—are most likely experiencing
525400148two factor theoryTheory that holds: physical arousal accentuates romantic responses
525400149companionate loveThe type of love we feel for people that is a labeled as a deep affectionate attachment is
525400150symmetricalFaces judged to be very attractive are typically very ________________
525400151perceived inequityTim feels he is investing more time and emotions into the relationship he has with Jane than she is investing. This would describe
525400152disillusionmentThe cooling of intense romantic love can trigger a period of:
525400153complementarityWhat term is used to describe the supposed effect of two people who are "opposites" of each other, being attracted to each other and "completing" each other?
525400154vinegar strokesThe facial expression a man makes just before and the beginning of an organism. They say when u look at a man's eyes during this event u can see into his soul.
528287905clinical psychologyThe study, assessment, and treatment of people with psychological difficulties.
528287906depressive realismThe tendency of mildly depressed people to make accurate rather than self-serving judgements, attributions, and predictions.
528287907explanatory styleOne's habitual way of explaining life events. A negative, pessimistic, depressive explanatory style attributes failure to stable, global, and internal causes.
528287908behavioral medicineAn interdisciplinary field that integrates and applies behavioral and medical knowledge about health and disease.
528287909health psychologyThe study of the psychological roots of health and illness. Provides psychology's contribution to behavioral medicine.
528287910negative explanatory styleInterpreting events as being stable, global, and internally caused.
528287911reactanceA motive to protect or restore one's sense of freedom. Reactance arises when someone threatens our freedom of action.
528287912reactanceOne reason a judge's instructions to ignore admissible testimony may boomerang and add to the testimony's impact is:
528287913group thinkThe mode of thinking that persons engage in when concurrence seeking becomes so dominant in a cohesive in-group that it tends to override realistic appraisal of alternative courses of action.
528287914group polarizationDeliberation by juries seems to lead to:
528287915lenientLow-authoritarian jurors, after deliberation become more:

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