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Chapter 1: From the Origins of Agriculture to the First River Valley Civilizations (8000-1500 BCE) Flashcards

This set contains the key terms of Chapter 1: From the Origins of Agriculture to the First River Valley Civilizations (8000-1500 BCE) from the third edition of The Earth and Its Peoples: A Global History

Terms : Hide Images
1581645657civilizationrefers to more complex societies or sometimes, any group of people sharing a set of cultural traits0
1581645658culturesocially transmitted patterns of action and expression; includes: material culture, arts, beliefs, knowledge, and technology1
1581645659historythe study of past events and changes in the development, transmission, and transformation of cultural practices2
1581645660Stone Agea historical period characterized by the production of tools from stone and other nonmetallic substances3
1581645661Paleolithicthe period of the Stone Age associated with human evolution4
1581645662Neoloithicthe period of the Stone Age associated with the Agricultural Revolutions5
1581645663foragerspeople who support themselves by hunting wild animals and gathering wild edible plants and animals6
1581645664Agricultural Revolutionsthe change from food gathering to food production that occurred between ca. 8000 and 2000 BCE7
1581645665Holocenethe geological era since the end of the Great Ice Age about 11,000 years ago8
1581645666megalitha structure and complex of very large stones constructed for ceremonial and religious purposes in Neolithic times9
1581645667Babylonthe largest and most important city in Mesopotamia; achieved particular eminence as the capital of the Amorite king Hammurabi in the 18th century BCE and Nebuchadnezzar in the 6th century BCE10
1581645668Sumeriansthe people who dominated southern Mesopotamia through the end of the third millennium bCE11
1581645669Semiticrefers to the family of related languages spoken across parts of western Asia and northern Africa such as Hebrew, Aramaic, Phoenician, and Arabic12
1581645670city-statea small independent state consisting of an urban center and the surrounding agricultural territory13
1581645671Hammurabithe Amorite ruler of Babylon (r. 1792-1750 BCE); significant for conquering and uniting many city states in Mesopotamia14
1581645672scribeone who held a professional position reserved for me who had undergone the lengthy training required to be able to read and write using cuneiform, hieroglyphics, and other writing15
1581645673ziggurata massive pyramidal stepped tower made of mud bricks and was used for religious purposes16
1581645674amuleta small charm meant to protect the bearer from evil and harm17
1581645675cuneiforma system of writing in which wedge-shaped symbols represented words or syllables18
1581645676pharaohthe central figure in the Ancient Egyptian state and was believed to be an earthy manifestation of the gods19
1581645677ma'atthe Egyptian term for the concept of divinely created and maintained order in the universe20
1581645678pyramida large, triangular stone monument used in Egypt and Nubia for the burial of kings21
1581645679Memphisthe capital of Old Kingdom Egypt, near the head of the Nile Delta22
1581645680Thebesthe capital city of Egypt and home of the ruling dynasties during the Middle and New Kingdoms23
1581645681hieroglyphicsa system of writing in which pictorial symbols represented sounds, syllables, or concepts24
1581645682papyrusa red that grows on the banks of the Nile River and was a medium for Egyptian writing25
1581645683mummya body preserved by chemical processes or special natural circumstances, often in belief that the deceased will need it in the afterlife26
1581645684Harappathe site of one of the greatest cities of the Indus Valley civilization in 3000 BCE; a center for the acquistion of raw materials27
1581645685Mohenjo-Darothe largest city in the Indus Valley with advanced technology of the time28

Ch. 1 "The First Civilizations" (People, Places, and Events) Flashcards

1. EARLIEST HUMANS: Early humans hunted animals and gathered plants for food. When farming developed, people settled in towns and cities.

2. MESOPOTAMIAN CIVILIZATION: In early Mesopotamian civilizations, religion and government were closely linked. Kings created strict laws to govern the people.

3. THE FIRST EMPIRES: New Empires arose in Mesopotamia around 900 B.C. Theses civilizations included the Assyrians and the Chaldeans. They used powerful armies and iron weapons to conquer the region.

Terms : Hide Images
874621129JerichoOne of the earliest known Neolithic communities, this city is in the West Bank between what are now Israel and Jordan, dates back to about 8000 B.C.1
874621130Catal HuyukA Neolithic community in present-day Turkey; it was home to about 6,000 people who lived in simple mud-brick houses between 6700 B.C. and 5700 B.C.2
874621131Tigris RiverRiver that flows from Turkey to Iraq; this river merges with the Euphrates River to form the Shatt-al-Arab.3
874621132Euphrates RiverRiver that flows from Turkey through Syria and Iraq; this river merges with Tigris to form the Shatt-al-Arab4
874621133MesopotamiaA flat plain in what is now southern Iraq, bounded by the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers; it is the site of the earliest know civilization.5
874621134SumerA region in Mesopotamia where cities had formed by 3000 B.C.6
874621135BabylonCity and trade center built near the Euphrates River in the 1800's B.C.7
874621136SargonKing of the Akkadians who conquered all of Mesopotamia in 2340 B.C. Sargon's empire lasted for more than 200 years.8
874621137HammurabiKing who created the Babylonian Empire; he is known for his collection of laws.9
874621138Code of HammurabiCollection of law created by the king who created the Babylonian Empire10
874621139AssyriaAn ancient empire that arose in the northern part of Mesopotamia near the Tigris River around 650 B.C.11
874621140Persian GulfBody of water that separates Iran from the peninsula of Arabia12
874621141NinevehCapital of the Persian Empire in 650 B.C.13
874621142Hanging GardensTerraced gardens in Babylon built by Nebuchadnezzar for his wife.14
874621143NebuchadnezzarChaldean king who controlled all of Mesopotamia from 605 B.C. to 562 B.C.15

AP US Unit 1 Flashcards

Unit One: European Expansion Westward and English Colonial Structure: Unit Syllabus and Term Sheet

Unit I: Expansion and the Role of the Colonies

Textbook Readings:
Brinkley; Ch. 1 - The Meeting of Cultures
Ch. 2 - Transplantations and Borderlands

Primary Source Readings:
Students will gain further knowledge of the time period through discussion and analysis of one or more of the following primary sources: Readings of Bartolome de Las Casas, Mayflower Compact, Frame of Government, other various colonial charters, various colonial diaries.

Assignments / Projects:
Introduction to the DBQ - DBQ sample taken from previous AP tests or review examples

Unit Objectives:
� Students will identify and evaluate the contributions of Queen Elizabeth, Christopher Columbus, Amerigo Vespucci, John Smith, Walter Raleigh, John Rolfe, John Winthrop, Roger Williams, Anne Hutchinson, Thomas Hooker, William Penn, George Calvert, and other pertinent personalities

� The students will identify and evaluate, but are not limited to, the following documents and their various influences on United States History: Various charters for each colony, Navigation Acts, Mayflower Compact, Saybrook platform, Virginia Charter, etc.

� The students will evaluate how the following events and social patterns influenced American History, including, but not limited to Westward European Expansion, Order of Expansion, The result of Exploration on Native American culture, major differences between English and Spanish exploration, Basic structure of the Thirteen colonies, Three concepts of borrowed government, Colonial government, the concept of Mercantilism.

� The students will evaluate the various conflicts and cooperation among social groups and organizations of the time period by studying the following events or situations, including but not limited to Native American v. Colonial settlers, secular v.

Terms : Hide Images
442074808Christopher Columbussailed to the America's in 14921
442074809pre-Columbian eraThe time before Columbus landed in the Americas2
442074810Native AmericansPeople who inhabited the Americas from birth and did not have European descendants3
442074811Bering Straita land mass connecting Siberia to Alaska and is not on any modern maps.4
442074812AlaskaNative Americans reached the Americas by traveling through here and Canada5
442074813IndiansName Columbus gave to the Native Americans because he thought he landed in East India.6
442074814Columbian ExchangeOccurred when Columbus landed on the Bahamas. Included a trade of plants, animals, foods, diseases, and ideas.7
442074815Conquistadors"Conquered" the Native Americans in and around Central America.8
442074816Spanish ArmadaThe Navy that prevented most of the Old World to colonize the New World until 1588 when the British defeated it.9
442074817EncomiendasGrants to settlers that gave authority over Native Americans for the pupose of labor and obliged the holder to Christianize and protect the Native Americans, and attempted to erase their culture and supplant it with Catholicism.10
442136816Smallpoxa highly contagious viral disease characterized by fever and weakness and skin eruption with pustules that form scabs that slough off leaving scars11
442136817Sir Walter RaleighSponsored an English settlement on Roanoke Island in 1587. By 1590 the colony had disappeared. Known as the Lost Colony.12
442136818JamestownFounded in 1607 by the British and would have suffered the fate of Roanoke Island if it did not have the help of the Powhatan Confederacy.13
442136819Joint-stock companyA group of investors who bought the right to establish New World plantations from the king (who was selling land he did not actually own.)14
442136820Virginia CompanyNamed for the virgin Queen Elizabeth, it was the joint-stock company that settled Jamestown.15
442136821Captain John Smith"He who will not work, shall not eat."16
442136822The Starving TimeIn 1609 and 1610 the colonists of Jamestown found themselves with so little food that some resorted to cannibalism, while others joined Native Americans.17
442136823Powhatan ConfederacyA group of local tribes that taught the English how to farm the local lands.18
442136824TobaccoIntroduced by John Rolfe, the prospects of Jamestown's survival greatly increased when it was traded to Europe.19
442136825ChesapeakeThe area around Jamestown. Its namesake is a bay.20
442136826Indentured ServitudeIn return for free passage, these people typically promised seven years of labor, after which they received freedom21
442136827Headright SystemA tract of land, usually about 50 acres, that was granted to colonists and potential settlers.22
442136828House of BurgessesEstablished by the Virginia Company in 1619, it was a place for any property-owning, white male to vote. Any decision made here also had to be approved by the Virginia Company.23
442136829Edict of NantesPassed by the French government and allowed for religious tolerance of the Huguenots, whom might have fled the country like the Puritans, which may have increased France's impact on the New World otherwise.24
442136830PuritanismA movement led by English Calvinists' desire to "purify" the Catholic Church and the Anglican Church.25
442136831SeparatistsA Puritan group that completely separated from the Catholic Church26
442136832PlymouthA Puritan Settlement established in 1620.27
442136833PilgrimsThe travelers that made the trip from England to the New World28
442136834the Mayflower Compactan agreement establishing a "body politic" and a basic legal system for the Plymouth colony.29
442136835Monarchistspeople that believe a government ruled by a king works best.30
442136836AbsolutistsMonarchists that believe that a governments power comes from its people, not from a god.31
442136837SquantoA Native American that had been imprisoned in England for several years, and who helped the pilgrims at Plymouth survive the winter.32
442136838Massachusetts BayA colony formed by Pilgrims that was larger and more powerful than Plymouth.33
442136839CongregationalistsPuritans who wanted to reform the Anglican church from within.34
442136840Governor John WinthropLed the Massachusetts Bay colony.35
442136841Covenanta signed written agreement between two or more parties (nations) to perform some action, (Bible) an agreement between God and his people in which God makes certain promises and requires certain behavior from them in return36
442136842Roger WilliamsA minister in the Salem Bay who believed that Church and State should be separated.37
442136843Anne HutchinsonA woman who believed that faith and God's Grace suffice to earn one a place among the "elect".38
442136844Oliver CromwellThe Lord Protector of England from 1649 through 1658. The Puritans most well-known and respected leader.39
442136845English Civil WarsLed to the trial and execution of Charles I, the exile of his son, Charles II, and replacement of English monarchy with, first, the Commonwealth of England (1649-53), and then with a Protectorate (1653-59), under Oliver Cromwell's personal rule.40
442136846InterregnumThe "between kings" stage when Puritans had little reason to leave England for the New World.41
442136847Pequots IndiansIndian tribe that resisted English incursions.42
442136848Pequots WarWar between the English colonists and the Native American tribe that the war's name is derived from. Resulted in 400 killed.43
442136849ConnecticutA proprietorship that received its charter in 1635 and produced the Fundamental Orders.44
442136850Fundamental OrdersThe first written constitution in British North America.45
442136851Act of TolerationPassed by Marylanders in 1649 to ensure all citizens were entitled to religious freedom.46
442136852PennsylvaniaLand granted to William Penn and his Quakers by King Charles II because Penn was a friend of his and King Charles II viewed the Quakers as "dangerous".47
442136853Proprietary ColoniesControlled by a single colonist48
442136854Royal ColoniesRuled by the king. Most colonies would be converted to this.49
468577844Middle Passagethe trade route that brought slaves to North America50
468577845Triangular Trade RouteThe trade routes that made up trade between the colonies, Europe, and Africa.51
468577846Tobacco, rice, and indigolabor-intensive crops that fueled the slave trade in the colonies.52
468577847French and Indian WarA war fought in the colonies by the British and the French, with Native Americans joining both sides.53
468577848Salutary NeglectLetting a colony rule itself as much as possible, in order to allow it to become more prosperous and valuable.54
468577849Mercantilisman economic system (Europe in 18th C) to increase a nation's wealth by government regulation of all of the nation's commercial interests55
468577850Speciehard currency, gold coins56
468577851Protective TariffsTaxes placed on foreign commodities in order to insure the products are bought from the mother country.57
468577852Navigation ActsA set of protective tariffs and laws placed on the colonies in order to guarantee that mercantilism would be held in place.58
468577853vice-admiralty courtsmilitaristic courts where the defendants did not have a jury; used to try those in violation of the Navigation Acts59
468577854Boards of TradeBritish form of regulating proprietary colonies.60
468577855The New England ConfederationWhile it held no real legislative powers, it settled disputes between the North-eastern colonies.61
468577856Bacon's RebellionOften cited as a populist uprising in colonial Virginia. The source is known as unrest between the "back country" farmers and the richer colonists that lived further east. It was fought by class lines and not racial ones.62
468577857Nathaniel BaconLed Bacon's Rebellion in Virginia. Nearly caused a war with the Native Americans when he and his followers attacked the Doegs and the Susquehannocks.63
468577858Black codespassed by state governments to segregate blacks and whites in order to protect the government.64
468577859King Philip's WarNative Americans led by Metacomet retaliated against the English colonists for intrusions on their culture and territory. The bloodiest colonist/Indian conflict of the time.65
468577860Stono UprisingSlave rebellion in the colonists which failed and led to several "witch hunts" which resulted in the execution of four whites and 31 blacks for conspiracy of liberating slaves.66
468577861Salem Witch TrialsDuring the summer of 1692, 130 women were jailed or executed on charges of witchcraft. Caused by the Dominion of New England and wars with the French and the Native Americans.67
468577862Dominion of New EnglandAn English government attempt to clamp down on illegal trade68
468577863Glorious Revolutionreplaced James II with William and Mary69
468577864Halfway CovenantChanged the rules regarding Puritan baptisms from one's parents having to have had to experience God's grace in order to be baptized, to everyone being baptized.70
468577865Great Awakeninga wave of religious revivalism in the 1730s and 40s71
468577866Jonathan Edwardsa Congregationalist minister known for severe predeterministic doctrines of Calvinism and his graphic depictions of Hell72
468577867George WhitefieldMethodist preacher who preached Christianity based on emotionalism and spirituality, which is most manifested in Southern evangelism73
468577868Enlightenmentbrought back old philosophies and emphasized rationalism over emotionalism and spirituality74
468577869Ben Franklintypified the effects of the Enlightenment in the colonies. Poor Richard's Almanack was written by him.75

American Pagent Chapter 2 Flashcards

Key Terms

Terms : Hide Images
1619703514Virginia CompanyA joint-stock company: based in Virginia in 1607: founded to findgold and a water way to the Indies: confirmed all Englishmen that they would have thesame life in the New World, as they had in England, with the same rights: 3 of their shipstransported the people that would found Jamestown in 1607.0
1619703515Iroquois ConfederacyThe Iroquois Confederacy was nearly a military power consisting of Mohawks, Oneidas, Cayugas, and Senecas.IT was founded in the late1500s.The leaders were Degana Widah and Hiawatha. The Indians lived in log houseswith relatives. Men dominated, but a person's background was determined by thewomen's family. Different groups banded together but were separate fur traders and fur suppliers. Other groups joined; they would ally with either the French or the Englishdepending on which would be the most to their advantage.1
1619703516Starving TimeThe winter of 1609 to 1610 was known as the "starving time" to thecolonists of Virginia. Only sixty members of the original four-hundred colonists survived.The rest died of starvation because they did not possess the skills that were necessary toobtain food in the new world.2
1619703517Act of TolerationA legal document that allowed all Christian religions in Maryland:Protestants invaded the Catholics in 1649 around Maryland: protected the Catholicsreligion from Protestant rage of sharing the land: Maryland became the #1 colony toshelter Catholics in the New World.3
1619703518SquatterA person who settles on land without title or right: Early settlers in NorthCarolina became squatters when they put their small farms on the new land. They raisedtobacco on the land that they claimed, and tobacco later became a major cash crop for North Carolina.4
1619703519PrimogenitureA system of inheritance in which the eldest son in a family received allof his father's land. The nobility remained powerful and owned land, while the 2nd and3rd sons were forced to seek fortune elsewhere. Many of them turned to the New Worldfor their financial purposes and individual wealth.5
1619703520Indentured ServitudeIndentured servants were Englishmen who were outcasts of their country, would work in the Americas for a certain amount of time as servants.6
1619703521Royal CharterA document given to the founders of a colony by the monarch thatallows for special privileges and establishes a general relationship of one of three types:(1) Royal- direct rule of colony by monarch, (2) Corporate- Colony is run by a joint-stock company, (3) Proprietary- colony is under rule of someone chosen by the monarch. RoyalCharters guaranteed that colonists would have "rights as all Englishmen".7
1619703522Slave CodesIn 1661 a set of "codes" was made. It denied slaves basic fundamentalrights, and gave their owners permission to treat them as they saw fit.8
1619703523YeomanAn owner and cultivator of a small farm.9
1619703524Proprietora person who was granted charters of ownership by the king: proprietarycolonies were Maryland, Pennsylvania and Delaware: proprietors founded colonies from1634 until 1681:a famous proprietor is William Penn.10
1619703525LonghouseThe chief dwelling place of the Iroquois Indians; c. 1500s-1600s;longhouses served as a meeting place as well as the homes for many of the NativeAmericans. They also provided unity between tribes of Iroquois Confederacy.11
1619703526James Oglethorpefounder 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.12
1619703527John Smithtook over the leadership role of the English Jamestownsettlement in 1608. Most people in the settlement at the time were only there for personal gain and did not want to help strengthen the settlement. Smith therefore told the people,"people who do not work do not eat." His leadership saved the Jamestown settlementfrom collapsing.13
1619703528Nation-stateA unified country under a ruler which share common goals and pride in anation. The rise of the nation-state began after England's defeat of the Spanish Armada.This event sparked nationalistic goals in exploration which were not thought possiblewith the commanding influence of the Spanish who may have crushed their chances of building new colonies.14
1619703529Slaverythe process of buying people (generally Africans) who come under the completeauthority of their owners for life, and intended to be worked heavily; became prominentin Colonial times around the mid to late 1600's ( but also to a lesser degree, concerningnatives during the early 1500's) because of the labor intensive nature of the crops beinggrown, and the desire for a profit; mainly used on southern plantations, but also a little bitin the north; brought Africans to America, who have now become an integral part of our culture.15
1619703530Enclosurecaused by the desire of land-owning lords to raise sheep instead of crops,lowering the needed workforce and unemploying thousands of poor former-farmers; thelords fenced off the their great quantities of land from the mid to late 1500's forcing manyfarmers out and into the cities, leading many of them to hire themselves as indenturedservants for payment of passage into the New World, and therefore supporting many of the needs of the labor-thirsty plantation owners of the New World.16
1619703531House of BurgessThe House of Burgeses 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 form the soil of America.17
1619703532PowhatanChief of the Powhatan Confederacy and father to Pocahontas. At the time of the English settlement of Jamestown in 1607, he was a friend to John Smith and JohnRolfe. When Smith was captured by Indians, Powhatan left Smith's fate in the hands of his warriors. His daughter saved John Smith, and the Jamestown colony. Pocahontas andJohn Rolfe were wed, and there was a time of peace between the Indians and Englishuntil Powhatan's death.18
1619703533John RolfeWas an Englishman who became a colonist in the early settlement of Virginia. He is best known as the man who married the Native American, Pocahontas and took her to his homeland of England. Rolfe was also the savior of the Virginia colony by perfecting the tobacco industry in North America. Rolfe died in 1622, during one of manyIndian attacks on the colony.19
1619703534Lord BaltimoreHe was the founder of Maryland, a colony which offered religiousfreedom, and a refuge for the persecuted Roman Catholics.20
1619703535Sir Walter RaleighAn English adventurer and writer, who was prominent at the court of Queen Elizabeth I, and became an explorer of the Americas. In 1585, he sponsored the first English colony in America on Roanoke Island in present-day NorthCarolina. It failed and is known as "The Lost Colony."21
1619703536Oliver CromwellEnglishman; led the army to overthrow King Charles I and was successful in 1646. He ruled England in an almost democratic style until his death.His uprising drew English attention away from Jamestown and the other American colonies.22
1619703537Lord De la WarAn Englishman who came to America in 1610. He brought the Indiansin the Jamestown area a declaration of war from the Virginia Company. This began thefour year Anglo-Powhatan War. He brought in "Irish tactics" to use in battle withthe Indians.23
1619703538PocahontasA native Indian of America, daughter of Chief Powahatan, who was one of the first to marry an Englishman, John Rolfe, and return to England with him; about1595-1617; her brave actions in saving an Englishman paved the way for many positive English and Native relations.24
1619703539Virginia CompanyA joint-stock company: based in Virginia in 1607: founded to findgold and a water way to the Indies: confirmed all Englishmen that they would have thesame life in the New World, as they had in England, with the same rights: 3 of their shipstransported the people that would found Jamestown in 1607.25
1619703540The Iroquois ConfederacyWas a military power consisting of Mohawks, Oneidas, Cayugas, and Senecas. IT was founded in the late1500s.The leaders were Degana Widah and Hiawatha. The Indians lived in log houseswith relatives. Men dominated, but a person's background was determined by thewomen's family. Different groups banded together but were separate fur traders and fur suppliers. Other groups joined; they would ally with either the French or the Englishdepending on which would be the most to their advantage.26
1619703541Starving Time:The winter of 1609 to 1610 was known as the "starving time" to the colonists of Virginia. Only sixty members of the original four-hundred colonists survived. The rest died of starvation because they did not possess the skills that were necessary to obtain food in the new world.27
1619703542Act of Toleration:A legal document that allowed all Christian religions in Maryland: Protestants invaded the Catholics in 1649 around Maryland protected the Catholics religion from Protestant rage of sharing the land: Maryland became the #1 colony to shelter Catholics in the New World.28
1619703543Squatter:A person who settles on land without title or right. Early settlers in North Carolina became squatters when they put their small farms on the new land. They raised tobacco on the land that they claimed, and tobacco later became a major cash crop for North Carolina.29
1619703544Primogeniture:A system of inheritance in which the eldest son in a family received allof his father's land. The nobility remained powerful and owned land, while the 2nd and3rd sons were forced to seek fortune elsewhere. Many of them turned to the New Worldfor their financial purposes and individual wealth.30
1619703545Indentured Servitude:These were Englishmen who were outcasts of their country, would work in the Americas for a certain amount of time as servants.31
1619703546Royal Charter:A document given to the founders of a colony by the monarch that allows for special privileges and establishes a general relationship of one of three types:(1) Royal- direct rule of colony by monarch, (2) Corporate- Colony is run by a joint-stock company, (3) Proprietary- colony is under rule of someone chosen by the monarch. Royal Charters guaranteed that colonists would have "rights as all Englishmen".32
1619703547Slave Codes:In 1661 a set of "codes" was made. It denied slaves basic fundamental rights, and gave their owners permission to treat them as they saw fit.33
1619703548YeomanAn owner and cultivator of a small farm.34
1619703549Proprietora person who was granted charters of ownership by the king proprietary colonies were Maryland, Pennsylvania and Delaware: they founded colonies from1634 until 1681:a famous proprietor is William Penn.35
1619703550LonghouseThe chief dwelling place of the Iroquois Indians; c. 1500s-1600s; they served as a meeting place as well as the homes for many of the Native Americans. They also provided unity between tribes of Iroquois Confederacy.36
1619703551James Oglethorpefounder 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.37
1619703552John SmithHe took over the leadership role of the English Jamestown settlement in 1608. Most people in the settlement at the time were only there for personal gain and did not want to help strengthen the settlement. He therefore told the people, "people who do not work do not eat." His leadership saved the Jamestown settlement from collapsing.38
1619703553Nation-stateA unified country under a ruler which share common goals and pride in a nation. The rise of the nation-state began after England's defeat of the Spanish Armada. This event sparked nationalistic goals in exploration which were not thought possible with the commanding influence of the Spanish who may have crushed their chances of building new colonies.39
1619703554Slaverythe process of buying people (generally Africans) who come under the complete authority of their owners for life, and intended to be worked heavily; became prominent in Colonial times around the mid to late 1600's ( but also to a lesser degree, concerning natives during the early 1500's) because of the labor intensive nature of the crops being grown, and the desire for a profit; mainly used on southern plantations, but also a little bit in the north; brought Africans to America, who have now become an integral part of our culture.40
1619703555Enclosurecaused by the desire of land-owning lords to raise sheep instead of crops, lowering the needed workforce and unemploying thousands of poor former-farmers; the lords fenced off the their great quantities of land from the mid to late 1500's forcing many farmers out and into the cities, leading many of them to hire themselves as indentured servants for payment of passage into the New World, and therefore supporting many of the needs of the labor-thirsty plantation owners of the New World.41
1619703556House of BurgesesWas the first representative assembly in the New World. The London Company authorized the settlers to summon an assembly. A momentous precedent was thus feebly established, for this assemblage was the first of many miniature parliaments to sprout form the soil of America.42
1619703557PowhatanChief of the Powhatan Confederacy and father to Pocahontas. At the time of the English settlement of Jamestown in 1607, he was a friend to John Smith and John Rolfe. When Smith was captured by Indians, he left Smith's fate in the hands of his warriors. His daughter saved John Smith, and the Jamestown colony. Pocahontas and John Rolfe were wed, and there was a time of peace between the Indians and English until his death.43
1619703558John RolfeHe was an Englishman who became a colonist in the early settlement of Virginia. He is best known as the man who married the Native American, Pocahontas and took her to his homeland of England. He was also the savior of the Virginia colony by perfecting the tobacco industry in North America. He died in 1622, during one of many Indian attacks on the colony.44
1619703559Lord BaltimoreHe was the founder of Maryland, a colony which offered religious freedom, and a refuge for the persecuted Roman Catholics.45
1619703560Sir Walter RaleighAn English adventurer and writer, who was prominent at the court of Queen Elizabeth I, and became an explorer of the Americas. In 1585, he sponsored the first English colony in America on Roanoke Island in present-day North Carolina. It failed and is known as "The Lost Colony."46
1619703561Oliver CromwellAn Englishman; led the army to overthrow King Charles I and was successful in 1646. Cromwell ruled England in an almost democratic style until his death. His uprising drew English attention away from Jamestown and the other American colonies.47
1619703562Lord De la WarAn Englishman who came to America in 1610. He brought the Indians in the Jamestown area a declaration of war from the Virginia Company. This began the four year Anglo-Powhatan War. He brought in "Irish tactics" to use in battle with the Indians.48
1619703563PocahontasA native Indian of America, daughter of Chief Powahatan, who was one of the first to marry an Englishman, John Rolfe, and return to England with him; about1595-1617; her brave actions in saving an Englishman paved the way for many positive English and Native relations.49

the scottsboro boys Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
1603577072peltinganything happening rapidly or in quick successive, beating against again and again0
1603577073exchangedchanged for (replaced by) something different1
1603577074hoboa disreputable vagrant2
1603577075recruitedto enroll or seek to enroll3
1603577076decadesperiods of ten years4
1603577077inequalitylack of equality5
1603577078eloquentlyin an articulate manner6
1603577079possea temporary police force7
1603577080obliviousfailing to keep in mind8
1603577081dilapidatedin deplorable condition9
1603577082impoverishedpoor enough to need help from others10
1603577083destituteVery poor, Deprived of the necessities of life;11
1603577084sporadicoccurring singly, or occasionally, or in scattered instances, (adj.) occurring at irregular intervals, having no set plan or order12
1603577085vagrancythe state of wandering from place to place13
1603577086virtuousmorally excellent, Adjective: conforming to moral and ethical principles;14
1603577087sulliedespecially of reputation, made dirty or impure [opposite unsullied; sully (v)]15
1603577088avengedfor which vengeance has been taken16
1603577089deplorablebad17
1603577090lynchingswhen small vigilante mobs or elaborately organized community events where an individual (typically black) was publicly hung due to a crime (true or perceived). Resulted from white supremacy or fear of black sexuality.18
1603577091recantformally reject or disavow a formerly held belief, usually under pressure19
1603577092dispersescatter20
1603577093contradictTo challenge, confront, counter, deny, or oppose21
1603577094luridshining with an unnatural red glow as of fire seen through smoke22
1603577095grotesqueart characterized by an incongruous mixture of parts of humans and animals interwoven with plants23
1603577096coalesenceunion; a combination24
1603577097balkedto stop short and refuse to proceed25
1603577098vivid(of color) having the highest saturation26
1603577099unabashednot embarrassed27
1603577100fabricatedformed or conceived by the imagination28
1603577101possessTo have or to own29
1603577102conclusiveforming an end or termination30
1603577103bayoneta knife that can be fixed to the end of a rifle and used as a weapon31
1603577104condemnedofficially and strongly disapproved32
1603577105staycontinuing or remaining in a place or state33
1603577106hesitantuncertain or in doubt34
1603577107stewardsPeople who are put in charge of managing, caring for, and protecting something, such as money or personal property.35
1603577108inflammatorycharacterized or caused by inflammation36
1603577109adequate(sometimes followed by 'to') meeting the requirements especially of a task37
1603577110indiscretionsimprudent actions38
1603577111anti semitismprejudice against Jews39
1603577112bigotrythe intolerance and prejudice of a bigot40
1603577113antagonism(biochemistry) interference in or inhibition of the physiological action of a chemical substance by another having a similar structure41
1603577114uncorroboratedunsupported by nother evidence42

AP US History Vocabulary Chapers 3 and 4 Flashcards

Vocabulary for Chapters 3 and 4 of The American Pageant, 13th Edition

Terms : Hide Images
81718888John Calvin(1509-1564) French Protestant reformer and theologian who, after breaking with the Roman Catholic Church (1533), settled in Geneva (1541). Founder of Presbyterianism.81718888
81718889Anne Hutchinson(1591-1643) U.S. colonist and religious leader, born in England. After settling in Boston (1635), she was ostracized and later banished for her religious beliefs.81718889
81718890Rodger Williams1603-83) Colonial clergymen and founder of Rhode Island, born in England. After being expelled from Massachusetts, he founded the commonwealth of Providence, based on religious freedom.81718890
81718891Henry HudsonAn English explorer who, in 1609, tried to find a northwest passage and discovered the river that bears his name. When returning from a second trip, his crew mutinied and he and his son were sent adrift, never to be seen again.81718891
81718892William Bradford(1590-1657) English puritan colonist in America. A signer of the Mayflower Compact and one of the original settlers of the Plymouth Plantation, he was elected governor for 30 1-year terms.81718892
81718893Peter Stuyvesant(1592-1672) Dutch colonial administrator in America. While living in New Amsterdam (Present day New York City), he attempted to bring social and religious reform to the diverse populace, but was largely unsuccessful.81718893
81718894Thomas Hooker(1586- 1647) Puritan colonial leader who founded the colony of Connecticut after fighting with Puritan leaders in Massachusetts.81718894
81718895William Penn(1644-1718) English Quaker. Converted to Quakerism in 1667, he was imprisoned in the Tower of London of his views in 1668. In 1681, he was given a charter in Pennsylvania by the Crown in lieu of a debt to his late father. He proceeded to establish a colony practicing religious tolerance.81718895
81718896John Winthrop(1588-1649) A founder of the Massachusetts Bay Company who moved to the colony in 1630, serving as its first governor (1629-33), and was re-elected several times.81718896
81718897King Philip (Metacom)(1639-1676) War chief of the Wampanoag Indians and their leader in King Philip's War.81718897
81718898Sir Edmund AndrosBritish colonial administrator. As governor of the Dominion of New England, his unpopular laws angered colonists, and in 1689 the people of Boston revolted and threw him in jail.81718898
81718899Gustavus Adolphus(1594-1632) King of Sweden from 1611 to 1632 and led it to military supremacy during the 30 years war.81718899
81718900William and MaryCollage in Williamsburg, Virginia, founded in 1693 and named after King Williams III and Queen Mary II.81718900
81718901Massasoit(1580-1661) Chief of the Wampanoag Indians. One of the most powerful native rulers of New England, he signed a peace treaty with the Plymouth Pilgrims in 1621 and befriended Rodger Williams.81718901
83172312SquantoU.S. Indian and friend of the Plymouth Colony Pilgrims. He was captured as a young man and sold as a slave, he escaped and made his way back to his homeland, where he taught the pilgrims to grow corn and probably participated in the First Thanksgiving celebration.83172312
83172313William Berkley(1605-1677) Governor of Virginia appointed by King Charles I. His friendly relations towards the Indians led to Bacon's Rebellion in 1676.83172313
83172314Nathaniel Bacon(1640s-1676) Wealthy colonist of Virginia Colony and leader of Bacon's Rebellion. He died of dysentery, ending the rebellion.83172314
83172315Matthew Hopkins(1620-1647) English witch hunter during the English Civil War. He was responsible for more people being hung for witch craft than anyone in the previous 100 years.83172315
83172316Indentured servantA contract binding one party in the service of another for a stipulated term.83172316
83172317Martin Luther(1483- 1546) German leader of the reformation. An Augustinian monk, he visited Rome in 1510 and was shocked by the wealth and corruption. In 1520, he launched the Protestant Reformation.83172317
83172318Slave codeslaws which defined the status of slaves and the rights of their masters. They gave slave owners absolute power over their human property.83172318
83172319Headright systemUsed as an attempt to solve labor shortages. Immigration colonists who paid for their own passage were given 50 acres of land.83172319
83172320Middle passageThe passage of slave ships from Africa to the West Indies and America during the 16th to 19th centuries.83172320
83172321Freedom duesland or money given to an indentured servant when he was done serving his term.83172321
83172322Witch huntingSearches for witches or witchcraft, often involving moral panic, mass hysteria, and lynching.83172322
83172323ConversionsThe reception of God's saving grace.83172323
83172324Bacon's RebellionUprising in 1676 in the Virginia Colony that was a protest of Native American raids on the frontier.83172324
83172325Leisler's RebellionUprising in 17th century colonial New York, in which militia captain Jacob Leisler seized control of lower New York from 1689 to 1691.83172325
83172326Half-way covenantProvided partial church membership for children and grandchildren of Puritan church members.83172326
83172327QuakersMembers of the Society of Friends. Not used officially by the Friends.83172327

MATH Flashcards

math math math math MATH!!!!!

Terms : Hide Images
2756623669x9811
2756623678x8642
2756623686x6363
2756623695x5254
2756623704x4165
2756623713x7216
2756623729x5457
2756623737x37x3=8
2756623747x5359
2756623759x32710
2756623766x42411
2756623773x61812
2756623787x21413
2756623796x95414
2756623808x43215
2756623816x53016

AP Chem ch. 1 Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
456967875chemistrythe study of the composition, structure, properties, and changes of matter1
456967876propertyany characteristic that gives a sample of matter its unique identity2
456967877elementa substance that cannot be separated into simpler substances by chemical means; composed of only one type of atom3
456967878atomthe smallest representative particle of an element4
456967879moleculean entity composed of two or more atoms with the atoms attached to one another in a specific way5
456967880massa measure of the amount of material in an object6
456967881states of mattergas, liquid, and solid7
456967882gashas no fixed volume or shape; conforms to the volume and shape of its container; molecules are far apart and move at high speeds8
456967883liquidhas a distinct volume independent of its container but had no specific shape; assumes the shape of the portion of the container it occupies; molecules are packed more closely together but move rapidly and slide9
456967884solidhas a definite shape and volume; molecules are held tightly together in definite arrangements and wiggle slightly10
456967885pure substancematter that has distinct properties and a composition that doesn't vary from sample to sample (elements and compounds)11
456967886compounda substance composed of two or more elements12
456967887mixturea combination of two or more substances in which each substance retains its own chemical identity13
456967888componentsthe substances that make up a mixture14
456967889homogeneous mixture (solution)a mixture that is uniform throughout ( a solution)15
456967890heterogeneous mixturea mixture that does not have the same composition, properties, and appearance throughout16
456967891law of constant composition (law of definite proportions)the elemental composition of a pure compound is always the same17
456967892physical propertiescan be measured without changing the identity and composition of the substance (color, odor, density, melting point, boiling point, hardness)18
456967893chemical propertiesdescribe the way a substance may change, or react, to form other substances19
456967894physical changematter does not change its composition (ex. changes of states)20
456967895chemical change (chemical reaction)a substance is transformed into a chemically different substance21
456967896intensive propertiesare independent of the amount of matter examined; are used to identify substances22
456967897extensive propertiesrelate to the amount of substance present23
456967898scientific methoda dynamic process used to answer questions about our physical world24
456967899scientific lawsgeneral rules that summarize how nature behaves25
456967900hypothesisa tentative explanation that guides in planning further experiments26
456967901theoryan explanation of the general causes of certain phenomena, with considerable evidence or facts to support it27
456967902quantitative analysisthe determination of the amount of a given substance that is present in a sample28
456967903qualitative analysisthe determination of the presence or absence of a particular substance in a mixture29
456967904metric systemmetric units are used for scientific measurements30
456967905SI unitspreferred units used in scientific measurement (length=meter (m), mass=kilogram (kg), time=second (s), temperature=Kelvin (K))31
456967906temperaturethe measure of the hotness or coldness of an object; determines the direction of heat flow32
456967907Celsius scalethe everyday temperature scale of most countries33
456967908Kelvin scalethe SI temperature scale34
456967909Kelvin <--> CelsiusK = C + 273.1535
456967910Celsius --> FahrenheitF = (9/5)C + 3236
456967911Fahrenheit --> CelsiusC = (5/9)(F - 32)37
456967912precisionindicates how closely different measurements of a quantity agree with one another38
456967913accuracyindicates how well a measurement agrees with the accepted or "true" value39
456967914significant figuresin a measured quantity, they include one estimated digit (the last digit of the measurement)40
456967915dimensional analysisan approach to problem solving in which we keep track of units as we carry measurements through calculations41
456967916conversion factora fraction whose numerator and denominator are the same quantity expressed in different units42

Out of Many Chapter 2 Flashcards

Out of many : ap edition

Terms : Hide Images
10608908291st English Baby born in AmericaVirginia Dare1
1060890830Walter RaleighWant compete with spanish empire, sponsor roanoke, enslave Indians.2
1060890831WinginaChief of Algonquin want english as allies3
1060890832Wanchese + ManteoMant= english technology make english good allies Wanch= english are brutal and inequal ally.4
1060890833English Betrayal of AlgonquinAsk for support, Wingina helped, but they were hit by diesease, and got angry w/ English. English heard this and killed ppl, kill wingina Return to England bc no Indian labor5
1060890834RoanokeLost Colony, disappearing colonists. Represent that English went to New Wrold just for imperial, not economic, etc, waste Indians' hospitality. Perhaps colonists marry into Indian families6
1060890835Feudalismcontinent divided into 100s territories each rule by family of lords, claimed wealth and power Feudal lords command service from peasants, paid tribute in crops. Medieval economic expansion+ estates and made castles by lords7
1060890836Relgion in Medieval EuropesRoman Catholic church control politically fragmented Europe. Create hierchy from priests to the pope. Persecute heretics/nonbelievers/other pagan religions. church counsel the poor8
1060890837Living condition europeHarsh, ppl liveo n bread/porridge, some vegetables and meat. Infectious disease, 1/2 population reach adulthood plague led to violence and famine9
1060890838Medieval European economic expansionTrade in basic goods expand, growth of markets and towns. Fully recover from black death.10
1060890839New Monarchies Medival EuropeNew European states rise, , and monarchs step up bcome center of power. Supported by rising merchant class which sought lucrative royal contracts+ trading monopolies This relationship prepare for oversea expansion11
1060890840Pre RennaissanceCities launch commercial fleets to get control o' trade in mediterranean, these merchants becmae outfitters of the crusades. New spices from Crusade made diet less monotonous,12
1060890841New InventionsCompass, Gunpowder and Printing with movable type13
1060890842Renaissancepro human possibility, classicle styles, ration reflection, heroic image of ppl (humanism) no religion, motivated exploration into Americas Secular over religious.14
1060890843PortugueseWith new instruments like tables of declination, armin vessles, astronomical calculation Explore NW Africa for gold and slaves erect trading forts on African coast/india, etc. gain control of Chinese spice trade15
1060890844ColumbusWant new route to Indies, need royal money, calculated wrong, Most import. contribution= discover clockwise icrculation of Atlantic winds16
1061210737Reconquistacentury long struggle, militrary tradition of conquest and plunder in Muslim contol province in Iberia ended, ppl really want goo dtrade routes17
1061210738Goals of Columubs + expeditionCommercial interest for Columbus Spain want conquer land18
1061210739TainosNative ppl of Caribbean, had gold jewelry made columbus get gold fever and tell king + queen abt golds! Tainos killed all Columbus men left behind, col fought back ravage village, force tribute as gold, when gold run out, tainos become sent Spain as slaves and die. Completely eliminated, made colony go into depression19
1061210740EncomiendaNatives have to do work for Spanish lords, supposed to be reciprocal but no,slavery.20
1061210741Spanish Invasion of USAHispaniola, Carribbean islands, Puerto Rico, jamaica Aztecs, Aztecs provide wealth for Europe beyond beliefs21
1061210742Destruction of Indies,Bartolome de las Casas- fight for Natives lives blame spanish for millions of indiana deaths, genocide His book create BLACK LEGEND of spanish colonization22
1061210743Why so many Indians die?Battle, which was small portion of decilne Starvation, Birthrate fell, women have no energy, epidemic disease that had never hit a nation before for the 1st time = virgin Soil epidemics, Population did not swing back up until 20th century23
1061210744Intercontinental exchangePriceless artifacts melted for gold, silver in mines make coins. (this create inflation) New Crops maize became staple, Potatoes from peru, Wheat, miracle crops= good food source Tobacco, Cotton , Domesticated animals and horses24
10612107451sp Spanish conquistador to go to North AmericFlorida25
1061210746CibolaNorth American rumor empire of golden cities Hernan de Soto ttry to find, pushed through powerful native armies, reduced his force, died, survivors went back on RAFTS spread disease to South. No find city of gold, lost all interest in Southwest26
1061210747Treaty of TordesillasPortugues colonize Brazil, agreement divide Us btw Spain and Portugal27
1061340031Spain Government?CONTROL by COUNCIL OF THE INDIES IN SPAIN28
1061340032Protestant ReformationRevolt against Roman Catholic, inspire John Calvin to create radical theology, predestination, small number of ppl for salvation. French followers= Huguenots, they establish colonies in North America,29
1061340033King Henry VIIIHe no like Protestant, but when church reject his marriage to Cathering of Aragon, he denounced Catholic. Kept him strong30
1061340034Early English Effort in AmericasHawkins took tropical goods from Caribbean, attacked by Spanish. English rad against spanish new world, became Sea Dogs, time to clonize to be able to raid spanish, get to indian market,stop reliance on Asia. Send vagabonds across. King Philip committed to smash England, but were beat by English, and Eng. destroy monopoly.31

Chapter 2 modern chemistry vocab Flashcards

Holt 2009

Terms : Hide Images
882103106scientific methodsa series of steps followed to solve problems, including collecting data, formulating a hypothesis, testing the hypothesis, and stating conclusions1
882103107systema set of particles or interacting components considered to be a distinct physical entity for the purpose of study2
882103108hypothesisan explanation that is based on prior scientific research or observations and that can be tested3
882103109modela pattern, plan, representation, or description designed to show the structure or workings of an object, system, or concept4
882103110theorythe explanation for some phenomenon that is based on observation, experimentation, and reasoning; that is supported by a large quantity of evidence; and that does not conflict with any existing experimental results or observations5
882103111quantitysomething that has magnitude, size, or amount6
882103112SILe Système International d'Unités, or the International System of Units, which is the measurement system that is accepted worldwide7
882103113Weighta measure of the gravitational force exerted on an object; its value can change with the location of the object in the universe8
882103114Derived Unitsproduced by multiplying or dividing standard units, the result of mathematical differentiation9
882103115volumea measure of the size of a body or region in three-dimensional space10
882103116Densitythe ratio of the mass of a substance to the volume of the substance; commonly expressed as grams per cubic centimeter for solids and liquids and as grams per liter for gases11
882103117conversion factora ratio that is derived from the equality of two different units and that can be used to convert from one unit to the other12
882103118Dimensional analysisa mathematical technique for studying dimensions of physical quantities13
882103119Accuracya description of how close a measurement is to the true value of the quantity measured14
882103120precisionthe exactness of a measurement15
882103121Percentage errora figure that is calculated by subtracting the accepted value from the experimental value, dividing the difference by the accepted value, and then multiplying by 10016
882103122significant figureshow reported values are measured. Consists of all the digits known with certainty plus one final digit17
882103123scientific notationa method of expressing a quantity as a number multiplied by 10 to the appropriate power18
882103124direct proportionthe relationship between two variables whose ratio is a constant value19
882103125inverse proportionthe relationship between two variables whose product is constant20

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