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AP World History Chapter 18 Flashcards

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5860011002Niccolo Machiavelliauthor of The Prince; emphasized realistic discussions of how to seize and maintain power.0
5860011003Humanismphilosophy, or ideology, with a focus on humanity as the center of intellectual and artistic endeavor.1
5860011004Northern Renaissancecultural and intellectual movement of northern Europe; influenced by earlier Italian Renaissance; centered in France, Low Countries, England, and Germany; featured greater emphasis on religion than the Italian Renaissance.2
5860011005Francis lking of France (r. 1494-1547); one of many monarchs of the Renaissance period who were influential through their patronage of the arts.3
5860011006Johannes Gutenbergintroduced movable type to Western Europe in the 15th century; greatly expanded the availability of printed materials.4
5860011007European-style familyemerged in the 15th century; involved a later marriage age and a primary emphasis on the nuclear family.5
5860011008Martin LutherGerman Catholic monk who initiated the Protestant Reformation; emphasized the primacy of faith for gaining salvation in place of Catholic sacraments; rejected papal authority.6
5860011009Protestantismgeneral wave of religious dissent against the Catholic Church; formally began with Martin Luther in 1517.7
5860011010Anglican Churchform of Protestantism in England established by Henry VIII.8
5860011011Jean CalvinFrench Protestant who stressed doctrine of predestination; established center of his group in Geneva; in the long run encouraged wider public education and access to government.9
5860011012Catholic ReformationCatholic response to the Protestant Reformation; reformed and revived Catholic doctrine.10
5860011013JesuitsCatholic religious order founded during Catholic Reformation; active in politics, education, and missionary work outside of Europe.11
5860011014Edict of Nantes1598 grant of tolerance in France to French Protestants after lengthy civil wars between Catholics and Protestants.12
5860011015Thirty Years Warwar from 1618 to 1648 between German Protestants and their allies and the Holy Roman emperor and Spain; caused great destruction.13
5860011016Treaty of Westphaliaended Thirty Years War in 1648; granted right of individual rulers and cities to choose their own religion for their people; Netherlands gained independence.14
5860011017English Civil Warconflict from 1640 to 1660; included religious and constitutional issues concerning the powers of the monarchy; ended with restoration of a limited monarchy.15
5860011018Proletariatclass of people without access to producing property; usually manufacturing workers, paid laborers in agriculture, or urban poor; product of the economic changes of the 16th and 17th centuries.16
5860011019Witchcraft persecutionoutburst reflecting uncertainties about religious truth and resentments against the poor, especially women.17
5860011020Scientific Revolutionprocess culminating in Europe during the 17th century; period of empirical advances associated with the development of wider theoretical generalizations; became a central focus of Western culture.18
5860011021CopernicusPolish monk and astronomer; disproved Hellenistic belief that the sun was at the center of the universe.19
5860011022Johannes Keplerresolved basic issues of planetary motion and accomplished important work in optics.20
5860011023Galileopublicized Copernicus's findings; added own discoveries concerning the laws of gravity and planetary motion; condemned by the Catholic Church for his work.21
5860011024William HarveyEnglish physician who demonstrated the circular movement of blood in animals and the function of the heart as pump.22
5860011025Francis BaconEnglish philosopher, statesmen, author, and scientist; best known for work on the scientific method.23
5860011026Rene Descartesphilosopher who established the importance of the skeptical review of all received wisdom; argued that human wisdom could develop laws that would explain the fundamental workings of nature.24
5860011027Isaac NewtonEnglish scientist; author of Principia; drew the various astronomical and physical observations and wider theories together in a neat framework of natural laws; established principles of motion and defined forces of gravity.25
5860011028Deismconcept of God during the Scientific Revolution; the role of divinity was limited to setting natural laws in motion.26
5860011029John LockeEnglish philosopher who argued that people could learn everything through their senses and reason; argued that the power of government came from the people, not from the divine right of kings; they bad the right to overthrow tyrants.27
5860011030Absolute monarchyconcept of government developed during the rise of the nation-state in Western Europe during the 17th century; monarchs held the absolute right to direct their state.28
5860011031Louis XIVFrench king who personified absolute monarchy.29
5860011032Glorious RevolutionEnglish political settlement of 1688 and 1689 that affirmed that parliament had basic sovereignty over the king.30
5860011033Parliamentary monarchyoriginated in England and Holland in the seventeenth century, with monarchs partially checked by significant legislative powers in parliaments.31
5860011034Frederick the GreatPrussian king who introduced Enlightenment reforms; included freedom of religion and increased state control of the economy.32
5860011035Enlightenmentintellectual movement centered in France during the 18th century; argued for scientific advance, the application of scientific methods to study human society; believed that rational laws could describe social behavior.33
5860011036Adam Smithestablished new school of economic thought; argued that governments should avoid regulation of economies in favor of the free play of market forces.34
5860011037Denis DiderotFrench Enlightenment figure best known for his work on the Encyclopedie.35
5860011038Mary WollstonecraftEnlightenment English feminist thinker; argued that political rights should be extended to women.36
5860011039Mass consumerismthe spread of deep interest in acquiring material goods and services below elite levels, along with a growing economic capacity to afford some of these goods.37
5860011040Proto-globalizationterm used to describe the increase of global contacts from the sixteenth century onward, particularly in trade, while also distinguishing early modern developments from the more intense exchanges characteristic of outright globalization.38

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