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People and a Nation Flashcards

CH 1. 2. 3.

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463707671paleo IndiansArrived 12,00 to 14,000 years ago. First Americans, used spears and homemade tools to hunt game.
463707672Importance of Agriculture9,000 years ago the inhabitants of Central and South America began cultivating various crops. Where ever agriculture dominated the economy, complex civilizations flourished
463707673Mesoamerican CivilizationsEarly civilizations emerged in what is now New Mexico as early as 3,000 years ago. A number of powerful and complex societies develoved including the Olmecs, the Myans, and the Aztecs.
463707674Mound BuildersTribes of North America who built extensive mounds of dirt, especially in the Mississippi and Ohio River valleys.
463707675AztecsThe Aztecs moved into the Valley of Mexico in the twelfth century where they ultimately established an empire built on a warrior tradition that included human sacrifice and conquered people's tribute.
463707676Sexual Division of LaborThe nomadic tribes assigned the task of hunting to men, while women prepared the food, made clothing, and raised children. In the agricultural tribes of the West the men farmed, but in the East women performed that task
463707677Social OrganizationThe social organizations of the agricultural peoples of the southwest and east were similar, with extended families being defined matrilineally. The nomadic Indians of the Great Plains, by contrast, were usually related patrilineally.
463707678War and PoliticsThe Indians of North America engaged in wars with each other long before the coming of Europeans. Indian leadership reflected a widespread democracy, but political structure, including the role of women, varied widely from tribe to tribe.
463707679ReligionGenerally polytheistic, Indian religion was more varied than their politics. In 1492
463707680West Africa (Guinea)Most of the enslaved Africans that came to America originated in West Africa, or Guinea. Upper Guinea had a culture that reflected contact with the Islamic Mediterranean region, while Lower Guinea remained less cosmopolitan.
463707681Slavery in West AfricaSlavery existed in West Africa primarily as a means of accumulating lands and wealth, but after contact with Europeans and the establishment of slave-trading posts, the internal slave trade adapted readily to meet the new demands from abroad.
463707682Sexual Division of Labor in West AfricaIn West Africa men and women shared agricultural duties, with the men also hunting or herding while the women performed household tasks and managed local commerce. In Lower Guinea, society developed based on the "dual-sex principle."
463707683West African ReligionWest African religious beliefs stressed complimentary male and female roles.
463707684Sexual Division of Labor in EuropeMales did most of the farming or herding; women concentrated on the household and children. Men dominated European society, relegating females to positions of inferiority
463707685Black DeathBubonic Plague first struck Europe in 1346, then struck again in the 1360s and 1370s, killing a third of the continent's population.
463707686Political, Economic, and Technological ChangeEuropean leaders took advantage of the chaos resulting from the Black Plague and the Hundred Years' War to engender nationalism as a means of consolidating power. Along with this political innovation, economic and technological changes shaped Europe in the fifteenth century
463707687Motives for ExplorationsDevelopments in Europe made possible an era of exploration designed both to gain access to markets and to spread Christianity.
464825221Sailing in the MediterraneanEuropean sailors learned much of navigation, winds, and currents by sailing in the Mediterranean Atlantic, a region bounded by the Canary Island, the Azores, and the Madeiras. The most important concept being sailing "around the wind" or picking up westerly breezes that allowed ships to return safely to port.
464825222Islands of the Mediterranean AtlanticIn the fifteenth century Europeans, particularly Portuguese and Spanish, settled the Azores, Madeiras, and Canary islands, and began plantation economies.
464825223Portuguese Trading Posts in AfricaThe Portuguese established mutually beneficial trading posts in West Africa. Later on São Tomé, the Portuguese established sugar plantations dependent on slave labor from the African interior.
464825224Lessons of Early ColonizationEuropeans learned that they could transplant crops and livestock successfully to new lands, that the inhabitants of these new regions could be conquered, and slave-based plantations could be profitable.
464825225Columbus's VoyageChristopher Columbus sailed west in an effort to reach Asia, but he encountered the Bahamas instead a month after starting
464825226Columbus's ObservationsColumbus made obvious his intentions by asking the natives about gold, pearls, and spices. He also marveled at the new plants and animals he encountered, and described how they could be exploited.
464825227The Taíno PeopleColumbus also reported that the human inhabitants he encountered would be useful as converts and as laborers
464825228Naming of AmericaEven though Columbus died believing he had found Asia, map makers named the new region America in honor of Florentine explorer, Amerigo Vespucci.
464825229Northern VoyagesBecause of the winds they confronted, mariners who sailed to the region that was to become the United States and Canada followed a route different from those who sailed to the south.
464825230Norse SeafarersLeif Ericsson had established a short-lived settlement in modern Newfoundland in the year 1001
464825231John Cabot's ExplorationsJohn Cabot deserves credit for the first formal exploration of the continent's northern coast. Other mariners added to Europe's knowledge of the Western Hemisphere.
464825232Hernán Cortés and MalincheHaving first arrived in the West Indies in 1504, Cortés embarked for the mainland in 1519. Malinche, one of 20 slaves given to Cortés by the Mayas, became his mistress and translator. In 1521 the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlán fell to the Spaniards.
464825233Spanish ColonizationSpanish conquerors established a colonial system that stressed strict royal control, the predominance of male settlers, and exploitation of Americans and Africans.
464825234Christianity in New SpainFranciscan and Dominican friars established a number of missions to Christianize Native Americans and to Hispanicize their culture, in which they were very successful.
464825235Smallpox and Other DiseasesHundreds of thousands of Native Americans died from European diseases, particularly smallpox, to which they had no immunity.
464825236Trade Among Indians and EuropeansRich fishing banks off the coast of North America attracted many Europeans to the New World. The English also developed a lucrative fur trade with the Indians. The Indians, in turn, desired European goods. This mutually beneficial trade arrangement not only affected Indian cultures but had serious ecological consequences as well.
464825237Contest of Spain and EnglandGeopolitical conflict with Spain led England to desire colonies in North America.
464825238Sir Walter Raleigh's Roanoke ColonyEarly efforts by the English to settle the region they called Virginia had disastrous results
464825239Thomas Harriot's Briefe and True ReportThomas Harriot's Briefe and True Report Harriot, a noted scientist, publicized the benefits of Virginia, including its natural resources like copper, iron, furs, grapes, and people.
464825240FloridaSpain established a fort and settlement at St. Augustine in 1565 to keep the French out of present-day Florida.
464825241New MexicoSpaniards under Juan de Oñate invaded and conquered the Pueblo country, but the colony they established turned out to be poor and indefensible, but fertile ground for missionaries.
464825242Quebec MontrealBy the middle of the seventeenth century, France had founded Quebec and Montreal, outposts that served as that nation's claim to what is now Canada.
464825243Jesuit Missions in New FranceFriars from the Society of Jesus eventually converted thousands of natives to the Catholic faith and introduced them to European culture.
464825244New NetherlandsIn 1614, the Dutch established a post near present Albany, New York. The presence of the Dutch traders helped spawn competition, and war, among the various tribes.
464825245Conflict in the CaribbeanThe Caribbean provided the area of greatest conflict between European powers, especially as the lucrative sugar industry emerged in the region.
464825246Social change in EnglandA swelling population led to geographical and social mobility, and many viewed the New World as a siphon for surplus population.
464825247The English reformationThe English Reformation, which King Henry VIII initiated in 1533, set the stage for large numbers of English dissenters to leave their homeland.
464825248PuritansConflict between the Stuart monarchs and dissenters called Puritans caused thousands of settlers to leave England in the 1630s.
464825249The First Stuart MonarchsJames I established a new dynasty in England that was intolerant of Puritans and representative government.
464825250Joint-Stock companiesEnglish investors established joint-stock companies to finance early colonization projects. These forerunners of modern corporations enjoyed limited success in providing the vast long-term investment funds necessary for colonization.
464825251JamestownGreat difficulties beset Jamestown, the first permanent settlement in Virginia
464825252Powhatan confederacyJamestown survived largely as a result of aid from the Algonkian Indians, but problems arose between the Englishmen and members of the Powhatan Confederacy.
464825253Algonkian and English Cultural DifferencesThe Indians and the Europeans had many differing views, but the Englishmen's attitude of cultural superiority led to the greatest problems between the two peoples.
464825254Virginia Company PoliciesFirst under the Virginia Company, and later under James I, settlers to Virginia could claim 50 acres of land as a headright. In 1619 the Virginia Company allowed major landowners to elect representatives to an assembly called the House of Burgesses.
464825255Indian uprisingFearful of English encroachment, Powhatan's successor Opechancanough attacked Jamestown on March 22, 1622, killing 347, or one quarter of its inhabitants. This sparked warfare that ended only with the subjugation of the Powhatan Confederacy.
464825256end of the Virginia companyJames I revoked the charter of the Virginia Company in 1624, making Virginia a royal colony.
464825257Founding of MarylandMaryland, founded in 1632, mirrored Virginia in many ways. One important difference set Maryland apart: the colony tolerated all Christian faiths and therefore served as a haven for Catholics.
464825258Need for laborersobacco cultivation required a vast need for laborers, and Virginians experimented with several solutions, including Indian and African workers.
464825259Indentured servant immigrantsVirginians met their labor needs by bringing indentured servants to the colony.
464825260conditions of servitudeLife for these migrants proved difficult, but opportunities existed for those who fulfilled their contracts.
464825261Standard of livingFor everyone in the Chesapeake, life was severe with material wealth in short supply.
464825262Chesapeake familiesThe predominance of males, the economic conditions, and high mortality rates in the Chesapeake led to fewer, smaller, and shorter-lived families in Virginia and Maryland.
464825263Chesapeake PoliticsA native-born elite with local ties and interests failed to emerge in Virginia and Maryland, leading to political instability.
464825264Contrasting Regional Religious PatternsMost immigrants to the Chesapeake were not affected by religious motives. By contrast, religion motivated many people who moved to the New England colonies.
464825265Congregationalists and SeparatistsPuritans believed in an omnipotent God who had predestined some people for salvation and some for damnation. Congregationalists wanted to reform the Church of England, while Separatists thought the Church of England was too corrupt to be saved.
464825266PlymouthSeparatists, who wanted to leave the Church of England, arrived in America in 1620 and founded the settlement of Plymouth.
464825267PokanoketsThis branch of the Wampanoags served as allies to the Pilgrims, ensuring their success.
464825268Massachusetts Bay CompanyWhen Charles I ascended to the throne in 1625 his anti-Puritan policy led thousands of Congregationalists to leave England for America.
464825269Governor John WhinthropJohn Winthrop, first elected governor of Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1629, envisioned a communal society based on Christian charity that put the common good before the needs of the individual.
464825270Ideal of covenantThe concept of covenant permeated Puritan society. This faith in mutual consent manifested itself in the colony's political institutions.
464825271New England townsPuritan ideas influenced land distribution in the New England colonies. Massachusetts often gave land to groups rather than to individuals, grants that led to the growth of communities rather than to large personal holdings.
464825272Internal Migration and the Pequot WarEnglish migration into the Connecticut valley spawned conflict with the Pequot tribe.
464825273John Eliot and the Praying TownsPuritans focused on "civilizing" Indians, but met with little success.
464825274Puritan and Jesuit Missions ComparedIn New England, cultural assimilation remained limited, and Jesuit missions in New France enjoyed more success than did Puritan missions in New England.
464825275New England FamiliesBig families, religious intolerance, and strict morality characterized life in New England.
464825276impact of religionReligion permeated every facet of New England life.
464825277Roger Williamsadvocated Indians' rights, separation of church and state, and religious tolerance. In 1635, he founded the town of Providence in what became Rhode Island.
464825278Anne Hutchinsonemphasized the covenant of grace and direct communication with God. Her ideas threatened Puritan religious orthodoxy and traditional gender relationships.
465322181Proprietorship6 new colonies. known ad the Restoration colonies, were founded during the reign of Charles II (1660-1685
465322182New YorkCharles gave his younger brother, the Duke of York, claim to the area the Dutch had previously settled as New Netherland.
465322183Duke's LawProclaimed by the Duke of York in 1665, the Duke's Laws tolerated the maintenance of Dutch legal practices and allowed each town in New York to decide which church to support with its tax revenues. However, no provision was made for a representative assembly.
465322184Founding of New JerseyThe Duke of York regranted much of his land to two friends, thereby limiting the geographical extent and economic growth
465322185Pennsylvania: Quaker HavenCharles II gave William Penn a grant in 1681 to repay a debt he owed Penn's father. A leading member of the Society of Friends, William Penn sought to establish a tolerant, humane, and dynamic colony.
465322186William Penn's Indian PolicyPenn attempted to treat Indians fairly, which in turn attracted many Indian immigrants to his colony. The newcomers often clashed with Europeans aslo attracted by Penn's policies.
465322187Founding of CarolinaCharles charted Carolina in 1663. The northeren region remained linked to Virginia and developed differently thean did the area around Charleston.
465322188New France and the IroquisThe French claimed the Great LAkes with the Mississippi valley. This expansion broght France into conflict with the Iroquis Confederacy, which exerted great influence in what became northeasters United States. Competition for European trade sparked a series of wars in the region that lasted until 1701.
465322189French expansion into the Mississippi ValleyAfter the French founded New Orlenes in 1718, its posts alonf the Mississippi became the glue of empire.
465322190Popé and the Pueblo RevoltResentment over Spanish treatment led a shaman named Popé to lead a revolt among the Pueblo Indians in 1680. This uprising was the most successful Indian resistance in North America.
465322191Spains North American PossessionsBy using forts and missions, Spain expanded its holdings to include California and Texas.
465322192Population Pressures in New EnglandThe population increase in the New England area placed great pressure on the available land.
465322193King Phillips WarConcerened by the encroachment of English settlers King Phillip, chief of the Pokanokets, led a bloody war In New England 1675-1676
465322194Bacon's RebellionConflict between ENglish settlers and Indians in Virginia turned into a Political struggle between Nathaniel Bacon and Govoner William Berkeley
465322195Atlantic Trading SystemThe traffic in slaves became the linchpin of a complicated web of exchange that tied the peoples of the Atlantic world together
465322196New England and the CaribbeanThe sale of New England foodstuffs and wood products to Caribbean sugar palnters provided New Englanders with a major source of income.
465322197The Human Tragedy of the Slave TradeThis voyage that transported Africans to the Americas proved particularly deadly, with high percentages of black slaves and white overseers dying in Africa or at sea.
465322198West Africa and the Slave TradeWest Africa experienced profound demographic changes because of the slave trade. Also, some African kings consolidated their political power as a result of the role they played in the commerce.
465322199European Rivalries and the Slave TradeEuropeans benefited the most from the slave trade, and their economies shifted away from trade in Asia and the Mediterranean to the Atlantic trade. Furthermore, attempts to control the slave trade caused rivalries among European nations.
465322200MercantilismEngland used its colonies in an attempt to become self-sufficient while maintaining a favorable balance of trade with other countries.
465322201Navigation ActsParliament sought to advance its mercantilist policies through a series of trade laws passed between 1651 and 1673. These acts, which made England the center of all trade, met with resistance in North America.
465322202Board of Trade and PlantationsIn 1696, Parliament hoped to improve its administration over the colonies when it established the Board of Trade and Plantations.
465322203Enslavement in the ChesapeakeBy 1720, Africans made up 20 percent of the population in the Chesapeake
465322204Impact of Slavery on the Anglo-American ChesapeakeThis concentration of slaves influenced the economic activities, demographic patterns, and social values of the region.
465322205Enslavement in South CarolinaThe large number of slaves in South Carolina, along with similarities in the climates of West Africa and the colony, helped ensure the survival of African culture.
465886842Rice and IndigoSouth Carolina developed a rice economy based mostly on skills brought in by enslaved Africans. Indigo, too, flourished because of knowledge bought by West Indian slaves.
465886843Indian Enslavement in North and South CarolinaIndians were among the many people held in slavery in both the Carolinas. Bitterness over the trade in Indian slaves caused the Tuscarora War.
465886844Yamasee WarThe abuses associated with the trade in Indian slaves also led to the Yamasee War in South Carolina.
465886845Slaves in Spanish North AmericaSpanish authorities in Florida in 1693 offered freedom to runaway slaves who would convert to Catholicism.
465886846Slaves in French LouisianaBoth Africans and Indians were held as slaves in French Louisiana, but Louisiana remained a society with slaves rather than a slave society.
465886847Enslavement in the NorthInvolvement of the northern colonies in the slave trade ensured that many people of African descent lived in that region.
465886848Colonial Political StructuresEach of the colonies generally had a governor, some form of council, and an assembly. Local political institutions, such as town meetings or county courts, also developed in America.
465886849A Tradition of Autonomy ChallengedJames II and his successors attempted to tighten the reins of government by reducing the colonies' political autonomy.
465886850Dominion of New EnglandJames II attempted to strengthen royal control over the New England colonies by creating the Dominion of New England in 1686.
465886851Glorious Revolution in AmericaNews of the Glorious Revolution encouraged New Englanders to overthrow Governor Edmund Andros.
465886852King William's WarA war with the French and their Algonquian allies added to New England's problem
465886853The 1692 Witchcraft CrisiSA witch hunt broke out in Salem, Massachusetts, in 1692. The intense but short-lived incident reflected the social and political stresses of the day.
465886854Accommodation to EmpireAlthough the colonists resented the new imperial order, they adjusted to its demands and restrictions.

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