AP US chapter 8 studyguide
a professional soldier who serves in a foreign army for pay | ||
a formal written accusation charging someone with a crime | ||
a form of government characterized by absolute state power and the unlimited authority of the ruler | ||
a nation or person not taking sides in a war | ||
a citizen not in military service | ||
one who betrays a country by aiding an enemy | ||
to seize private property for public use, often as a penalty | ||
a messenger or agent sent by a government on official business | ||
a mass of disorderly and crude common people | ||
a place for making or storing weapons and ammunition | ||
concerning the belief that a country should take little or no part in foreign affairs, especially through alliances or wars | ||
passed down from generation to generation | ||
the isolation of a place by hostile ships or troops | ||
a private vessel temporarily authorized to capture or plunder enemy ships in wartime | ||
taking advantage of one's official position to gain money or property by illegal means | ||
to restore their rights within the British Empire | ||
of his integrity, courage, and moral forcefulness | ||
an invasion of Canada by generals Arnold and Montgomery | ||
had little loyalty to the British cause and ended up deserting | ||
their own experience with local and colonial democratic governance had prepared them for the idea | ||
an independent and republican America separate from Britain | ||
conservative and well-off Americans | ||
General Benedict Arnold | ||
it brought about crucial French assistance to the Revolutionary cause | ||
the practical self-interest of needing assistance to defeat the British | ||
in the Carolinas | ||
they believed that a victorious Britain would contain westward American expansions | ||
the French navy under Admiral de Grasse | ||
to aquire only the territory east of the Appalachian Mountains | ||
the desire of the weak Whig ministry in London for friendly future relations with the United States | ||
the body that chose Washington commander of the Continental Army | ||
the British colony that Americans invaded in hopes of adding it to the rebellious thirteen | ||
the inflammatory pamphlet that demanded independence and heaped scorn on "the Royal Brute of Great Britain" | ||
the document that provided a lengthy explanation and justification of Richard Henry Lee's resolution that was passed by Congress on July 2, 1776 | ||
the term(s) by which the American Patriots were commonly known, to distinguish them from the American "Tories" | ||
another name for the American Tories | ||
the church body most closely linked with Tory sentiment, except in Virginia | ||
the river valley that was the focus of Britain's early military strategy and the scene of Burgoyne's surrender at Saratoga in 1777 | ||
term for the alliance of Catherine the Great of Russia and other European powers who did not declare war but assumed a hostile neutrality toward Britain | ||
the region that saw some of the Revolution's most bitter fighting, from 1780 to 1782, between American General Greene and British General Cornwallis | ||
"legalized pirates" more than a thousand strong, who inflicted heavy damage on British shipping | ||
British political party that replaced Lord North's Tories in 1782 and made a generous treaty with the United States | ||
the western boundary of the United States established in the Treaty of Paris | ||
the irregular American troops who played a crucial role in swaying the neutral civilian population toward the Patriot cause | ||
the other European nation besides France and Spain that supported the American Revolution by declaring war on Britain | ||
a weathly virginian of great character and leadership abilities who served his country without pay | ||
military engagement that led King George III officially to delcare the colonists in revolt | ||
brilliant American general who invaded Canada, foiled Burgoyne's invasion, and then betrayed his country in 1780 | ||
a radical British immigrant who put an end to American toasts to King George | ||
fiery Virginian and author of the official resolution of July 2, 1776, formally authorizing the colonies' independence | ||
author of an explanatory indictment, signed on Jul 4, 1776, that accused George III of establishing a military dictatorship | ||
Americans who fought for King George and earned the contempt of Patriots | ||
blundering British general whose slow progress south from Canada ended in disaster at Saratoga | ||
British general who chose to enjoy himself in New York and Philadelphia rather tha nvigorously pursue the American enemy | ||
American diplomat who forged the alliance with France and later secured a generous peace treaty | ||
leader whose small force conquered key British forts in the West | ||
american naval commander who successfully harassed British shipping | ||
the decisive early battle of the revolution that led to the alliance with France | ||
the British defeat that led to the fall of North's government and the end of the war | ||
Mohawk chief who led many Iroquois to fight with Britain against American revolutionaries |