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American Pageant Chapter 3: APUSH IDs Flashcards

AP US History identifications for The American Pageant Chapter 3: Settling the Northern Colonies

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798887688Blue Lawspassed by Connecticut Puritans to govern morality
798887689Bread ColoniesPennsylvania, New York, and New Jersey, due to their large exports of grain
798887690Protestant work ethicserious commitment to work and worldly pursuits, calling to do God's work on Earth
798887691Salutary neglectBritish policy of avoiding strict enforcement of Parliamentary laws, with the hope that the colonies would flourish if left to themselves
798887692Electsouls already chosen to go to heaven, according to the concept of predestination
798887693Anne Hutchinsonchallenged Puritan doctrine of predestination, claimed that if it was true, then the elect had no reason to obey God or the law, was banished from Massachusetts
798887694Antinomianismliterally "against the law," Hutchinson's claim that laws did not matter to the elect
798887695Bible CommonwealthMassachusetts Bay Colony, founded by Puritans, religious leaders were very powerful, but maintained separation of church and state
798887696CovenantPuritan colonists in Mass. Bay Colony believed they had an agreement with God to build a holy society in the New World
798887697Navigation LawsBritish policy that attempted to bring the colonies closer to England by stopping American trade with places not ruled by the crown, increased smuggling
798887698Dominion of New Englandadministrative union of the New English colonies plus New York and New Jersey
798887699Freemenadult males who belonged to the Puritan congregation, were the only ones allowed to vote in Mass. Bay
798887700Fundamental Orders of Connecticutconstitution that set up a democratic regime, eventually used for Connecticut's charter and state constitution
798887701Glorious Revolutionput William and Mary on the throne of England, allowed the Dominion of New England to collapse
798887702Great Puritan Migrationwave of migration to the New World in the decade following the success of the Mass. Bay colony
798887703James IIDuke of York, unpopular Catholic ruler dethroned in the Glorious Revolution
798887704John Calvinfounder of Calvinism, author of Institutes of the Christian Religion, believed in predestination and the elect
798887705John Cotton/John WinthropPuritan preachers in the Mass. Bay, believed in the calling to do God's work on Earth
798887706Massachusetts Bay Colonymainly families, wanted to settle long-term
798887707Mayflower Compactnot a constitution, simple agreement to form a crude government and use democratic methods
798887708Metacomcalled King Philip by the English, gathered the tribes around Plymouth into an alliance to fight the Puritans, destroyed many villages before eventually failing
798887709Middle ColoniesNew York, New Jersey, Delaware, and Pennsylvania, exported grain, fur, and lumber, had economic and social democracy
798887710New England Confederationincluded two Mass. colonies and two Conn. colonies, allowed to become semi-autonomous
798887711New Jerseyfounded when two proprietors received the territory form the Duke of York, both halves were later acquired by Quakers before being combined into a royal colony
798887712New Yorkoriginally New Netherlands, founded by the Dutch
798887713Pequot Warconfrontations between Plymouth settlers and Pequot tribe became war, ended with a siege that destroyed the tribe
798887714Peter Stuyvesantled the Danish forces that ended Swedish rule in the New World
798887715Predestinationthe belief that each soul's salvation is determined by God and cannot be earned during one's lifetime
798887716Quakersreligious society, primarily in Pennsylvania, saw everyone as equal under God, pacifists
798887717Rhode Islandfounded by Roger Williams, complete religious freedom, attracted outcasts, was liberal from the start

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