Vocab terms for chapter 4 of the american pageant.
1709101059 | Disfranchise | To take away the right to vote | 0 | |
1709101060 | Jeremiad | A sermon or prophecy recounting wrongdoing, warning of doom, and calling for repentance | 1 | |
1709101061 | Lynching | The illegal execution of an accused person by mob action, without due process of law | 2 | |
1709101062 | Social Structure | The basic pattern of the distribution of status and wealth in a society | 3 | |
1709101063 | Blue Blood | Of noble or upper-class descent | 4 | |
1709101064 | Colonies | Early Maryland and Virginia settlers had difficulty creating them and even more difficulty making them last | 5 | |
1709101065 | Disease | Primary cause of death among tobacco-growing settlers | 6 | |
1709101066 | Indentured Servants | Immigrants who received passage to America in exchange for a fixed term of labor | 7 | |
1709101067 | Headright System | Maryland and Virginia's system of gaining land to anyone who would pay transatlantic passage for laborers | 8 | |
1709101068 | Hanging | Fate of many of Nathaniel Bacon's followers, though not of Bacon himself | 9 | |
1709101069 | Rhode Island | American colony that was home to the Newport slave market and many slave traders | 10 | |
1709101070 | Royal African Company | English company that lost its monopoly on the slave trade in 1698 | 11 | |
1709101071 | Gullah | African-American dialect that blended English with Yoruba, Ibo, and Hausa | 12 | |
1709101072 | Revolts | Uprisings that occurred in New York City in 1712 and in South Carolina in 1739 | 13 | |
1709101073 | Virginia | Wealthy extended clans like the Fitzhughs, Lees, and Washingtons that dominated politics in this most populous colony | 14 | |
1709101074 | Their Early 20's | Approximate marriage age of most New England women | 15 | |
1709101075 | Meetinghouse | The basic local political institution of New England, in which all freemen gathered to elect officials and debate local affairs | 16 | |
1709101076 | The Half-Way Covenant | Formula devised by Puritan ministers in 1662 to offer partial church membership to people who had not experienced conversion | 17 | |
1709101077 | Salem Witch Trials | Late seventeenth century judicial event that inflamed popular feelings, led to the deaths of twenty people, and weakened the Puritan clergy's prestige | 18 | |
1709101078 | Farming | Primary occupation of most seventeenth-century Americans | 19 | |
1709101079 | Chesapeake | Virginia-Maryland bay area, site of the earliest colonial settlements | 20 | |
1709101080 | Indentured Servants | Primary laborers in early southern colonies until the 1680s | 21 | |
1709101081 | Nathaniel Bacon | Person who led poor former indentured servants and frontiersman on a rampage against Indians and colonial government | 22 | |
1709101082 | Governor Berkeley | Colonial Virginia official who crushed rebels and wreaked cruel revenge | 23 | |
1709101083 | Royal African Company | Organization whose loss of the slave trade monopoly in 1698 led to free-enterprise expansion of the business | 24 | |
1709101084 | Middle Passage | Experience for which human beings were branded and chained, and which only 80 percent survived | 25 | |
1709101085 | Ringshout | West African religious rite, retained by African-Americans, in which participants responded to the shouts of a preacher. | 26 | |
1709101086 | New York City slave revolt of 1712 | Major middle-colonies' rebellion that caused thirty-three deaths | 27 | |
1709101087 | Nathaniel Hawthorne | Author of a novel about the early New England practice of requiring adulterers to wear the letter "A" | 28 | |
1709101088 | New England conscience | The legacy of Puritan religion that inspired idealism and reform among later generations of Americans | 29 | |
1709101089 | Harvard | The oldest college in America, which reflected Puritan commitment to an educated ministry | 30 | |
1709101090 | William & Mary | the oldest college in the South, Founded in 1693 Half-Way Covenant - | 31 | |
1709101091 | Salem Witch Trials | Phenomena started by accusations of adolescent girls that ended in deaths of 20 people | 32 | |
1709101092 | Leisler's Rebellion | Small New York revolt of 1689-1691 that reflected class antagonism between landlords and merchants | 33 | |
1709101093 | Massachusetts | The second most populated colony at the time | 34 | |
1709101094 | Maryland | The third most populated colony at the time | 35 | |
1709101095 | Charles II | Person who was angered at Governor Berkeley's actions | 36 | |
1709101096 | Virginia and Maryland | The Chesapeake colonies | 37 |