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AP US History Period 1, 1491-1607 Flashcards

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9266360715Columbian Exchange"Triangle Trade: Widespread transfer of animals, plants, culture, human populations, technology and ideas between the American and Afro-Eurasian hemispheres in 15th-16th centuries, related to European colonization and trade after Christopher Columbus' 1492 voyage.0
9266360716FeudalismA way of structuring society around relationships derived from the holding of land in exchange for service or labour.1
9266360717CapitalismAn economic and political system in which a country's trade and industry are controlled by private owners for profit, rather than by the state.2
9266360718Joint-Stock CompaniesA business entity where different stocks can be bought and owned by shareholders. Each shareholder owns company stock in proportion, evidenced by his or her shares (certificates of ownership).[1]This allows for the unequal ownership of a business with some shareholders owning a bigger proportion of a company than others do.3
9266360719Encomienda SystemA system in which the Spanish crown granted a person a specified number of natives of a specific community, with the indigenous leaders in charge of mobilizing the assessed tribute and labor. In turn, encomenderos were to take responsibility for instruction in the Christian faith, protection from warring tribes and pirates, instruction in the Spanish language and development and maintenance of infrastructure.4
9266360720Caste SystemA social structure in which one's position in society is hereditary. (Generally, this means no social mobility)5
9266360721Subjugateto bring under complete control or subjection; conquer; master, enslave.6
9266360722Northwest PassageThe Northwest Passage is a sea route connecting the northern Atlantic and Pacific Oceans through the Arctic Ocean, along the northern coast of North America via waterways through the Canadian Arctic Archipelago7
9266360723Bering StraitStretch of ocean separating North America from Asia that was, during the Ice Age, the location of a land bridge as wide as Alaska. Then, human migration was possible over the land bridge from Siberia, and human beings came across likely in pursuit of game. From this point of origin, American Indians dispersed down across the entire Western hemisphere.8
9266360724IroquoisThe name not of a tribe but of a confederacy of six separate tribes centered in what would become New York. Coposed of the Mohawk, Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, Oneida and Tuscarora Tribes united in a military alliance against the Huron tribe located in the Great Lakes Region.9
9266360725Marco PoloExplorer whose famous journey along the Silk Road (from Mongolia to China) inspired the Discourse Containing Various Experiences, which became the basis for overland trade with China. Established Europe as a market hungry for Asian goods and vice versa.10
9266360726RenaissanceThe flowering of scholarship and individualistic, humanistic endeavor that ended the medieval period of European history. In English: "Rebirth."11
9266360727Amerigo Vespuccian Italian explorer, financier, navigator and cartographer who first demonstrated that Brazil and the West Indies did not represent Asia's eastern outskirts as initially conjectured from Columbus' voyages, but instead constituted an entirely separate landmass hitherto unknown to Old Worlders12
9266360728Prince Henry the NavigatorRegarded as the main initiator of what would be known as the Age of Discoveries, responsible for the early development of Portuguese exploration and maritime trade with other continents through the systematic exploration of Western Africa, the islands of the Atlantic Ocean, and the search for new routes.13
9266360729Hernando de SotoThe first Spaniard to successfully explore Florida. Landed in 1539 and surveyed virtually the entire Southwest Territory of the New World.14
9266360730John and Sebastian CabotThe father-son team of Venetians working for the English crown; claimed the fishing beds off the coast for Henry VII and Henry VIII. Responsible for the first English claim in the New World.15
9266360731Giovanni de VerrazanoFlorentine man sent to the New World to claim land for the French. Reports back to the French King stimulated further exploration and colonization as well as a claim to Canada. Today, the only known North American explorer to have been killed and eaten by American Indians.16
9266360732Ferdinand and Isabella of SpainChristopher Columbus' patrons; launched the Spanish Empire after hearing of his discoveries of a supposed water route to Asia. Established management precedents that cpaitalized on treasures discovered in the New World, served as a model for other European nations attempting similar exploits.17
9266360733JesuitsReligious order founded by Ignatius Loyola that became the chief instrument of Catholic Counter-Reformation.18
9266360734Pope's RebellionAn uprising of most of the indigenous Pueblo people against the Spanish colonizers in the province of Santa Fe de Nuevo México, present day New Mexico. Killed 400 Spanish and drove the remaining 2,000 settlers out of the province19
9266360735Council of the IndiesAdvisory body in the Spanish government that answered only to the crown in shaping Spanish life in the New World.20
9266360736ViceroyIn the Spanish Empire's power structure, the first representative position sent to govern divisions in the New World. Handpicked, loyal men were chosen to this position, which served as the head of civil government but also as the commander in chief of Spanish military forces in his region. Served as a model for other European nations that sought stricter control over their colonies.21
9266360737Bartolome de las CasasDominican friar, priest and scholar that worked tirelessly throughout the sixteenth century, decrying the plight of the American Indians.22
9266360738Protestant ReformationEarly 16th century writings by the priest and scholar Martin Luther, focusing primarily on biblical doctrines of grace, inspired this movement. Its key doctrine: each person having an individual calling and a Christian duty to work diligently at that calling for the Glory of God. This idea became a seminal attribute of American society through the influence of Dutch, English, Swedish, Germany and French Huguenot colonists.23
9266360739Martin LutherA German priest and scholar who defied Rome and launched the Protestant Reformation by contesting certain teachings of the Roman Catholic Church, beginning in 1517.24
9266360740John CalvinFrenchman that began as a priest but joined the Protestant cause as a legal scholar and minister in Geneva, Switzerland. Wrote the Institutes of Christian Religion, emphasizing the sovereignty of God in salvation. His student, John Knox, formed the Scottish Presbyterian Church brought to the shores of America by Scots-Irish immigrants. The Puritans were also Calvinist in doctrine and were the founders of Congregational Churches in New England.25
9266360741Henry VII of EnglandTudor King of England who launched the English Reformation because the Roman Catholic Church opposed his actions of divorcing Catherine of Aragon and marrying Anne Boleyn. Also: severed ties with Rome and allowed the Bible to be printed in English legally for the first time.26
9266360742Jacques CartierFirst French explorer of Canada; made a total of three voyages and is responsible for naming Canada.27
9266360743Samuel de ChamplainCartographer form France that sought the Northwest Passage; Instead, he traveled up the Saint Lawrence River to shape the birth of New France, founding settlements that would become Quebec and Montreal.28
9266360744New AmsterdamDutch Colony in North America that began when Peter Minuit purchased the best harbor on the Atlantic Seaboard from local Indians with a few trading goods. Established the Dutch as competent fur traders, excellent merchants, responsible for founding the most ethnically diverse colony that fittingly, became the site of the trade and culture capital of the world, New York City.29
9266360745Peter StuyvesantThe governor of New Netherland, who ultimately lost the colony to the English, who renamed it New York.30
9266360746Elizabeth IThe daughter of Henry VII and Anne Boleyn, who was more responsible than any other monarch for positioning her country to take advantage of New World discoveries.31
9266360747Sir Walter RaleighEstablished colonies in Virginia that he named for the Virgin Queen. Published the Discourse Concerning Western Planting, the book that explained the rationale for English Colonization.32
9266360748PrimogenitureThe law stating that the property of an English nobleman had ot be passed down to the firstborn son, and only to that son.33
9266360749nation-stateThe modern form of political society that combines centralized government with a high degree of ethnic and cultural unity.34
9266360750matrilinearThe form of society in which family line, power, and wealth are passed primarily through the female side.35
9266360751confederacyAn alliance or league of nations or peoples looser than a federation.36
9266360752primevalConcerning the earliest origin of things.37
9266360753sagaA lengthy story or poem recounting the great deeds and adventures of a people and their heroes.38
9266360754middlemenIn trading systems, those dealers who operate between the original buyers and the retail merchants who sell to consumers.39
9266360755caravelA small vessel with a high deck and three triangular sails.40
9266360756plantationA large-scale agricultural enterprise growing commercial crop and usually employing coerced or slave labor.41
9266360757ecosystemA naturally evolved network of relations among organisms in a stable environment.42
9266360758demographicConcerning the general characteristic of a given population, including such factors as numbers, age, gender, birth and death rates, and so on.43
9266360759conquistadorA Spanish conqueror or adventurer in the Americas.44
9266360760capitalismAn economic system characterized by private property , generally free trade, and open and accessible markets.45
9266360761encomiendaThe Spanish labor system in which persons were help to unpaid service under the permanent control of their masters, though not legally owned by them.46
9266360762mestizoA person of mixed Native American and European ancestry.47
9266360763provinceA medium sized sub-unit of territory and governmental administration within a larger nation or empire.48
9266360764nationalismFervent belief and loyalty given to the political unit of the nation-state.49
9266360765primogenitureThe legal principle that the oldest son inherits all family property or land.50
9266360766joint-stock companiesAn economic arrangement by which a number of investors pool their capital for investment.51
9266360767charterA legal document granted by a government to some group or agency to implement a stated purpose, and spelling out the attending rights and obligations.52
9266360768censusAn official count of population, often also describing other information about the population.53
9266360769feudalConcerning the decentralized medieval social system of personal obligations between rulers and ruled.54
9266360770indentured servantA poor person obligated to a fixed term of labor.55
9266360771tolerationOriginally, religious freedom granted by an established church to a religious minority.56
9266360772squatterA frontier farmer who illegally occupied land owned by others or not yet officially opened for settlement.57
9266360773matriarchA respected, usually elderly, female head of a household or extended clan.58
9266360774melting potPopular term for an ethnically diverse population that is presumed to be "melting" towards some eventual commonality.59
9266360775predestinationThe Calvinist doctrine that God has foreordained some people to be saved and some to be damned.60
9266360776electIn Calvinist doctrine, those who have been chosen by God for salvation.61
9266360777conversionA religious turn to God, thought by Calvinists to involve an intense, identifiable person experience.62
9266360778visible saintsIn Calvinism, those who publicly proclaimed their experience of conversion and were expect to lead godly lives.63
9266360779callingIn Protestantism, the belief that saved individuals have a religious obligation to engage in worldly work.64
9266360780heresyDeparture from correct or officially defined belief.65
9266360781seditiousConcerning resistance to or rebellion against the government.66
9266360782commonwealthAn organized civil government or social order.67
9266360783autocraticAbsolute or dictatorial rule.68
9266360784passive resistanceNonviolent action or opposition to authority in accord with religious or moral beliefs.69
9266360785proprietaryConcerning exclusive legal ownership, as of colonies granted to individuals by the monarch.70
9266360786naturalizationThe granting of citizenship to foreigners or immigrants.71
9266360787blue lawsLaws designed to restrict personal behavior in accord with a strict code of morality.72
9266360788ethnicConcerning diverse peoples or cultures, specifically those of non-Anglo-Saxon background.73

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