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9728537708Renaissanceperiod from 1400 - 1600 that witnessed a transformation of cultural & intellectual values from primarily Christian to classical or secular.0
9728539734HumanistsRenaissance scholars of classical Greek & Roman works of literature and thought who were advocates of liberal arts education & the importance of the individual1
9728547413MedicisWealthy merchant family of bankers who controlled the Italian city-state of Florence during the Renaissance era. Their subsidization of the arts, especially under Lorenzo, supported the flowering of the Renaissance.2
9728552395Baldassare CastiglioneWrote The Book of the Courtier which presented the image of the "Renaissance Man" who was versed in liberal arts & social graces as contrasted to the more unrefined knights in the Middle Ages.3
9728558070Niccolo MachiavelliWrote The Prince which described his view of realistic government with a strong leader concerned only with political power and success. "better to be feared rather than loved by the masses."4
9728560414Renaissance Art-used perspective and math for a realistic portrayal of nature and the human body5
9728564229Michelangelopainter who also experimented in poetry, architecture, and sculpture. His most famous works are David & the Sistine Chapel.6
9728567415Leonardo da VinciRenaissance sculptor, scientist, engineer, architect, & painter. Famous works: The Last Supper & Mona Lisa.7
9728571153RaphaelKnown for his Madonnas and his School of Athens that showed ancient philosophers with Renaissance artists.8
9728575508Brunelleschiarchitect who created the largest dome built in Europe in a cathedral in Florence.9
9728579424Northern Renaissance Artfocused less on perspective and the human body and more on detail10
9728584604Van Eyck BrothersFlemish painters from the Northern Renaissance who applied great attention to detail in their work, particularly in their capturing of human facial expressions.11
9728592102Johannes Gutenberg(1450) European inventor of the printing press which allowed books to be printed quickly & economically. This spread the Renaissance & Reformation ideas throughout Europe.12
9728597570Desiderius ErasmusDutch scholar who wrote The Praise of Folly. The book criticized the Church's superstition & ignorance. Erasmus is credited with "laying the egg that Luther hatched."13
972860094795 ThesesMartin Luther's list of complaints and reforms. He accused Johann Tetzel of wrongdoing in his selling of indulgences and asking people to pay for false promises of exoneration of their sins. Luther's protests spread throughout Europe, igniting the Reformation.14
9728604552Priesthood of All BelieversLuther's revolutionary idea that every believer had the ability to read and interpret the Bible, that all people of faith were viewed by God as equals. This challenged the Church's position that priests had an exclusive ability to do so.15
9728620296John CalvinSwiss leader of Protestantism & advocate of predestination16
9728608719Justification of Faith AloneLuther's ideas revolved around this central tenet that people were led to salvation only through inner faith in God, rather than by participating in worldly rituals and good deeds.17
9728616800Diet of WormsSpecial imperial council in Worms, Germany, to which Martin Luther was summoned after his excommunication 1521. Luther was ordered to abandon his revolutionary ideas, which he refused to do, so he was banished (excommunicated) from the empire18
9728627851Schmalkaldic Leaguealliance of German princes which results in war with the Catholics led by the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V19
9728640761Council of TrentThese meetings did not reform church doctrines but they did end several corrupt practices criticized by Reformers within the Church and reasserted traditional Catholic doctrine.20
9728632528Peace of Augsburg(1555) - ends the Schmalkaldic War and grants German princes the right to chose the religion for their territory21
9728636875Henry VIIIbroke with the Church forming the Church of England so he could annul his marriage. The First Act of Supremacy (1534) made the King the head of the English Church (Anglican Church).22
9728644415JesuitsA religious order known as the Society of Jesus, created to strengthen support of the Church during the Counter-Reformation. Founded by Ignatius de Loyola & committed to doing good deeds in order to achieve salvation.23
9728648936Index of Forbidden BooksThe Index forbade Catholics from reading books considered "harmful" to faith or morals. This indicates the significance of the printing press in disseminating Reformation ideas.24
9788241914MercantilismA new economic theory based on the idea that a country's wealth was measured by the amount of gold & silver it possessed. This led to fierce competition for metallic riches through exploration & imperialism25
9788247875Treaty of TordesillasAgreement between Spain & Portugal to divide the land east and west of the Atlantic Ocean. Spain could explore the New World and Portugal could explore the lands East of Africa. (Line dividing the world down the middle through Brazil)26
9788252721Ferdinand MagellanPortuguese navigator who was the first to circumnavigate the globe proving that the world was round and that the New World was not a part of Asia.27
9788258842Triangle TradeA pattern of trade in early modern Europe that connected Europe (supplies), Africa (slaves), and the Americas (gold & silver) in an Atlantic economy.28
9788270298Elizabeth IQueen of England from 1558-1603, developed England into a world power & strengthened Protestantism through the 2nd Act of Supremacy.29
9788263003Columbian Exchangethe reciprocal importation and exportation of plants and animals between Europe and the Americas.30
9788278378PolitiqueA ruler who suppresses their religious designs for his or her kingdom in favor of political expediency. Examples: Elizabeth I (England), Henry IV (France)31
9788286725Spanish Armada (1588)Fleet of 130 ships launched by Spain's Catholic Phillip II to conquer England during the time of Elizabeth I. England was victorious and Spain never again posed a threat to England.32
9788293701Treaty of Westphalia1648 treaty ending the Thirty Years' War, (Protestant rebellion against the Holy Roman Empire). France gained land. Switzerland & German princes gained independence from Holy Roman Empire33
9788291110Thirty Years War (1618-1648)Most destructive war to date fought mainly in the Germanic states. Starts off as a conflict between Protestants and Lutherans and ends up a struggle for European control between French Catholic Bourbon family fighting on the side of the Protestants against the Habsburg family of Spain and the Holy Roman Empire34
9832912402Petition of Right(1628) This stated that the King could not tax without Parliamentary consent.35
9832920776English Civil War(1641-1651) Puritans versus the Royalists over control of Parliament36
9832924203Charles ICharles fought with the Puritan Parliament over his war expenses, advancing his divine-right of kings, and marrying a Catholic. He was beheaded at the end of the English Civil War.37
9832931579Oliver CromwellPuritan leader of the Roundhead army in the English Civil War who defeated Charles I and established a republic, or commonwealth, in England. He ruled as "Lord Protector."38
9832934117Glorious RevolutionIn 1688, Parliament gave the crown to James II's Protestant daughter, Mary II, and her Protestant husband, William III, as joint rulers rather than to James II's Catholic son. It was a bloodless and "glorious" transfer of power.39
9833025990English Bill of Rights1689 document declaring Parliament would choose who ruled England, that the ruler could not tax without Parliamentary consent, that the ruler could not suspend Parliament, that the ruler was subject to all laws, that Parliament was to meet frequently, that MPs were guaranteed freedom of speech, and that cruel and unusual punishment was illegal.40
9833028954Peter the GreatRomanov ruler of Russia from 1682-1725. He brought Western European ideas to Russia, improved the Russian army, achieved control of the church, dominated the nobility, and transformed Russia into a major world power.41
9833031980Cardinal RichelieuChief minister to Henry IV's weak son, Louis XIII of France. He worked to establish absolute rule by weakening the nobles and Huguenots and employing intendants.42
9833034570Henry IVFirst Bourbon king of France, ruled 1589-1610, and converted to Catholicism from Calvinism to bring peace after the French Civil War. He passed the Edict of Nantes and was also assassinated in 1610.43
9833036995Louis XIVreigned from 1643-1715 - best example of an absolute monarch. (divine right king) Built the palace at Versailles. Issued the Edict of Foutainebleau (1685) which revoked the rights of the Huguenots granted in the Edict of Nantes.44
9833040083Rene DescartesHis Discourse on Method states that all assumptions had to be proven on the basis of known facts. "I think; therefore, I am." He stressed separation of mind and matter or logical reasoning.45
9833043892Isaac NewtonEnglish scientist and author of works explaining the law of universal gravitation & motion. His work inspired the notion of natural universal laws ordering and arranging life (mechanical view of the universe).46
9833045733Galileo GalileiItalian scientist who used a telescope. Discovered that not every heavenly body revolves around Earth. After he was put on house arrest he made discoveries in the areas of motion or physics.47
9833048162Johannes KeplerMathematician who used models, observations, and mathematics to prove the heliocentric theory developed by Copernicus.48
9833050511Nicolaus CopernicusThe Polish scientist who abandoned the geocentric model (earth centered universe) and advocated the heliocentric theory (sun centered universe).49
9833053311Francis BaconAdvocated a system of experimentation in seeking truth rather than accepting without question traditional Church & ancient beliefs. This led to the development of the scientific method.50
9833058637War of Spanish Succession (1701-1713)War fought to prevent Louis XIV's grandson from taking over Spain. Ended with the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713.51
9833061423Treaty of UtrechtEnded the War of Spanish Succession in 1713, recognizing France's Philip V as King of Spain, but prohibited the unification of the French and Spanish monarchies. England gained profitable lands in North America from France.52
9833063485Pragmatic SanctionCharles VI released this sanction urging all constituent Austrian lands to allow his daughter, Maria Theresa, to inherit Austria and other Hapsburg lands.53
9833064999War of Austrian Succession (1740-1748)Initiated by Prussia's acquisition of Silesia; war involved Spain, Prussia, and France against Austria, GB, Netherlands & Russia.54
9833067820Catherine the GreatRomanov ruler of Russia from 1763-96 who supported enlightened additions to Russian culture and expanded Russia's borders55
9833073854Age of Enlightenment18th century period of scientific & philosophical innovation in which people investigated human nature & sought to explain reality through rationalism.56
9833077123John Lockeargued that individuals have natural rights of life, political equality, and property that could not be violated by a political leader in a social contract. He believed governments existed only to protect these natural rights, and any government failing to do so should be overthrown.57
9833080631PhilosophesBody of Enlightenment thinkers. Most famous for writing Encyclopedia, a handbook for Enlightenment ideas, edited by Denis Diderot.58
9833083150MontesquieuPhilosophe who wrote Spirit of the Laws in 1748. Described the British model of divided branches of government with checks and balances as the ideal system.59
9833085453VoltairePhilosophe who wrote Candide, satirizine prejudice, oppressive government, and bigotry. Championed freedom of religion and thought.60
9833087684Jean-Jacques RousseauPhilosophe who published the Social Contract. Claimed that people were born good but were corrupted by education, laws, and society. Rousseau advocated a government based on popular sovereignty and proper child rearing.61
9864109358Seven Years' WarWar from 1756-63. Began as the "French and Indian War" in North America. Evolved into a war on the European continent62
9864113134Three EstatesBefore the 1789 Revolution, "Old Regime" France was divided into three estates: First Estate: Roman Catholic clergy (1%) Second Estate: nobility (2%) Third Estate: all of the rest, including bourgeoisie, city workers, rural peasants, and artisans (97%)63
9864117361Louis XVIRuler of France (1774-92) Married Marie Antoinette, and nearly bankrupted France by supporting the American Revolution. Beheaded by the guillotine in January of 1793, on the orders of the National Convention.64
9864122264Marie AntoinetteDaughter of Maria Theresa and wife of Louis XVI. Became the most hated woman in France because of her ostentation and refusal to support reforms. Guillotined in October of 1793.65
9864125798Tennis Court OathThe 3rd Estate was locked out the Estates General meeting, they declared on May 5, 1789 on a Tennis court in Versailles that they would write a constitution before they would adjourn.66
9864130895Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the CitizenNational assembly proclamation that men are born free and equal before the law. Also granted freedom of religion, speech, and the press. Asserted that all men have a right to seek public office and have a fair trial.67
9864136719Joeseph SieyesFrench clergyman and revolutionary, author of What is the Third Estate, which expressed the pains and complaints of the 3rd Estate.68
9864140845Girondins versus JacobinsBoth were political groups in the National Convention. Girondins were republicans who feared Parisian dominance. The Jacobins favored Parisian control.69
9864146534Reign of TerrorDirect by Jacobin Maximillian Robespierre to suppress opposition to the Revolution. Lasted from 1793-1794 & ended with Robespierre's execution by those fearing his fanatical policies.70
9864154108Napoleonic CodeOne of Napoleon's most substantial achievements was the Civil Code of 1804, which centralized the disorganized body of French laws, safeguarded property rights, and upheld conservative attitudes toward women and labor71
9880086608agricultural revolutionthe application of new agricultural techniques that allowed for a large increase in productivity which freed up labor, lowered food prices and increased population size.72
9880089397Luddites1811-1816 workers destroyed machines that would replace them73
9880093442Enclosure MovementIn Britain, due to farming improvements, large landowners began fencing in their property. This displaced many small farmers, who generally migrated to cities or abroad. This movement provided the labor needed for the industrialization of Britain.74
9880097803Factory Act of 1833Children between 9 and 13 could work only eight hours a day, those between 13 and 18, twelve hours per day. Factory inspectors were appointed with the power to fine those who broke the law.75
9880101864Corn LawsEnacted in 1815, these laws protected British agriculture by placing strict limits on the amount of foreign grain to be imported. They resulted in keeping basic food prices artificially high until their repeal in 1846.76
9880105443Utopian SocialismThis movement was a reaction to the incredible poverty seen in the industrial era, which proposed that workers live together in a clean, safe environment and work cooperatively. Frenchman Charles Fourier (1768-1837) was the author of this ideal.77
9880107914The Peterloo MassacreIn 1819, British troops sought to stop a peaceful meeting at St. Peter's Fields in Manchester. Citizens favoring more liberal government policies organized the meeting. Soldiers killed several in the unarmed crowd and hundreds were injured.78
9880111215James Wattdeveloped the steam engine in the late 18th century79
9880114455Edward Chadwickadvocated sanitary living conditions in cities, helped pass the first Public Health Act to develop sewers, piped water80
9880117976Congress of ViennaThe 1815 meeting of Europe's major powers (England, Russia, Austria, and France) to decide how to redraw the European map after Napoleon's fall from power. Reactionary policies restored royal families to their legitimate claims and ordered France to pay restitution for damages.81
9880120572balance of powera distribution of power among several states such that no single nation can dominate or interfere with the interests of another.82
9880123957Metternich SystemUltra-conservative Austrian chancellor. The system bearing his name sought to restore pre-Napoleonic rulers to their thrones, restore the European balance of power, and repress liberal and democratic ideas.83
9880130514Burschenschaftenstudent societies in Germany dedicated to the cause of a free, united German nation.84
9880133927Carlsbad DecreesExtremely repressive laws adopted in 1819 in Prussia and the German Confederation. The decrees were meant to discourage liberal views and movements.85
9880140377Crimean WarFought from 1853-56. Pitted the Ottoman Empire (backed by Britain, France, and Sardina-Piedmont) against Russia. Russia wanted to extend into Ottoman held territory, and Britain and France objected. Russia was defeated and all parties suffered significant casualties.86
9880144296Louis Napoleon Bonaparte(1808-1873) Nephew of Napoleon I; he came to power as president of the Second French Republic in 184887
9986690975Ausgleichthe "Compromise" of 1867 that created the dual monarchy of Austria-Hungary. Austria and Hungary each had its own capital, constitution, and legislative assembly, but were united under one monarch.88
9986696125Marxismthe political, economic, and social theories of Karl Marx, which included the idea that history is the story of class struggle and that ultimately the proletariat will overthrow the bourgeoisie and establish a dictatorship en route to a classless society.89
9986699991Proletariatindustrial working class. In Marxism, the class who will ultimately overthrow the bourgeoisie.90
9986703800Otto von BismarckPrussian chancellor who engineered a series of wars to unify Germany under his authoritarian rule in 187191
9986708039Realpolitikthe "politics of reality," the use of practical means to achieve ends. Bismarck was a practioner.92
9986711024Giuseppe GaribaldiSoldier of fortune who amassed his "Red Shirt" army to help unify Italian states. Italy becomes united in 186693
9986720517Alexander II (1855-1881)Reforming czar who emancipated the serfs and introduced some measure of representative local government.94
9986722882Alexander III (1881-1894)Politically reactionary czar who promoted economic modernization of Russia.95
9986725667DumaRussian national legislature96
9986728573Nicholas II (1894-1917)the last czar of the Romanov dynasty, whose government collapsed under the pressure of World War I.97
9986733735Charles DarwinBritish scientist whose Origin of Species (1859) proposed the theory of evolution based on his biological research.98
9986737486Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)Leader of the British Tory Party who engineered the Reform Bill of 1867, which extended to the working class99
9986740911Alfred DreyfusFrench Jewish army captain unfairly convicted of espionage in a case that lasted from 1894 to 1906.100
9986743548Sigmund FreudViennese psychoanalyst whose theory of human personality based on sexual drives shocked Victorian sensibilities.101
9986746516William Gladstone (1809-1898)English Prime Minister (Liberal) known as the "Grand Old Man." Instituted liberal reforms which were designed to remove long standing abuses without destroying existing institutions. He believed in Home Rule for Ireland. He passed the Education Act of 1870.102
9986752424Friedrich NietzscheGerman philosopher who stressed the role of the Superman, who would rise above the common herd of mediocrity.103
9986755010Emmeline PankhurstBritish women's suffrage leader104
9986757832Social Darwinismthe application of Darwin's principle of organic evolution to the social order; led to the belief that progress comes from the struggle for survival as the fittest advance and the weak decline.105
9986760013Zionisman international movement that called for the establishment of a Jewish state or a refuge for Jews in Palestine.106
9986761874Impressionismart movement that originated in France in the 1870s; artists attempted to paint their impressions of the changing effects of light on objects in nature. (Monet)107
9986763963Post-impressionismused color and thick brush strokes like impressionists, but exaggerated geometric shapes for effect (Cezanne, Van Gogh, Gauguin)108
9986767693Cubismearly 20th century artistic style that used geometric designs as visual stimuli in an effort to recreate reality in the viewer's mind. (Picasso)109
9986773476Surrealism1920's artistic movement that sought reality beyond the material world and explored the unconscious; works often portrayed fantasies, dreams and nightmares (Dali)110
9986779964Bolsheviksa small faction of the Russian Social Democratic Party who were led by Lenin and dedicated to violent revolution; seized power in Russia in 1917 and were subsequently renamed the Communists.111
9986783165Militarisma policy of aggressive military preparedness; in particular, the large armies based on mass conscription and complex, inflexible plans for mobilization that most European nations had before World War I.112
9986785709Nationalisma sense of national consciousness based on awareness of being part of a community—a "nation"—that has common institutions, traditions, language, and customs and that becomes the focus of the individual's primary political loyalty.113
9986789272Reparationspayments made by a defeated nation after a war to compensate another nation for damage sustained as a result of the war; required from Germany after World War I.114
9986791892War Guilt Clausethe clause in the Treaty of Versailles that declared that Germany (and Austria) were responsible for starting World War I and ordered Germany to pay reparations for the damage the Allies had suffered as a result of the war.115
9986795242totalitarian statea state characterized by government control over all aspects of economic, social, political, cultural, and intellectual life,116
9986800039Fascisman ideology or movement that exalts the nation above the individual and calls for a centralized government with a dictator.117
9986803221Lebensraum"living space." Hitler's policy to acquire land.118
9986806842Appeasementallied policy to give into Hitler to avoid another war. Chamberlain appeased Hitler at the Munich Conference119
9986809040Nazi-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact (1939)also known as the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact. Agreement not to fight and invade Poland120
9986811718Blitzkrieg"lightning war." A war conducted with great speed and force, as in Germany's advance at the beginning of World War II.121
9986814515Final SolutionNazi policy to exterminate Jews. Developed at the Wannsee Conference122
9986817221Potsdam ConferenceJuly 1945 - Stalin, Churchill and Truman discussed how to punish and divide Germany123
9986819787Yalta ConferenceFeb. 1945 - FDR, Stalin and Churchill meet and agree to settle for nothing less than the unconditional surrender of Germany124
9986823218Berlin Blockade1948-9 - Resulted in allied Berlin Airlift125
9986826928Marshall Planthe European Recovery Program, under which the United States provided financial aid to European countries to help them rebuild126
9986829707ContainmentUS policy to stop the spread of Communism127
9986832178Decolonizationthe process of becoming free of colonial status and achieving statehood; occurred in most of the world's colonies between 1947 and 1962.128
9986834663domino theorythe belief that if the Communists succeeded in Vietnam, other countries in Southeast and East Asia would also fall (like dominoes) to communism; a justification for the U.S. intervention in Vietnam.129
9986837633Truman Doctrinethe doctrine, enunciated by Harry Truman in 1947, that the United States would provide economic aid to countries that said they were threatened by Communist expansion.130
9986840303Brezhnev Doctrinethe doctrine, enunciated by Leonid Brezhnev, that the Soviet Union had a right to intervene if socialism was threatened in another socialist state; used to justify the use of Soviet troops in Czechoslovakia in 1968, "Prague Spring."131
9986842858NATOthe North Atlantic Treaty Organization; a military alliance formed in 1949 in which the signatories (Belgium, Canada, Denmark, France, Great Britain, Iceland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, and the United States) agreed to provide mutual assistance if any one of them was attacked; later expanded to include other nations.132
9986842859Warsaw Pacta military alliance, formed in 1955, in which Albania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, Poland, Romania, and the Soviet Union agreed to provide mutual assistance.133
9986845778mutual deterrencethe belief that nuclear war could best be prevented if both the United States and the Soviet Union had sufficient nuclear weapons so that even if one nation launched a preemptive first strike, the other could respond and devastate the attacker.134
9986847999Détentethe relaxation of tension between the Soviet Union and the United States that occurred in the 1970s.135
9986851690ethnic cleansingthe policy of killing or forcibly removing people of another ethnic group; used by the Serbs against Bosnian Muslims in the 1990s.136
9986855428glasnost"openness." Mikhail Gorbachev's policy of encouraging Soviet citizens to openly discuss the strengths and weaknesses of the Soviet Union.137
9986858139Perestroika"restructuring." A term applied to Mikhail Gorbachev's economic, political, and social reforms in the Soviet Union.138
9986861037Stagflationa combination of high employment and high inflation; a serious economic problem in the United States during the late 1970s.139
9986865005Fall of the Berlin WallNovember 1989, the symbolic end to the Cold War.140
9986869377Fall of the Soviet Union1991 - After a failed coup, Yelstin comes to power This marks the official end of the Cold War.141
9986874965Maastricht Treaty or the Treaty of the European Union(1992)- unites European countries economically142

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