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classical civilizations outline

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Mesopotamia Culture- • Believed in many gods • Had public, state-organized religion is most visible in the archaeological records • Priest had the power of divination • Cuneiform was made • Metallurgy State- • Cities evolved from villages • cities and rural farming villages were dependent on one another • made of many small city-states • by the third millennium BCE a king or lugal erected from Sumerian cities Social Structure- • slaves comes from mountain tribes • hereditary slavery • slaves are able to earn freedom • the patriarchal society reinforced the elite class • laws were created to provide answers to lifes' daily dilemmas • a monarchal society Egypt Culture-

AP US History Notes America's History Sixth Edition Chapter 6

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Making War and Republican Governments 1776 ? 1789 In 1776, Fredrick County of Maryland demanded allegiance to the American cause. The same went for Farmington, Connecticut where Nathaniel Jones and 17 others were arrested for remaining ?neutral?. Patriots controlled most local gov?ts and were extremely touchy/fiery when it came to things about human rights/feelings. American Armies were made out of a huge variety of people. Now that there was a military force, there was political commitment. To encourage Americans to support the war, they encouraged people to take an active role in the gov?t. The trails of War, 1776 ? 1778 Declaration of Independence clashed w/ British military and led to mistreatment of the colonial soldiers by the British. War in the North

Necessary Terms to Pass

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TERMS YOU MUST KNOW UNIT 1 Social contract Natural rights Declaration of independence Articles of confederation Connecticut/great compromise Virginia plan Three-fifths compromise New jersey plan Commerce and slave trade compromise Ratification Federalists Anti-federalists Federalist papers Bill of rights Constitution Limited government Separation of powers Popular sovereignty Checks and balances Amendments Judicial review Marbury v. madison Federalism Delegated powers Implied powers Necessary and proper clause (elastic clause) Supremacy clause Inherent powers Concurrent powers Reserved powers Full faith and credit clause Privileges and immunities clause Extradition Interstate compacts Mcculloch v. Maryland Dual federalism Cooperative federalism

Vocab Words You Must Know

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TERMS YOU MUST KNOW UNIT 1 Social contract Natural rights Declaration of independence Articles of confederation Connecticut/great compromise Virginia plan Three-fifths compromise New jersey plan Commerce and slave trade compromise Ratification Federalists Anti-federalists Federalist papers Bill of rights Constitution Limited government Separation of powers Popular sovereignty Checks and balances Amendments Judicial review Marbury v. madison Federalism Delegated powers Implied powers Necessary and proper clause (elastic clause) Supremacy clause Inherent powers Concurrent powers Reserved powers Full faith and credit clause Privileges and immunities clause Extradition Interstate compacts Mcculloch v. Maryland Dual federalism Cooperative federalism

Bradbury Rhetorical Analysis

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It is an inescapable conclusion that we must come to when reading Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451 that the people and the society he describes are not happy. They constantly search for solace in their lives and, when confronted by the obvious unhappiness of their situation, they drown their troubles in “families” and electronics. Guy Montag, on the other hand, finds his own solace and newness in life through connection to the opposite, as Bradbury shows through specific rhetorical strategies in this passage.

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