World History - First Semester Final Flashcards

1
Q

Mexico’s authoritarian leader from 1880 to 1910 who did not have the people’s best interests in mind

A

Porfirio Diaz

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2
Q

army generals or powerful civilian leaders backed by armed groups of followers that have power in Mexico

A

Caudillos

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3
Q

Bandit and leader of a band of armed peasants who helped Madero

A

Pancho Villa

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4
Q

Indian leader who aided Madero by raising an army of 5000 men

A

Zapata

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5
Q

In Mexico this made it so 1) government could take and redistribute the land of wealthy landowners 2) minimum wages and maximum work hours were set 3) life, health, and unemployment insurance programs were created 4) public school education and freedom of religion were granted

A

Mexican Constitution of 1917

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6
Q

New name for the National Revolutionary party which chooses the president in Mexico

A

PRI

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7
Q

Ruler of Cuba from 1935-1958. was backed by US business interests.

A

Batista

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8
Q

the statement made by Roosevelt saying that the US had the right to collect customs from Haiti and the Dominican Republic

A

Roosevelt Corollary

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9
Q

Haitian dictator whose dictatorship started in 1957. Had a long and feared dictatorship

A

Francois “Papa Doc” Duvalier

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10
Q

Dictator of the Dominican Republic from 1930-1961. One of the longest, cruelest, and most feared dictatorships of modern times

A

Rafael Trujillo

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11
Q

How did the US gain control of the Panama canal?

A

A French company began digging the canal in the 1880s but ran out of money. The deal to sell it to the US was denied by the government of Columbia. The french encouraged a group of Panamanians who wanted freedom to revolt. In 1903 the Panama government gave the US control of the canal zone.

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12
Q

National Guard commander of Nicaragua who overthrew the elected president and created a brutal dictatorship from 1936 until 1956 when he was asassinated

A

Somoza

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13
Q

Explain at least three ways of significant US intervention in Latin America during this period.

A

1) the US supervised the election of Cuba’s first president and after that president resigned, US rule returned in 1906-08 and again in 1917-23, and in 1933 the US helped overthrow a brutal dictator 2) in 1905 the US started collecting taxes in Haiti and the Dominican Republic - Roosevelt Corollary 3) control of Panama Canal

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14
Q

How did the Mexican Revolution influence other nations in Latin and South America?

A

The Mexican Revolution was admired by many common citizens who were inspired by it and because of this the people in power lost their hold over people.

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15
Q

How were most “elites” supported/empowered? Explain their ties with key industries for example in 1) Venezuela and 2) Brazil

A

1) In Venezuela the elites were fueled by the oil industry 2) The “Coffee Elite” was the wealthy landowners. Coffee production was the main source of wealth

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16
Q

What, according to Roosevelt, gave the US the justification to be the world’s cop? explain why you agree or disagree with this claim.

A

“Chronic wrongdoing, or an impotence which results in a general loosening of the ties of civilized society, may…ultimately require intervention by…the United States…to the exercise of an international police power” I agree/disagree because _______

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17
Q

It entered WWI in 1914 and believed that the war was a fight for the survival of Islam. It ruled a multi-ethnic empire with many languages and religions and was head by Sultans

A

Ottoman Empire

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18
Q

It was formed in 1923 with Mustafa Renal as the first president who put new reforms from parts of German, Italian, and Swiss legal systems in place.

A

Turkey

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19
Q

An ancient country ruled by a series of Shahs from 1797 to 1896. It formed into Iran

A

Persia

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20
Q

Formed from Persia in 1979 by Reza Shah who started a system of secular schools and made it so women didn’t have to wear veils and were encouraged to work.

A

Iran

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21
Q

Widespread constitution and national legislature against European involvement in Persia

A

Majles

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22
Q

Ruler of Persia

A

Shah

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23
Q

Ruler of Iran when it was first formed who westernized the country

A

Reza Shah

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24
Q

Agreement between France and Britain to split the Ottoman Empire between them if it didn’t make it through WWI

A

French “Mandate”

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25
Q

Britain and France decided that the Palestine region should be handled differently than the rest of Syria because it contained many sacred places in three world religions

A

British “Mandate”

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26
Q

Britain announced its support for the establishment of a national home for all Jewish people in Palestine and that nothing can be done to harm none-Jewish people in Palestine

A

Balfour Declaration

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27
Q

Support for the right of Jews to return to their ancient homeland and create a state

A

Zionism

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28
Q

Founder of the Zionist movement in the 19th century

A

Theodore Herlz

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29
Q

The area between the Jordan river and the Mediterranean sea and a large region to the east.

A

Transjordan

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30
Q

Mandate for self-rule in Palestine that was prepared by Britain. It created a workable government.

A

Palestine Mandate

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31
Q

When Hilter’s rise of power in Germany brought a huge wave of Jewish immigrants to Palestine the Arabs living there were alarmed and began to revolt. it forced Britain to withdraw it’s support for a Jewish homeland and took away many of their rights.

A

Palestine Revolt

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32
Q

Many European powers have long histories of trying to intervene in the Middle East, but Britain’s early interventions, according to the textbook, “…contain the roots of tension that still challenge the Middle East today.” Explain some of the reasons why.

A

Britain took away the rights of many people and pitted countries against each other. because it didn’t know the relationships between groups, when it put certain groups together it caused unrest and fighting

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33
Q

While the Middle East is a hotbed of religious conflict today, under the Ottoman Empire, there was at least basic co-existence, commerce, and tolerance for diverse neighborhoods. How did the “millet” system help foster this?

A

Each millet was it’s own religious group, headed by a religious leader, and each had limited legal power. the Millets controlled marriage, divorce, and baptism according to their own laws. Still, Muslims, Christians, and Jews all lived and worked in communities together.

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34
Q

What ended up happening to most of the lands of the former Ottoman Empire?

A

It lost its territory over time from 1807 until 1923 when it turned into Turkey. this happened after it failed to capture Vienna, exposing its military weakness

35
Q

Describe Iran under Reza Khan

A

Reza Khan tried to modernize and westernize it by changing its name from Persia to Iran, expanding the secular school system, starting the first university, making it so women didn’t have to wear veils anymore and were encouraged to work, and he built roads and railroads.

36
Q

The League of Nations had proposed that Britain and France “help” the Middle East get ready for self-government and democracy. To what degree were these goals met? What do you think about the “help” the Middle East received? Give specific incidents and examples to support your answer.

A

the goals were met somewhat but the “help” was very controlling. In Palestine, they were giving help but in the end, just ended up taking away Jews’ rights. In the Middle East, they didn’t know the relationships between groups of people, and when they tried to “help” they just caused conflict.

37
Q

Much of the public and governments of Iran and Iraq today have deep-seated anti-western sentiment. How might you explain some of that? Give specific incidents and examples to support your answer.

A

Whenever the west tried to “help” it was always very controlling. Before Persia became Iran, Great Britain started interfering with their manufacturing and encouraging them to trade with the rest of the world

38
Q

Explain some of the roots of conflict over lands in Palestine.

A

There was conflict between the Arabs and the Jews and Britain ended up completely taking away the Jews’ rights when they needed them the most along with not allowing them to immigrate in and turning Palestine into an Arab state.

39
Q

A political favoring of strong central authority which puts a country and often a race above individual rights

A

Fascism

40
Q

Leader of the nazis, dictator of Germany, started WWII & Holocaust, etc.

A

Hitler duh

41
Q

Ruler of Italy from 1922-1943. Maintained support through his passionate and inaccurate speeches

A

Benito Mussolini

42
Q

“The Night of Broken Glass” on november 9, 1938 the Nazis went through and destroyed Jewish businesses, wrecked homes, and injured and killed people. 1000 people were murdered

A

Kristallnacht

43
Q

The new government of Germany after WWI and before Hitler

A

Weimar Republic

44
Q

The private army of the early nazi party

A

SA/Storm Division

45
Q

Dictator of Spain from 1936 until his death in 1975. received help taking power from Hitler and Mussolini

A

Fancisco Franco

46
Q

Fascist party led by Hitler and Mussolini

A

Falange

47
Q

Painting by Picasso in response to the brutal destruction of the town of Guernica

A

Guernica

48
Q

Born in Georgia, played a big part in the October Revolution in Russia and became the central committee’s secretary general.

A

Joseph Stalin

49
Q

Russia’s effort to eliminate everyone suspected of being an enemy of the people. Some were shot, and others were sent to concentration camps. After a year more than a million were in concentration camps.

A

The Great Purge

50
Q

Where people were sent during The Great Purge

A

Russian Concentration Camps

51
Q

Explain at least three or four steps Mussolini and Hitler used to gain total power in Italy and Germany

A

For both their country was suffering from the effect of war so the people were aching for change. Mussolini and Hitler took advantage of this. Mussolini used a newspaper to attack socialists and “unpatriotic traitors.” He also said a dictator would help solve Italy’s problems. Both set up an enemy or “scapegoat” like this. Hitler used propaganda that appealed to unemployed workers, farmers, and young people.

52
Q

Explain at least two reasons you think Italians and Germans “accepted” (and, often, enthusiastically supported) an abandonment of democracy and rallied behind dictators.

A

1) They were facing economic hardship from WWI and wanted change 2) there was a scapegoat/public enemy set up to go against.

53
Q

Imagine you are a United Nations official, diplomat, or sociologist. What are some “warning signs” you might look for that could indicate a nation may be in danger of sliding into fascism and/or autocratic dictatorship today?

A

Some “warning signs” I might look for are a presidential candidate playing into citizens’ struggles at a time when the country is at a low and saying they will fix them along with the setup of an enemy: making a group of people seem like the “bad guys.” I’d be especially watchful in times of struggle.

54
Q

How successful was Stalin’s first “Five Year Plan”? Explain at least three outcomes of it.

A

Stalin declared it successful but it caused mass suffering. It was forced upon the population and anyone who openly disagreed was killed or sent to concentration camps. Agriculture never recovered. about five million Ukrainians died between 1932 and 1933 because of any and all food being taken to meet quotas. thousands of peasants were worked to death as well.

55
Q

How should historians remember Stalin? Why?

A

He should be remembered as very controlling and ruthless because he was willing to cause incredible suffering in order to get what he thought the country needed.

56
Q

Nations pledged to Respect China’s territory and independence

A

Nine Power Treaty

57
Q

Hitler demanded parts of Czechoslovakia and Britain and France eventually signed

A

Munich Pact

58
Q

In 1931 Japan seized Manchuria and when the League of Nations told Japan to give Manchuria back, Japan refused and resigned from the League of Nations

A

Seizure of Manchuria

59
Q

In 1937 after the capture of Nanking, Japanese soldiers went on a rampage and killed 100,000 people and raped 200,000 women

A

Rape of Nanking

60
Q

In October 1935 the Italian army invaded Ethiopia and in May 1936 Italy officially annexed Ethiopia

A

Invasion of Ethiopia

61
Q

Germany and Italy and eventually Japan and other German allies were called this

A

Axis Powers

62
Q

Alliance between Hitler and Mussolini - namesake of the Axis Powers

A

Rome - Berlin Axis

63
Q

“Political Union” of Germany and Austria after it was captured by Germany

A

Anshluss

64
Q

When a government forbids trade with another country

A

Embargo

65
Q

Treaty between Nazis and Communists

A

1939 Non-Aggression Treaty

66
Q

US created the first atomic weapons

A

Manhatten Project

67
Q

Prevented the US from supplying “arms, ammunition, or implements of war” to countries in conflict

A

Neutrality Acts of the 1930s

68
Q

German for “lightning war.” a military tactic that swiftly took over an enemy using highly coordinated attacks

A

Blitzkrieg

69
Q

US found out about Japanese plans to attack the midway islands and sat in wait. US demolished Japan’s 4 carriers and 300 aircraft

A

The battle of Midway

70
Q

Last german offensive on the western front in 1944 when they attacked American lines. Eventually, they had to surrender

A

Battle of the Bulge

71
Q

The day when soviet soldiers were advancing so Hitler killed himself and Germany surrendered

A

V-E Day

72
Q

The region of France unoccupied by Germany and ruled by a puppet government

A

“Vichy France”

73
Q

Chamberlain’s rival, soon to be Britain’s new prime minister. was determined to defend Britain against Hitler

A

Winston Churchill

74
Q

In summer and fall of 1940, German bomber planes flew over Britain and Britain countered with its own fighter planes

A

Battle of Britain

75
Q

The act for the US to lend, not sell, arms to Britain

A

Lend-Lease Act

76
Q

Statement of principles and war goals reached by President Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill in 1944

A

Atlantic Charter

77
Q

Act that made Japan part of the Axis Powers

A

Tripartic Pact

78
Q

On December 7 1941 300 Japanese bombers and fighter planes attacked Pearl Harbor Hawaii. 18 warships were destroyed and 3600 were killed or wounded.

A

Pearl Harbor

79
Q

Prime Minister of Japan starting in October 1941. Lead attack on Pearl Harbor.

A

Hideki Tojo

80
Q

Commander of the Afrika Korps, a tank-based army division that helped Italy take control of North Africa for the axis powers

A

Rommel

81
Q

A section of a city where a minority group lives, especially because of force, social, or legal pressure.

A

Ghetto

82
Q

In June 1942 Germany took the soviet union’s city of Stalingrad with firebombs but in winter Hitler had to surrender

A

Battle of Stalingrad

83
Q

The day of June 6, 1944, when allied forces invaded France to free it of Nazi rule and would eventually defeat the Nazis

A

D-Day

84
Q

Two Japanese cities that the US dropped an atomic bomb on. 120,000 people died and in total

A

Hiroshina/Nagsaks