Term 1 Test Flashcards

(24 cards)

1
Q

Stono Rebellion

A

the largest slave rebellion is the colonial period happened in South Carolina, where over 60% of the population were Africans enslaved in rice, indigo, or cotton plantations. The out numbered whites’ fear of copy car revolts led to harsh slave codes restricting slaves ability to gather, learn to read and write, or to leave plantations.

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2
Q

Old Deluder Act

A

Puritans valued literacy so individuals could access God’s word directly. In addition confounding Harvard for the training of new ministers, they passed this law requiring any Massachusetts township with more than 50 families to provide public schooling

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3
Q

Puritan Theocracy

A

Puritans were a persecuted minority in England who became a persecuting majority in Massachusetts. Only male church members could vote, and dissenters like Roger Williams and Anne hutchinson were forced to leave.

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4
Q

Samuel de Champlain

A

Founder of Quebec on the St. Lawrence River. French fur traders (courier de bois) and Jesuit priests partnered with Great Lakes tribes like the Algonquin and Huron, rather than enslaving or pushing them off their land.

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5
Q

Rise of Hereditary chattel slavery

A

The first Africans arrive in Jamestown in 1619 and are treated similarly to indentured servants. The profitability of tobacco, longer life spans, fewer indentured servants, and lower prices for slaves to lead to the gradually fortifying of slavery through laws that defined Africans as property.

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6
Q

Sir Walter Raleigh

A

Privateer who named Virginia after Queen Elizabeth and financed the unsuccessful Roanoke colony

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7
Q

The Colombian Exchange

A

The diffusion of plants, animals, and diseases between the New World and Old World (1) Old world diseases decimate Native American populations making conquest easier. (2) Corn and Potatoes from the New Workd cause a population boom in Europe which leads to more immigration to the New World

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8
Q

Middle Passage

A

Refers to the forced emigration of Africans to America. It was the second leg of a triangular trade network: New England rum sold to Africa for enslaved persons, sold to the Caribbean for molasses, which was sold back to New England

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9
Q

James Oglethorpe

A

Founder of Georgia. Originally intended as a colony for debtors to work off debts by producing silk and wine for the mother country, Georgia quickly became a slave-based plantation society

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10
Q

King Philip’s War

A

Wampanoag chief Metacom led a coalition of tribes in a last ditch attempt to stop puritan encroachment on their lands. The bloodiest war per capita in American history killed more than 20% of the New England colonists and more Natives

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11
Q

Puritan Work Ethic

A

As Calvinists who believed God had predestined everyone for salvation or damnation, Puritans believed pious living and material prosperity despite New England’s rocky soil were signs that they were the “elect” or “visible saints”

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12
Q

The Mayflower Compact

A

Governing document signed by all separatist pilgrim “saints” as well as “strangers” who settled Plymouth in Cape Cod, Massachusetts. Governed by William Bradford, the early Pilgrims were helped by the disease-weakened Wampanoag tribe.

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13
Q

Bacon’s Rebellion

A

Nathaniel Bacon leads backcountry farmers who have less desirable land and more risk of Indian attack in a revolt against the eastern seaboard elite planters. Afterwards, planters, shift from indentured servants to African enslaved persons.

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14
Q

Jamestown’s early struggles

A

The location in a malarial swamp, focus on treasure-seeking, and being surrounded by the Powhatan Confederacy led to the “starving time” winter of 1609

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15
Q

Bartolomé De Las Casas

A

Spanish Dominican Friar who opposed his country’s harsh treatment of Native Americans in his book “A Short Account of the Destruction of the Indies

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16
Q

Spanish Conquistadors

A

Led expeditions to explore and plunder the American interior. Encomienda systems gives them responsibility for converting and supporting all Native Americans in a certain area in exchange for the right to tax them

17
Q

Benign or Salutary Neglect

A

before the French and Indian war, British colonies were used to autonomy and no interference from Britain. The Mercantile navigation acts restored colonial trade in manufacturing, but were only loosely enforced.

18
Q

no “established” church

A

colonies with the most religious freedom include number one, Rhode Island, which was founded by Roger Williams, who believed forced religion stinks in God‘s nostrils number two Pennsylvania, which was founded by quicker, William Penn and number three Maryland, which was founded by the Catholic Lord Baltimore

19
Q

Praying Towns

A

Communities founded by Puritan John Elliott to convert Native Americans. Overall, the British were less interested in converting natives than the French or Spanish.

20
Q

Massachusetts Bay Colony

A

settled by middle class, English Puritan, families in tight knit townships with subsistence farms surrounding the church, declared by Governor John Winthrop to be a city upon a hill example to the Anglican church

21
Q

House of Burgesses

A

The first elected representative assembly in the British colonies, established in Jamestown in 1619

22
Q

Pueblo Revolt

A

Spanish Franciscan monks established missions in New Mexico, forcing the Native Americans to convert and abandon all earlier beliefs. led by Popé the Pablo Indian successfully pushed the Spanish out for decade later Spanish were more flexible and willing to coexist with Native Americans

23
Q

Mercantilism

A

an economic theory that defined wealth by amount of gold reserves. European powers establish colonies to boost their access to raw materials, (whether gold, furs, or tobacco) and limit imports from other countries.

24
Q

Chesapeake Bay cash crop

A

after John Ralph Pioneers, the growing of labor-intensive, tobacco, migration to the Chesapeake Bay, a.k.a. Virginia and Maryland, increases as the head system grants wealthy planters 50 acres for each indentured servant they pay to bring over