Enlightenment Thinkers
Atlantic Revolutions
Nationalism and State Building
Industrial Revolution
Industrial Technology and Innovation
Social Change and Reform
100

This thinker argued that people have natural rights including life, liberty, and property.

John Locke

100

This revolution was largely caused by colonial anger over taxation without representation.

American Revolution

100

This belief that people with a shared culture should form a nation helped unify Italy and Germany.

Nationalism

100

This country industrialized first due to its coal and iron resources.

Great Britain

100

This man helped to improve the steam engine, which helped accelerate early industrial mechanization.

James Watt

100

This new social class grew as a result of industrial capitalism and included business owners.

Bourgeoisie

200

This philosopher proposed the idea of separation of powers to prevent tyranny.

Montesquieu

200

This revolution became more radical and violent, leading to events like the Reign of Terror.

French Revolution

200

This 1688 event established a constitutional monarchy in England.

Glorious Revolution

200

These natural transportation routes were essential because they provided power and cheap transport.

Waterways

200

This process allowed for cheap and fast mass production of steel.

Bessemer Process

200

Members of this class often worked long hours in unsafe factory conditions.

Proletariat

300

This Enlightenment figure strongly supported free speech and religious tolerance.

Voltaire

300

This revolution was the only successful large-scale slave revolt in world history.

Haitian Revolution

300

Nationalist movements in this region sought independence from the Ottoman Empire.

Balkans

300

This system centralized production and increased division of labor.

Factory System

300

This type of engine led to the rise of automobiles and new transportation systems.

Internal Combustion Engine

300

This ideology, associated with Karl Marx, focused on class struggle between workers and owners.

Communism/Marxism

400

This thinker introduced the concept of popular sovereignty and the “general will.”

Jean-Jacques Rousseau

400

This document declared that political authority comes from the people, not the monarch.

Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen

400

This Latin American leader envisioned a unified South America in his “Letter from Jamaica.”

Simon Bolivar

400

This event modernized Japan by adopting Western technology and industrial practices.

Meiji Restoration

400

This discovery by Michael Faraday made electric generators possible.

Electromagnetic Induction

400

This 1848 meeting marked the beginning of the women’s suffrage movement in the U.S.

Seneca Falls Convention

500

His ideas directly influenced the Declaration of Independence and justified revolution against unjust governments.

John Locke

500

This leader organized enslaved people to revolt and helped lead Haiti to independence.

Toussaint Louverture

500

This conflict in New Zealand was caused largely by Māori resistance to British land confiscation.

New Zealand Wars

500

This Egyptian leader promoted industrialization through state-sponsored factories and cotton production.

Muhammad Ali

500

This technology greatly increased the rate at which societies and peoples could stay connected.

Telegraph

500

This Russian ruler abolished serfdom partly to modernize the economy and prevent unrest.

Alexander II

M
e
n
u