Native American Interactions
Colonial Conflicts
Democratic Landmarks
Colonies and Their Regions
Religion and Economics
100
This European community's settlers most categorically rejected North American Indian culture and worldviews even though they came to the colonies to escape religious persecution.
Puritans
100
This rebellion in Virginia resulted in the increase in African slavery and decrease in indentured servitude.
Bacon’s Rebellion
100
This was the first representative assembly in North America, created in Virginia (1619).
House of Burgesses
100
This colonial region was the most ethnically, religiously, and demographically diverse
Middle Atlantic colonies
100
During the era before the French and Indian War, this resulted in the colonies being left alone to develop their own economic and political institutions.
Salutary Neglect
200
French and Dutch colonial relationships with American Indians were based primarily on trade alliance for this good
Furs
200
The conflict between the Native Americans in Jamestown and the Powhatan Indians after they realized the English colonists were establishing a permanent settlement, not a trading post
Uprising of 1622
200
Although technically not a constitution, this was a landmark agreement among Pilgrims and non-Pilgrims for majority rule.
Mayflower Compact
200
This system allowed for colonists who could not pay for their own passage to the colonies to serve for 5-7 years before earning their "freedom dues"
Indentured servitude
200
Considered the leader of the "First Great Awakening" and delivered his famous "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God" sermon to colonists in Enfield, Connecticut in 1741.
Johnathan Edwards
300
The name of the Native American who helped the Pilgrims learn how to fish and plant corn after their arrival and establishment of the Plymouth colony.
Squanto
300
This was the first major slave rebellion in the South that resulted in further restrictions on slaves
Stono Rebellion
300
This 1736 court case set a trend for more freedom of the press in the colonies.
John Peter Zenger Trial
300
The diversified economy of this New England region relied primarily on these exports (name at least 2)
fishing, lumber, shipbuilding, rum
300
This individual openly promoted the idea of an individual personal relationship with God without the guidance of church leaders, and was later expelled from the Massachusetts Bay colony
Anne Hutchinson
400
This American Indian confederation, reaching from the St. Lawrence Valley to the eastern Great Lakes in the present day area of New York, who created an important alliance with the British American colonists
The Iroquois
400
An armed conflict that took place between 1636 and 1638 in New England between the a Native American tribe and an alliance of the English colonists of the Massachusetts Bay and Plymouth colonies.
Pequot War
400
This movement was influenced by the 18th-century European movement and applied scientific reasoning to politics, science, and religion.
American Enlightenment
400
The primary staple crops produced in the middle colonies included
Wheat, oats, barley (grains)
400
These were passed by Parliament 1651,1660 & 1663 and enforced mercantilism and restricted colonial trade on enumerated goods, but were rarely enforced until after the French and Indian War
Navigation Acts
500
This actual name of King Phillip, who launched a nearly rebellion against the British colonies in the New England area in 1676.
Metacom
500
An armed conflict between American Indian inhabitants of present-day New England and English colonists and their Indian allies in 1675–78.
King Phillip's War
500
This philosopher's ideas included social contract and liberalism and influenced later colonial justifications for separated from Great Britain.
John Locke
500
This organization was created by King James to group a region in the colonies into one colony. It was governed by Edmund Andros was overthrown by New Englanders in 1689 after the Glorious Revolution in England.
Dominion of New England
500
Name at least one major effect of the Great Awakening.
Effects: - growth of modern Protestant churches such as Baptists, Methodists - decline of Puritans, Quakers, Anglican churches - a belief that all people could have a relationship with God - increase/beginnings of abolition - more schools/universities created
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