Early Colonialism
European Colonization
Servitude
Conflicts with Am. Indians
Colonial Societies
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FINAL JEOPARDY

Bacon's rebellion was partly caused by the neglectful actions of this governor of Virginia.

Governor William Berkeley

100

An influential Virginian leader. In 1611, he introduced his fellow farmers to tobacco cultivation, which provided the economic basis for their colony’s survival. Married Pocahontas.

Who is John Rolfe?

100

The colonists from this European nation were often single men who built strong trade relationships with Native Americans through intermarriage.

Who are the French

100

A failed 1676 rebellion in Jamestown that included servants and slaves against the colony's aristocracy. 

What is Bacon's Rebellion?

100

The name for an American Indian tribe neighboring Jamestown. Also the common name for its chief in the 1610s, who was father to Pocahontas and brother to Opechancanough.

Who are/was Powhatan?

100

The theory that a government should control economic pursuits to further a nation’s national power, especially in the acquisition of silver and gold.

What is mercantilism?

200

These religious leaders wished to reform the Church of England to be more in line with their Calvinist ideology, and rejected the Roman Catholic holdovers in the Anglican Church.

Who are Puritans.

200

An umbrella term for various Christian sects that broke away from the Roman Catholic Church following the start of the Reformation in 1517. Constitutes one of three major branches of Christianity, alongside Catholicism and the Eastern Orthodox faith.

What is Protestantism?

200

The leg of Triangular Trade which transported Africans across the Atlantic Ocean to the New World. Approximately 20 percent of enslaved Africans died before reaching the New World due to poor conditions, dehydration, and disease.

What is the Middle Passage?

200

A Protestant theologian in during the 1630s who wanted relationships with Natives and founded Rhode Island.

Who is Roger Williams?

200

An English law that called for the free worship of most Protestants, not only Puritans. Forced on Massachusetts in 1691 after it was made a royal colony, revoking its earlier Puritan-centric charter.

What is the Toleration Act of 1689?

300

The first written form of government in the modern-day United States. Drafted by the Pilgrims, it was an agreement to establish a secular body that would administer the leadership of the Plymouth colony.

What is the Mayflower Compact?

300

A document which Parliament used to grant exclusive rights and privileges. Required for the legal sanction of a formal colony.

What is a charter?

300

Set of legislation in several Colonies that would ensure the enslavement of people in bondage. Example: In 1661, Virginia passed a law that made children inherit the status of slave from their mother.

What are the Slave laws?

300

Coalition of colonies (Plymouth, Massachusetts Bay, New Haven, & Connecticut) that organized in 1643 for mutual protection against Native Americans.

What is the New England Confederation? 

300

A Protestant religious movement that took place across the Thirteen Colonies during the 1730s and 1740s. It indirectly helped spur religious tolerance and led to the founding of many universities.

What is the Great Awakening?

400

 The first Puritans to colonize the New World. Settled at Plymouth. Members of a minority group of Puritans known as separatists.

What are Pilgrims?

400

A 1680 revolt against Spanish settlers in the modern-day American Southwest. Led by a Pueblo man named Popé, it forced the Spanish to abandon Santa Fe. A rare, decisive American Indian victory against European colonization.

What is the Pueblo Revolt?

400

A transatlantic trade network that included raw materials, manufactured goods, and slavery.

What is the Triangular Trade?

400

Also known as Metacom’s War, (1675–1678) this was an ongoing battle between English colonists and the American Indian inhabitants of New England. The English victory expanded their access to land that was previously inhabited by the natives.

What is King Philip's War?

400

A preacher credited for sparking the (First) Great Awakening. His sermons encouraged parishioners to repent of their sins and obey God’s word in order to earn mercy. He delivered his most famous sermon, “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God,” in 1741.

Who is Jonathan Edwards?

500

A colony in which the crown allotted land and governmental command to one person. Maryland under Lord Baltimore is an example of it.

What is a proprietary colony?

500

The Dutch capital of their New Netherland colony noted for its tolerance of religious practices.

What is New Amsterdam?

500

 The first elected legislative assembly in the New World. Established in 1619. It served as a political model for subsequent English colonies.

What is the House of Burgesses?

500

American Indian woman who brokered peace between her tribe and the early settlers at Jamestown, such as John Smith. Married John Rolfe in 1614.

Who is Pocahontas?

500

A traveling New Light preacher during the Great Awakening. Known for his sermons on the “fire and brimstone” eternity that all sinners would face if they did not publicly confess their sins. Undermined the power and prestige of Old Light ministers by proclaiming that ordinary people could understand Christian doctrine without the clergy’s guidance.

Who is George Whitefield?

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