Important Documents
Vocabulary Words
The Compromises
Did We Learn This?
People
100

This document established that the power of the monarchy was not absolute.

the Magna Carta

100

This group of 55 delegates met at the Philadelphia Convention with the windows closed.

the Framers

100

In the Senate, states would be represented equally. In the House, the representation for each state would be based on population.

the Great Compromise

100

On May 25th, 1787, this state did not attend the Philadelphia Convention.

Rhode Island
100

He was unanimously selected as the president of the Philadelphia Convention.

George Washington

200
This "statement of freedom," is the reason we celebrate the 4th of July. The document granted us our freedom from Great Britain.

the Declaration of Independence.

200

It states that no government is all-powerful and can only do those things that the people have given it power to do.

Limited Government

200

Northern States vs Southern States ... Technically, the South won.

the Three-Fifths Compromise

200

They focused on the weaknesses of the Articles of Confederation and supported ratification of the Constitution.

Federalists

200

French nobleman who was educated in law.
In 1748, he published his greatest work entitled, The Spirit of the Laws.

Charles Montesquieu

300

This document challenged the divine right theory; even monarchs were expected to obey the law of the land.

Petition of Right

300

A method of distributing power where power is divided among the national, or central, government, and regional governments, such as states and cities.

Federalism

300

This compromise was over taxation and representation.

the Three-Fifths Compromise

300

The name of the enslaved women who birthed children from a well known president.

Sally Hemings

300

He used Locke’s ideology as a foundation for The Declaration of Independence.

Thomas Jefferson

400

This document established a bicameral legislative branch, a president in the executive branch, and gave Congress the power to tax.

the Constitution

400

A government in which the power is held by a small, often self-appointed elite. ALL dictatorships are authoritarian

Oligarchy

400

Congress was forbidden the power to tax the export of goods from any state, and Congress would not be
able to interfere with the slave trade for a period of at least twenty years.

Commerce Compromise

400

This Article of the Constitution created the Judicial Branch

Article III

400

He believed that direct democracy, with the citizens being the sovereign, was the best form of government.

Jean-Jacques Rousseau

500

This document up a simple government structure with a unicameral legislative branch. Congress did not have the power to tax and had to rely on asking the states to borrow funds.

the Articles of Confederation

500

This form of government has sovereign power held by those who are eligible to vote, while political power is exercised by the representatives chosen by the citizens

Republic

500

This compromise is also known as the Connecticut Compromise.

the Great Compromise

500

A book title and a mythological sea creature that devoured entire ships and likened the leviathan to government – a powerful state created to
impose order.

Leviathan

500

He believed, if the sovereign violated rights, the social contract was broken, and the people had the
right to revolt and establish a new government.

John Locke

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