Enlightenment Thought
Enlightenment Government & Power
Enlightenment Monarchs/Despots
Enlightenment Thinkers
Enlightenment Scientists
100

This idea says governments get their power from the agreement of the people they govern.

Social Contract

100

A system where a king or queen shares power with a constitution and elected representatives.

Constitutional Monarch

100

This French Enlightenment monarch built and ruled from the lavish Palace of Versailles.
 

Louis XIV

100

This philosopher argued for natural rights of life, liberty, and property.
 

John Locke

100

This scientist proposed the heliocentric theory placing the sun at the center of the solar system.

Nicolaus Copernicus

200

A ruler who holds absolute power, often ruling harshly without limits or checks. But these individuals pushed for reforms
 

Enlightenment Despot

200

The belief that a monarch’s authority to rule comes directly from God.
 

Divine Right

200

This Russian Enlightenment ruler expanded the Winter Palace and promoted arts and education.

Catherine the Great

200

This Enlightenment thinker believed in separation of powers in government.
 

Montesquieu

200

This English scientist developed the laws of motion and universal gravitation.
 

Isaac Newton

300

This term refers to the ultimate authority of a state to govern itself without outside interference.
 

Sovereignty

300

Louis XIV of France is one of the most famous examples of this form of centralized royal power.
 

Absolutism

300

Although she ruled before the Enlightenment, Elizabeth I’s reign strengthened this country, which later became a center of Enlightenment thinkers like John Locke.
 

England

300

Clue: This French thinker promoted freedom of speech and religious tolerance.
 

Voltaire

300

This scientist used the scientific method to promote experimentation and observation.
 

Francis Bacon

400

Enlightenment thinkers believed these universal principles of right and wrong could be discovered through reason.
 

Natural Laws

400

Thomas Hobbes and John Locke debated this concept as the foundation of legitimate government authority.
 

Social Contract

400

This massive palace complex in France became a symbol of royal absolutism and Enlightenment.
 

Palace of Versailles

400

This philosophy emphasized reason, individual rights, and the questioning of traditional authority.

Enlightenment philosophy

400

This English scientist discovered that blood circulates throughout the body, challenging earlier medical beliefs.

William Harvey

500

A system of government in which a monarch holds total power over the state.

Absolutism

500

This major intellectual movement of the 1500s–1700s used observation and experimentation to challenge traditional beliefs about science and nature.

Scientific Revolution

500

This ruler is known as an enlightened despot for modernizing Prussia’s military, education, and legal system.

Frederick the Great

500

Elizabeth I’s moderate religious policies reflected early ideas of this Enlightenment value promoting acceptance of different beliefs.
 

Religious Tolerance

500

As an Enlightenment figure, Franklin strongly supported this idea that knowledge should be gained through observation and experimentation.

Scientific Method

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