Pot Pourri
Revolution
The Enlightenment (Age of Reason)
Industrial & Agricultural Revolution
Revolution
100
British industrial success depended on cotton grown in other places for this reason.
What is the wrong climate?
100
This model of the known universe posited that the Earth revolved around the sun, not the other way around as the Church insisted; it was first proclaimed by Copernicus and later proven by Galileo.
What is a heliocentric model?
100
Inalienable rights, including life, liberty, and property (or pursuit of happiness), that John Locke (and Thomas Jefferson) advocated for.
What are natural rights?
100
New practices and technologies that contributed to the Industrial Revolution.
What are textiles (mechanized spinning of cotton), steam power (steam engines for trains and ships), iron production (coke in lieu of charcoal), railroads, assembly lines, etc.?
100
The Three Estates that existed in France prior to its 1789 revolution.
What are the First (clergy), Second (nobility), and Third (everyone else) Estates?
200
The first fossil fuel that supported the development of industry in Britain and later Europe?
What is coal?
200
This powerful medieval church resisted many of the advances and claims of the Scientific Revolution, often charging scientists and others with heresy; some were subjected to inquisition, others to house arrest; still others were executed.
What is the Catholic Church?
200
Ideas (incorporated into our Constitution) advocated by Baron de Montesquieu that would limit the power of government.
What are the "separation of powers" (i.e. 3 branches) and "checks and balances"?
200
New farming practices and technologies that contributed to the Agricultural Revolution of the 18th and 19th centuries.
What are crop rotation, the iron plow (with interchangeable parts), the cotton gin, mechanized reapers and harvesters, grain elevators, and, ultimately, steam-powered tractors, etc.
200
The only French estate (or class) to pay taxes.
What is the Third Estate?
300
These despots (or monarchs) were intolerant of religious difference (encouraging and legalizing religious persecution) and cared not a whit for the rights of those under their rule. They tended to rule with an "iron fist."
What are absolute despots (or monarchs)?
300
This method which consists of systematic observation, measurement, and experiment, and the formulation, testing, and modification of hypotheses was developed by Bacon, Descartes, and Newton (among others) during the Scientific Revolution.
What is the scientific method?
300
The First Amendment freedom that Voltaire argued in favor of.
What is free speech?
300
Effect of Industrial Revolution on European populations.
What is urbanization (moving to the city for factory jobs)?
300
A French legislative body called by Louis XVI that included all three French Estates. It was not interested in an overhaul of the French social, economic, and political systems.
What is the Estates General?
400
These despots (or monarchs) were, in general, tolerant of religious difference; most sought economic and educational reforms; some went so far as to abolish serfdom. They tended to rule as benevolent (well-meaning) dictators.
What are enlightened despots (or monarchs)?
400
He developed calculus to mathematically explain the laws of motion and the force of gravity.
Who is Sir Isaac Newton?
400
Enlightenment ideas and ideals inspired these revolutions.
What are the American, French, Haitian, and Latin American, revolutions?
400
Effect of Agricultural Revolution on European populations.
What are a population boom (more food = more babies), the disappearance of small farms, and a loss of farming jobs (people move to cities)?
400
The structure that resulted from the "Oath of the Tennis Court" at the meeting of the third estate.
What is the National Assembly?
500
A series of wars principally fought in Central Europe, involving most of the countries of Europe. Initially, religion was a motivation for war as Protestant and Catholic states fought even though many of them were or had been members of the Holy Roman Empire, which split apart as a consequence.
What is the Thirty Years' War?
500
He relied on the data collected by Tycho Brahe to develop the laws of planetary motion.
Who is Johannes Kepler?
500
This French philosophe argued that the power of government comes from the consent of the governed (popular sovereignty) based on a social contract between people and governments.
Who is Jean Jacques Rousseau?
500
Reasons some countries "industrialized" before others.
What are natural resources (namely iron and coal), capital investment (money and capital goods), education (science and engineering), etc.?
500
The French radical Maximilien Robespierre ordered thousands of executions (mostly by guillotine) literally causing the streets to run red with blood during this "reign." Ironically, he too was executed by guillotine.
What is the Reign of Terror?
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