Industrial Revolution
Innovation, Inventions & Inventors
WWI: Causes & Course
WWI: Consequences
Russian Revolution
100

The country where the Industrial Revolution began.

Great Britain

100

Inventor of the telegraph.

Samuel Morse

100

The "spark" that ignited WWI. (short-term cause)

Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand

100

Treaty that officially ended WWI.

Treaty of Versailles

100

Russia's absolute ruler who ignored reformers, suppressed opposition, and led the country into catastrophic WWI losses.

Tsar Nicholas II

200

This agricultural shift replaced open fields with large, privately-owned farms — and pushed peasants off the land.

The Enclosure Movement

200

Eli Whitney's 1793 invention that massively boosted the raw cotton supply for British mills.

The cotton gin

200

The type of warfare that defined the Western Front: muddy _________, barbed wire, poison gas, and almost no movement.

Trench Warfare

200

New international organization created for ensuring lasting peace following WWI. Member countries promised to defend each other against aggressors.

League of Nations

200

Leader of the Bolsheviks.

Vladimir Lenin

300

This 1833 law limited children's hours in factories and required inspections — but did NOT ban child labor entirely.

The Factory Act

300

Lord 'Turnip' Townshend's innovation: planting four different crops in rotation to keep soil productive year-round.

Four-crop rotation

300

The four underlying causes of WWI, spelled out by this acronym.

M.A.I.N. (Militarism, Alliances, Imperialism, Nationalism)

300

The exact symbolic moment Germany signed the armistice — 11th hour, 11th day, 11th month.

November 11, 1918 (Armistice Day)

300

The slogan of the Bolshevik Revolution.

Peace, Land, Bread

400

The term for the process by which displaced peasants became wage-dependent factory workers.

Proletarianization

400

James Hargreaves' 1764 invention that let one spinner operate multiple spindles at once.

The spinning jenny

400

Germany's two-front war strategy: knock out France in 6 weeks, then turn east to fight Russia.

The Schlieffen Plan

400

The "War Guilt Clause" assigned blame to this nation.  

Germany

400

Event that triggered the 1905 Revolution.

Bloody Sunday

500

England's five advantages that sparked industrialization: (List at least 2)

1) coal/iron, 2) navigable rivers, 3) stable government, 4) banking system, and 5) A colonial empire (overseas markets and raw materials)

500

The home-based production system replaced by the factory — workers spun and wove in their own homes.

The cottage industry (putting-out system)

500

The 1916 battle with nearly 1 million casualties and no real gain — the longest battle of the entire war.

The Battle of Verdun

500

The 1915 passenger ship sunk by a German U-boat, killing nearly 1,200 and turning American opinion against Germany.

The Lusitania


500

The 1918 treaty that took Finland, the Baltic states, Poland, and Ukraine from Russia — Lenin's price for peace.

Treaty of Brest-Litovsk

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