Industrial Technology
Second Industrial Revolution
Women’s Rights & Enlightenment
Economic Systems & Ideas
Revolutions & Nationalism
100

This invention provided reliable power for factories and reduced reliance on animal labor.

Steam engine power source 

100

This era roughly spanned from 1870–1900.

Second Industrial Revolution

100

‘Liberty, Equality, Fraternity’ was a slogan of this revolution.

French Revolution

100

An economic system where prices are set by supply and demand.


Free Market, laissez-faire, capitalism

100

He was the leader of the Haitian Revolution.

Toussaint L’Ouverture

200

This invention allowed near‑instant communication over long distances.

The Telegraph, Radio

200

This material replaced iron because it was stronger and more flexible.

Steel 

200

She wrote A Vindication of the Rights of Woman.

Mary Wollstonecraft 

200

This system calls for collective ownership of the means of production and has a central government which owns and controls all resources.

Communism

200

Known as ‘The Liberator,’ he led independence movements in Latin America.

Simón Bolívar

300

These transformed economies by connecting markets and encouraging national trade.

Railroads connect markets

300

This power source enabled mass production and modern factories.

Electricity 

300

This document established equality during the French Revolution.

Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen

300
this economic system was argued by Karl Marx in which the citizens all share resources and is controlled by the citizens

Socialism

300

Nationalist movements that broke away from Ottoman and Austro‑Hungarian rule.

Balkan Nationalism

400

This social process marked the movement of people from rural areas to cities 

Urbanization 

400

These industries produced fertilizers, dyes, and explosives.

Chemical industries 

400

She was executed, showing limits of revolutionary equality for women.

Olympe de Gouges 

400

Workers formed these to demand better wages and safer conditions.

Labor Unions 

400

The ‘Iron Chancellor’ who unified Germany.

Otto von Eduard von Leopold von Bismarck 

500

Coal, iron, and timber mattered because they enabled this major change.

The beginning of the industrial revolution 

500

This made railroads, skyscrapers, and bridges possible.

Steel enabled structures 

500

This U.S. convention launched the formal women’s rights movement.

The Seneca falls convention 

500

An economic system where colonies supply raw materials and buy finished goods.

Colonial economy/mercantilism

500

Peaceful reform movement in the Philippines led by José Rizal.

Propaganda movement

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