Native American Interactions
Colonial Conflicts
Democratic Landmarks
Colonies and Their Regions
Religion and Economics
100
This system used by the Spanish granted natives and land to individual Spaniards
Encomienda
100
This rebellion in Virginia resulted in the increase in black slavery and decrease in indentured servitude.
Bacon's Rebellion
100
This was the first representative assembly in North America, created in Virginia (1619).
House of Burgesses
100
He claimed that the Puritans should, “build a city upon a hill,” and became governor of Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1630.
John Winthrop
100
These members of the Society of Friends believed in non-violence and far treatment of natives
Quakers
200
French and Dutch colonial relationships with American Indians were based primarily on trade alliance for this good
Furs
200
This was the first major slave rebellion in the South that resulted in further restrictions on slaves
Stono Rebellion
200
This type of meeting became a “seed of democracy” in early New England.
Town Hall Meetings
200
This colonial region was the most ethnically, religiously, and demographically diverse (North, Middle or South)
Middle
200
This church was the dominant church in the Southern colonies (and New York).
Anglican Church/Church of England
300
The exchange/transfer of plants, animals and diseases between the New and Old Worlds
Columbian Exchange
300
An organization formed by the New England colonies in 1643, with the intention of providing collective security from attack the by the surrounding Native American tribes.
New England Confederation
300
The first English settlement in North America which was established by Sir Walter Raleigh in 1585 but then vanished without a trace.
Roanoke
300
The New England region relied primarily on these types of economies (name 2)
fishing, shipbuilding, and commerce
300
A concept which illustrated that the colonies served only to provide raw materials and as a market of consumers to the Mother Country.
Mercantilism
400
This conflict resulted in the lasting defeat of New England's Indians and the beheading of Wampanoag Chief Metacom
King Philip's War
400
An event which occurred in modern-day Santa Fe, New Mexico on August 10, 1680.
Pueblo Revolt
400
Although technically not a constitution, this was a landmark agreement among Pilgrims and non-Pilgrims for majority rule.
Mayflower Compact
400
The primary cash crop in Virginia
Tobacco
400
Author of "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God" and influential Reverend from Massachusetts during the Great Awakening
Jonathan Edwards
500
This American Indian confederation, reaching from the St. Lawrence Valley to the Eastern Great Lakes, successfully resisted both native and colonial challenges during the 18th century
Iroquois
500
This colony settled a disagreement about religion by adopting an Act of Toleration allowing religious freedom to all Christians
Maryland
500
An event which occurred in 1688 when Parliament overthrew King James II, replacing him with this daughter Mary and her husband, William III of Orange.
Glorious Revolution
500
This organization led by Edmund Andros was overthrown by New Englanders in 1689, an event known as the “1st American Revolution.”
Dominion of New England
500
This individual openly promoted the idea of an individual personal relationship with God without the guidance of church leaders, and was later expelled from the Massachusetts Bay colony
Anne Hutchinson