Democracy, Republics & Power
Faith, Schism & Reformation
Empires, Collapse & Continuity
Renaissance to Revolution
Exploration, Exchange & Global Change
100

This Greek polis developed direct democracy, but excluded women, enslaved people, and foreigners from political participation.

Athens

100

This document written by Martin Luther criticized indulgences and helped spark the Protestant Reformation.

95 Theses 

100

This empire preserved Roman law and traditions for nearly 1,000 years after the fall of the Western Roman Empire.

the Byzantine Empire

100

This intellectual movement emphasized human potential and achievement during the Renaissance.

Humanism

100

These three motivations are commonly known as the “3 Gs” of exploration.

God, Gold, & Glory

200

The office of tribune was created in Rome primarily to protect the interests of this social class.


Plebeians

200

The Great Schism of 1054 permanently divided Christianity into these two branches.

Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic

200

One major direct cause for the fall of the Western Roman Empire was repeated invasions by these groups.

Barbarians

200

This Renaissance technique created the illusion of depth and realism in artwork (made art look 3D)


perspective 

200

This global transfer of crops, animals, diseases, and ideas followed European contact with the Americas.


The Columbian Exchange

300

Unlike Athenian democracy, the Roman Republic relied primarily on this system of governance.

Representative government

300

This Roman emperor legalized Christianity through the Edict of Milan.


Constantine

300

The Punic Wars were fought between Rome and this North African power.

Carthage

300

Copernicus challenged traditional Church teachings by proposing this theory.

Heliocentric Theory

300

This brutal trans-Atlantic journey forcibly transported millions of enslaved Africans to the Americas.


The Middle Passage

400

This Roman policy used free grain and entertainment to reduce unrest among the urban poor.


"Bread and Circuses"

400

This Catholic meeting reaffirmed Church doctrine while reforming some abuses during the Counter Reformation.


The Council of Trent
400

Justinian’s legal achievement organized centuries of Roman law into this famous code.

The Code of Justinian 

400

This invention dramatically increased the spread of Reformation ideas and literacy across Europe.

Printing Press

400

This man discovered that the Americas were separate from Asia and as a result the Americas were named after him. 

Amerigo Vespuci

500

This political transition marked the end of the Roman Republic after years of civil war and culminated in the rule of Augustus.

Republic to Empire

500

Martin Luther’s doctrine that salvation could be achieved through “faith alone” directly challenged this Catholic belief.

The importance of good works and Church sacraments for salvation

500

This Medieval system exchanged land for loyalty and military service.

Feudalism

500

This broader historical movement emphasized observation, experimentation, and the scientific method over tradition.

The Scientific Revolution

500

This economic theory argued that colonies existed to enrich the mother country through trade and resource extraction.

Mercantalism