Native Nations
Columbian Exchanges
The New World
Landscapes of Enslavement
The American Revolution
100

This was the first major cash crop native to North America

Corn

100

This was the major cash crop of Hispanola

Sugar

100
This was the first permanent English settlement, established in 1607

Jamestown

100

This was the major cash crop of Virginia

Tobacco

100

This term refers to one's freedom within a society, free from oppressive restrictions

Liberty

200

The supreme law of the land, the ultimate governing authority

Sovereignty

200

This geographical term refers to the lands of Europe, Asia, and Africa

The "Old World"

200

This geographical term refers to North, South, and Central America, as well as the islands of the Caribbean

The "New World"

200

This is a society in which slavery is the central, most economic part, and where slavery is a matter of public concern, there are laws governing its enforcement

A Slave Society

200

This is a set of laws to regulate trade, collect taxes, and ensure that all goods from the colonies make their way back to England

The Navigation System

300

This shell bead was the currency of Eastern Native Nations (Iroquois, Algonquian, Wampanoag), also used by Europeans

Wampum

300

This broad concept refers to the part of the world that links trade and migrations from the Old World and the New World

The Atlantic World

300

These are the two ways to generate wealth in a colony

Land and Trade

300

These are the three distinctions of "New World" slavery

Defined by Race, Inheritable, and for Life

300

The period between 1680 and 1763, when the King did not enforce the Navigation System, trusting that most revenue came to him, and when MOST colonists were not paying taxes directly to England

Salutary Neglect

400

The five Iroquois Nations or "The People of the Longhouse"

The Haudenosaunee

400

These are the two distinctions of "Old World" slavery

The Social Death and the Chattel Idea

400

This provides a legal justification for Europeans that they have the right to any non-Christian land or land inhabited by non-Christian people 

The Doctrine of Discovery

400

This is a set of laws that defines and protects slavery. They state who is enslaved, for how long, and the rights, or lack thereof, of enslaved people.

The Virginia Slave Codes

400

This was a conflict that caused England to go into severe debt, causing taxes to be imposed on the colonists 

The French and Indian War

500

The paramount chief of a multi-nation confederacy, also the father of Pocahontas

Powhatan

500

The Atlantic exchange in which people are transported to the New World for labor purposes

The Transatlantic Slave Trade

500

This is a formal agreement conducted by governments to transfer land, establish territorial boundaries, or form political alliances

Treaties

500

This 1739 event took place in South Carolina and is representative of the resistance to slavery in the colonies

The Stono Rebellion

500

This law, "enforced" by royal decree, prevented colonists from settling in Native land west of the Appalachian Mountains

The Proclamation of 1763