Political
Innovation
Culture/effects on people
Economy
Social
100

A feeling of intense loyalty to others who share one's language and culture.

Nationalism

100

 Engine powered by coal, helped production in factories and also transportation on the water.

Steam Engine.

100

areas of cities where low-income families were forced to live, where industrial by-products such as polluted water supplies and open sewers were common.

Slums

100

key factor in U.S. success. Political upheaval and widespread poverty brought a large number of immigrants to the United States.

Human Capital

100

Enslaved Africans began the rebellion by killing their masters and burning their homes. They were soon joined by Maroons.

Haiti Revolution

200

It formally abolished feudalism, established a constitutional monarchy, reorganized its military, and it created a new school system that expanded educational opportunities.

Meiji Restoration

200

Effects of crop rotation and seed drills.    




More available food, which meant healthier people to working factories to run the economy.

200

Reform in China where this 2,500 year of tradition was abandoned as it was being exploited by getting favors from the wealthy and drop of revenues due to bribes. 


Reform of Civil Service System.

200

Group of people formed as the result of replaceable mechanical parts in factories, described as replaceable and low-skilled workers.



Working class. 

200

workers, those held by office workers, considered the middle class.

White-collar workers.

300

the abolition of the outdated civil service exam, the elimination of corruption, and the establishment of Western-style industrial, commercial, and medical systems.

Hundred Days of Reform

300

Machines that reduced the time needed to spin yarn and weave cloth.


Spinning Jenny and water frame.

300

This cultural development formed during the working middle class in Great Britain due to low living standards. 


Consumerism.

300

The idea that governments should reduce their intervention in economic decisions.

Laissez-faire

300

What was the social structure on the Latin America mainland.

Peninsulares, Creoles, Mestizos, and Mulattoes. 

400

a period during the French Revolution, in which the government executed thousands of opponents of the revolution, including the king and queen.

The Reign of Terror

400

 The harnessing of this source of power led to street lighting and electric street trains in the 1890s.


Electricity.

400

What was the code of conduct for the samurai called?

The Bushido.

400

Industrial advantages that drove Britain's economy.

(name two)

- Mineral resources,  resources from colonies 

- Strong Navy fleets

- Higher population from higher corp production

- Protection of private property

400

What contributed to higher populations and more workers in the factories to run the economy?

Better healthcare and food production.

500

It updated the legal system in the Ottoman Empire, declared equality for all men in education, and justice regardless of religion or ethnicity.

Hatt-i Humayun

500

Construction of this railroad connected the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. Once completed, it supported and contributed to the development of the U.S. as an industrial nation. 



Transcontinental railroad. 

500

The rise of socialism, liberalism, and other new ideas led to revolutions, often leading towards two goals. 


Independence from imperial powers and constitutional representation.

500

He campaigned legal reforms to allow labor unions, limit child labor, and ensure safe working conditions in factories.

John Stuart Mill

500

He thought that people had natural rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of property.

John Locke