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⭐ Maize (Corn) & Potato
Staple American crops spread after 1492 that increased global population growth (Columbian Exchange)
Rice & Indigo
Carolina cash crops (late 1600s) grown on plantations using enslaved African labor
⭐ Tobacco
First major Chesapeake cash crop (early 1600s) that drove land expansion and labor demand
⭐ Smallpox, Typhus & Epidemics
Old World diseases introduced after 1492 that killed over 90% of Native Americans
⭐ Columbian Exchange (1492–)
Transfer of people, crops, animals, and diseases between the Old and New Worlds
⭐ Indentured Servants
Europeans who worked 4–7 years for passage to the colonies (1600s)
⭐ Chattel Slavery & Atlantic Slave Trade
System of permanent, hereditary enslavement of Africans expanded after 1670
⭐ Middle Passage
Deadly Atlantic voyage enslaved Africans endured with high mortality
⭐ Encomienda System
Spanish labor system granting colonists Native labor in exchange for protection and conversion (1500s)
⭐ Headright System
Virginia land-grant system encouraging immigration and labor importation
⭐ Chesapeake
Virginia and Maryland region based on tobacco and plantation slavery
⭐ South Atlantic System / West Indies
Caribbean plantation economy centered on sugar and slavery (mid-1600s)
Neo-Europes
Colonies with European-like climates allowing permanent settlement
⭐ Joint Stock Companies
Corporations that shared risk to fund colonization (early 1600s)
⭐ House of Burgesses (1619)
First representative government in English America
⭐ Proprietary Colonies
Colonies owned by individuals (Maryland, Carolinas, Pennsylvania)
⭐ Royal Colonies
Colonies directly controlled by the English crown
⭐ Salutary Neglect
British policy of weak enforcement that allowed colonial self-government
⭐ Pequot War (1636–38)
New England conflict resulting in Pequot defeat
⭐ Metacom’s War / King Philip’s War (1675–76)
Major Native resistance in New England that weakened Native power
⭐ Bacon’s Rebellion (1676)
Frontier farmers rebelled against Virginia elites over land and Native policy
⭐ Pueblo Revolt (1680)
Successful Native uprising against Spanish rule in New Mexico
Beaver Wars (1600s)
Conflicts over fur trade dominance involving the Iroquois
Algonquin, Huron, Narragansett, Mohegan
Native groups often allied with French or English
⭐ Iroquois / Haudenosaunee Confederacy
Powerful Native alliance controlling Great Lakes trade routes
Covenant Chain
Diplomatic alliance between Iroquois and English colonies
Tribalization
Native groups merging for survival after population loss
⭐ New France (Quebec, Mississippi, Louisiana)
French colonies focused on fur trade and missionaries
⭐ New Netherland / New Amsterdam
Dutch trading colony that became New York
Christianity & Missionaries
Used to justify colonization and convert Native peoples
⭐ Great Awakening (1730s–40s)
Religious revival emphasizing emotional faith and equality
⭐ Evangelicalism
Movement stressing personal salvation and conversion
⭐ Enlightenment
18th-century movement emphasizing reason and natural rights
⭐ Deism
Belief that God created the world but does not intervene
⭐ Social Compact
Government exists to protect natural rights
⭐ John Locke
Philosopher who argued for natural rights and limited government
⭐ Two Treatises of Government (1689)
Locke’s work supporting the right to overthrow unjust rulers
⭐ Benjamin Franklin
Enlightenment thinker promoting reason and self-improvement
Poor Richard’s Almanack
Franklin’s publication spreading Enlightenment ideas
⭐ Jonathan Edwards & George Whitefield
Great Awakening preachers who inspired mass revivals
John Wesley
Founder of Methodism emphasizing disciplined faith
College of New Jersey (Princeton) & King’s College (Columbia)
Colonial colleges founded to train leaders and clergy
⭐ Print Revolution
Expansion of printing that spread ideas rapidly