APUSH Chapter 2 and 3 Vocab Atwood

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61 Terms

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Anne Hutchinson

A Puritan woman who challenged Puritan doctrines in the Massachusetts Bay Colony

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Atlantic World

A pattern of exchange between Western Europe, Western Africa, North and South America, and the Caribbean. Made it easier to get goods from foreign places.

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Bacon's Rebellion

an armed uprising in colonial Virginia from 1676-1677, led by Nathaniel Bacon against Governor William Berkeley

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Barbados Slave Trade

birthplace of Britain's slave society

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Congregational Church

(also known as Puritanism) Protestant movement in New England, characterized by its emphasis on local church autonomy and the direct rule of Christ

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Mercantilism

An economic policy under which nations sought to increase their wealth and power by selling more goods than they bought

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Metacomet

leader of the Pokanoket and Grand Sachem of the Wampanoag confederacy. He is known for leading a war of Indigenous resistance against English colonists in New England during a King Philip's War

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Middle Ground

space in the Great Lakes region where Native American and European (primarily French) cultures interacted and accommodated each other

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Navigation Acts

a series of British laws, designed to control colonial trade by mandating that goods be carried only on English or colonial ships

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New Amsterdam

Dutch colonial settlement that served as the capital of New Netherland. This later became "New York City"

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Pennsylvania

Founded by William Penn as a Quaker colony

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Pequot War

conflict in colonial New England between the Pequot tribe and English settlers, allied with the Mohegan and Narragansett tribes

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Plymouth Plantation

the Plymouth Colony, founded in 1620

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Dominion of New England

centralized colonial government created by King James II in 1686 to consolidate New England colonies

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English Caribbean

British colonies in the Caribbean, particularly Barbados

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Fundamental Constitution for Carolina

proposed governing documents for the British colony of Carolina, drafted by John Locke in 1669

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George & Cecilius Calvert

initiated the founding of Maryland as a refuge for English Catholics but died before receiving the official charter, which was granted to his son, Cecilius Calvert

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Glorious Revolution

the overthrow of the King James II of England and replaced with William and Mary of Orange, protestants

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Headright

land grant program established in the colonies, particularly Virginia, where 50 acres of land were given to those who paid the passage for a new settler

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Jacob Leisler

led Leisler's Rebellion, a uprising in New York, where he seized control of the colonial government and established a provisional government

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Powhatan

leader of the Powhatan Confederacy, a powerful alliance of Native American tribes in the Chesapeake Bay region of Virginia

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Praying Indians

Natives who converted to Christianity under Puritan missionaries and lived in special settlements called praying towns

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Puritans

A religious group who wanted to purify the Church of England. They came to America for religious freedom and settled Massachusetts Bay.

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Quakers

English dissenters who broke from Church of England, and under William Penn they founded Pennsylvania

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Roger Williams

founded Rhode Island based on his advocacy for religious freedom and the separation of church and state

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Sir William Berkeley

governor of colonial Virginia known for his advocacy for economic diversification and his central role in Bacon's Rebellion

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Theocracy

a state or government where religious leaders hold political power and the state's laws are based on religious law

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James Oglethorpe

Founder of Georgia

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Jamestown

First permanent English settlement in North America

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John Calvin

Protestant reformer who believed in predestination (Calvinism)

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John Smith

an English soldier, explorer, and author who was crucial to the early survival of the Jamestown colony

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John Winthrop

first governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, and a key figure in the founding of New England

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King's Philip's War

conflict in New England between colonists and a coalition of Native American tribes led by Metacomet

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Massachusetts Bay Company

Joint-stock company chartered by the English crown 1629 that established the Massachusetts Bay Colony under John Winthrop

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Mayflower Compact

a 1620 agreement signed by 41 Pilgrims to establishing order and lawful government in the Plymouth Colony

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Tobacco

Cash crop that made a profit and saved Jamestown

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Toleration Act

granted religious freedom to Christians but excluded non-Christians by the Maryland Assembly

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Virginia House of Burgesses

the first representative government in the American colonies, established in 1619 in Virginia

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Wampanoags

Native American tribe who had an alliance with the Pilgrims

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William Bradford

leader of the Pilgrims and the long-serving governor of Plymouth Colony

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William Penn

A Quaker that founded Pennsylvania to establish a place where his people and others could live in peace and be free from persecution.

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Cotton Mather

Puritan minister and author in colonial New England, known for his influential role in the Salem witch trials

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Covenant

religious compromise allowing baptized but unconverted church members to have their children baptized

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Enlightenment Ideals

emphasized reason, individual rights, natural rights (life, liberty, property), popular sovereignty, and the social contract

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George Whitefield

English Anglican priest and a central figure of the First Great Awakening

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Great Awakening

religious revival movement emphasizing emotionalism and individual spirituality, a reaction against the Enlightenment's focus on reason and tradition

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Gullah

descendants of enslaved Africans in the regions of South Carolina and Georgia

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Huguenots

French Protestants

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Indentured Servitude

A worker bound by a voluntary agreement to work for a specified period of years often in return for free passage to North America

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Jeremiad

type of sermon that serves as a lamentation and prophetic warning against the perceived decline in religious piety and moral virtue within a nation or community

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John and Charles Wesley

Founders of Methodism

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John Locke

Enlightenment philosopher whose ideas influenced the American Revolution and idea of natural rights

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John Peter Zenger

German-American printer in New York whose trial was a landmark case for freedom of the press

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Jonathan Edwards

Congregationalist clergyman known for "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God," a sermon that intensified the First Great Awakening

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Middle Passage

A voyage that brought enslaved Africans across the Atlantic Ocean to North America and the West Indies

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Primogeniture

English law that favored male-preference inheritance, giving the majority of or the entirety of an estate to the eldest son

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Saugus Ironworks

first successful integrated ironworks in North America, operating from 1646 to 1668 in colonial Massachusetts

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Scots-Irish

group of Presbyterian Scots who settled in the Irish province of Ulster before emigrating to America, primarily in the Middle Colonies

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Slave Codes

laws designed to define and control enslaved people, treating them as property rather than people and restricting their rights to prevent revolts and ensure a stable labor force

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Stono Rebellion

argest slave revolt in the British colonies, occurring in South Carolina in 1739, with about 60 enslaved Africans

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Triangular Trade

transatlantic exchange of goods, resources, and people between Europe, Africa, and the Americas