COMPLETE REVIEW: HISTORICAL PERIOD 2
how different european colonies developed and expanded
types of organization
corporate colonies: owned by joint-stock companies (eg. jamestown)
royal colonies: under the authority of the king (eg. virginia)
proprietary colonies: under the authority of individuals that were granted charters by the king (eg. maryland, pennsylvania)
jamestown
started by the virginia company
given a charter by james ii in 1607
saved by the leadership of captain john smith
tobacco growth aided by john rolfe and pocahontas revived economy
became the royal colony of virginia
shitty ass land
plymouth
started for religious separatists
pilgrims arrived on the mayflower
received help from indigenous peoples
notable figures: captain miles standish, governor william bradford
massachusetts bay
formed by puritans who received a charter from the mass. bay company
puritans were persecuted by king charles i so they fled to the mbcs in 1630 with john winthrop in the great migration
mercantilism
ultimate goal: making money for mother country
lots of smuggling
british indifference as long as they continue to make $
important documents/organizations
house of burgesses
elected legislative body of virginia → first form of representative government in the united states
bicameral
mayflower compact
first governing document of plymouth colony
act of toleration
act of parliament giving freedom to nonconformists → freedom [for protestants] to worship publicly
new england confederation
union for mutual safety: mass bay, plymouth, connecticut, new haven
met to write constitution in boston
the dominion of new england
administrative union of new england + mid-atlantic colonies
the navigation acts
ensure that colonies provide resources to mother england
prevents trade with dutch, spanish
dominion of new england governed by edmund andros
transatlantic trade
columbian exchange → established atlantic slave trade
created due to perceived racial superiority, lack of indentured servants, indigenous peoples were more difficult to enslave, european need for goods
impacts: more land needed (conflicts with indigenous peoples), resistance of enslaved peoples (eg. revolts, running away, wasting time)
interactions between native americans and europeans
bacon's rebellion
uprising of western farmers v. virginia → colonial (british) gvmt did nothing to protect settlers against indigenous attacks
one of the first instances of colonial resistance towards britain
king philip's war
ie. metacom's war
occurred bc the english threatened indigenous sovereignty as a result of british encroachment on their lands → created a dependency on britain for resources
slavery in the british colonies: see transatlantic trade section
colonial society and culture
enlightenment (aka "age of reason")
intellectual movement encouraging reason + science > blind faith
benjamin franklin: printer, publisher, scientist; embodied enlightenment ideals in british atlantic
founding of georgia
rationalism, empiricism, progressivism, cosmopolitanism
the great awakening
religious revival movement
renewed dedication to christianity after traveling preachers spread news of salvation from sin
george whitefield → traveled country, preached to anyone (including indigenous people, enslaved people)
the zenger case
establishment of freedom of the press
early colonial resistance
self government - lack of parliamentary representation - enlightenment - dif. views of liberty - religious independence/diversity - perceived corruption in british gvmt
how different european colonies developed and expanded
types of organization
corporate colonies: owned by joint-stock companies (eg. jamestown)
royal colonies: under the authority of the king (eg. virginia)
proprietary colonies: under the authority of individuals that were granted charters by the king (eg. maryland, pennsylvania)
jamestown
started by the virginia company
given a charter by james ii in 1607
saved by the leadership of captain john smith
tobacco growth aided by john rolfe and pocahontas revived economy
became the royal colony of virginia
shitty ass land
plymouth
started for religious separatists
pilgrims arrived on the mayflower
received help from indigenous peoples
notable figures: captain miles standish, governor william bradford
massachusetts bay
formed by puritans who received a charter from the mass. bay company
puritans were persecuted by king charles i so they fled to the mbcs in 1630 with john winthrop in the great migration
mercantilism
ultimate goal: making money for mother country
lots of smuggling
british indifference as long as they continue to make $
important documents/organizations
house of burgesses
elected legislative body of virginia → first form of representative government in the united states
bicameral
mayflower compact
first governing document of plymouth colony
act of toleration
act of parliament giving freedom to nonconformists → freedom [for protestants] to worship publicly
new england confederation
union for mutual safety: mass bay, plymouth, connecticut, new haven
met to write constitution in boston
the dominion of new england
administrative union of new england + mid-atlantic colonies
the navigation acts
ensure that colonies provide resources to mother england
prevents trade with dutch, spanish
dominion of new england governed by edmund andros
transatlantic trade
columbian exchange → established atlantic slave trade
created due to perceived racial superiority, lack of indentured servants, indigenous peoples were more difficult to enslave, european need for goods
impacts: more land needed (conflicts with indigenous peoples), resistance of enslaved peoples (eg. revolts, running away, wasting time)
interactions between native americans and europeans
bacon's rebellion
uprising of western farmers v. virginia → colonial (british) gvmt did nothing to protect settlers against indigenous attacks
one of the first instances of colonial resistance towards britain
king philip's war
ie. metacom's war
occurred bc the english threatened indigenous sovereignty as a result of british encroachment on their lands → created a dependency on britain for resources
slavery in the british colonies: see transatlantic trade section
colonial society and culture
enlightenment (aka "age of reason")
intellectual movement encouraging reason + science > blind faith
benjamin franklin: printer, publisher, scientist; embodied enlightenment ideals in british atlantic
founding of georgia
rationalism, empiricism, progressivism, cosmopolitanism
the great awakening
religious revival movement
renewed dedication to christianity after traveling preachers spread news of salvation from sin
george whitefield → traveled country, preached to anyone (including indigenous people, enslaved people)
the zenger case
establishment of freedom of the press
early colonial resistance
self government - lack of parliamentary representation - enlightenment - dif. views of liberty - religious independence/diversity - perceived corruption in british gvmt