knowt ap exam guide logo

Unit 6 Vocabulary

Unit 6 Vocabulary

Agricultural Revolution

  • Term that refers to dramatic improvements and modernization of farming techniques and technologies. It led to significant increases in crop yields which improved the diet and health of the population.

capital

  • Money that is used for investment.

entrepreneurs

  • A person who organizes and operates a business.

hydropower

  • Energy that is generated by the flow of water.

textile

  • Of, or pertaining to cloth or to the production of cloth.

cottage industry

  • Economic term for the production of goods in the private homes of the peasants. Goods, such as cloth, were woven by families in order to raise additional income.

spinning jenny

  • One of the first industrial machines developed to speed up the production of cloth, it helped begin the factory production of textiles and started the Industrial Revolution.

steam engine

  • Designed by James Watt in 1769, this was the first generator of artificial power developed by man. The invention made the Industrial Revolution possible.

Claremont

  • Inventor Robert Fulton’s first successful steam powered boat, it completed a voyage up the Hudson River in New York in 1809.

Rocket

  • Inventor George Stephenson’s award-winning steam powered railroad that won a British national competition in 1829.

Greenwich Mean Time (GMT)

  • The first system of standardized world time, it divides the globe into 24 separate time zones.

Factory System

  • A new system of producing goods that appeared during the Industrial Revolution and led to the gradual disappearance of Cottage Industry. Workers came to work in factories using powered machinery.

“iron law of wages”

  • A famous expression found in David Ricardo’s Political Economy and Taxation. Ricardo asserted that workers were governed by the law of supply and demand just like any other commodity.

Great Exhibition (aka: Crystal Palace)

  • The world’s first World’s Fair, it ran from May-October 1851. Dozens of nations displayed their latest inventions and products for millions of daily visitors.

Irish Potato Famine (aka: The Great Hunger)

  • The potato crop of Europe was struck by a devastating fungus between 1845-1852, leading too mass hunger and political instability all over Europe. But nowhere was more devastated than Ireland. Over 1,000,000 Irish died.

Corn Laws

  • A series of tariffs passed by the British Parliament that were placed on imported grains in hopes of protecting British landowners and farmers. The tariffs kept bread prices higher for poor urban workers.

tenement

  • A run-down and typically overcrowded apartment building, usually in a poorer neighborhood of a city.

cholera

  • A bacterial disease usually caused by contaminated water.

typhoid

  • A bacterial disease usually caused by contaminated water.

tuberculosis (aka: TB)

  • A highly contagious bacterial infection that typically affects the lungs, it is one of the leading causes of death in the world. It devastated the overcrowded cities of the 19th century.

sanitation system

  • A complex system of pipes that supply clean, safe drinking water and separate pipes that remove waste.

Metropolitan Police of London (aka: “Bobbies”)

  • One of the first modern, urban police forces, they were first organized by Sir Robert Peel. The goal was to improve public safety in the city of London.

Factory Acts

  • A series of laws and regulations passed by the British Parliament in order to improve the working conditions and working hours of children and women.

Mine Acts

  • Laws passed by the British Parliament that banned the use of women, girls, and boys under the age of 10 in the mining industry.

exploitation

  • The action of treating someone unfairly in order to benefit from their labor.

labor unions

  • An organized association of workers, often in a specific trade or industry, formed to protect and advance the rights of members.

Combination Act

  • Passed by the British Parliament during the Napoleonic Wars, the law forbid workers from forming labor unions and banned collective bargaining.

strike

  • A labor protest caused when a large number of employees refuse to work in hopes of forcing company management to give in to demands.

Luddites

  • A movement of British workers who smashed factory machinery as a form of labor protest.

  • Anyone who is afraid of technology or technological progress.

bourgeoisie

  • Term referring to the urban, educated middle and upper classes. Karl Marx used the term to refer to the “oppressors” of workers.

proletariat

  • Term referring to the urban, working-class of Europe. Karl Marx used the term to refer to the oppressed class he hoped would embrace communism.

Great Reform Bill of 1832

  • Important law that granted voting rights to urban, middle-class men in Britain. It almost doubled the number of eligible voters.

franchise

  • Term that refers to the power to vote.

suffrage

  • Term that refers to the power to vote.

domestics

  • Term that refers to people, usually women, who are employed to work in a home as maids, cooks, and laundresses.

universal manhood suffrage

  • Political term that means that all adult man have the right to vote.

People’s Charter

  • A national petition in Britain that demanded universal manhood suffrage, secret ballots, and salaries for members of Parliament. It gathered over 6,000,000 signatures bbut was never accepted by Parliament.

abolition

  • The political and social movement that fought to end the slave trade and the practice of human slavery all over the world.

Congress of Vienna

  • One of the most important diplomatic events in European history, the Congress went from November 1814 to June 1815. The goal of the diplomats was to restore European order after the defeat of Napoleon.

Prince Metternich

  • he served as the Austrian Foreign Minister and later the Chancellor (Prime Minister) during most of the first half of the 1800’s. His conservative views dominated European international politics for decades after the Congress of Vienna.

restoration

  • The act of returning a monarch to their throne, a government to power, or the control of a previous regime.

legitimacy

  • Something that is legal, rightful, or appropriate.

balance-of-power

  • The European diplomatic goal of preventing any single nation from dominating the entire continent. Britain was especially dedicated to it.

Troppau Protocol

  • An 1820 diplomatic agreement between Austria, France, Prussia, and Russia that pledged military assistance to any European government threatened by revolution. Britain strongly opposed the agreement.

ideology

  • Ideas and ideals that form the basis of thoughts and attitudes toward economic and political goals.

conservatism

  • The political ideology that supports free-enterprise, private ownership of property, and traditional social values.

liberalism

  • The political ideology that supports personal liberty, individual rights, and equality before the law.

“The government that governs best, governs least.”

  • A phrase by John Stuart Mill that summarizes the philosophy of liberalism.

free trade

  • The economic policy that argues that international trade should have no restrictions, such as tariffs, quotas, or embargoes.

capitalism

  • An economic system in which business is controlled by private companies and individuals, not the state.

socialism

  • An economic theory that supports the state’s control of the major resources and businesses in society. Socialists believe that the state can ensure that all benefit equally from economic activity.

subjugate

  • To bring someone or something under domination or control, especially by conquest.

Utopian Socialism

  • A branch of socialism that advocated the formation of small, idealistic communities that focused on communal living around a specific business.

New Lanark

  • A large textile factory community in Scotland that was turned into a model Utopian Socialist experiment by Robert Owen. Owen built good worker housing, schools for the town’s children, and paid fair wages.

July Monarchy

  • The nickname for the reign of the French monarch, King Louis Philippe. It lasted from the July Revolution in 1830 until the Revolution of 1848.

Provisional Government

  • A temporary government set up after the overthrow of Louis Philippe in February 1848. It lasted until June 1848.

  • A term applied to any interim government set up to temporarily keep a state functioning until a new permanent regime can be formed.

National Workshops

  • An employment program established by the French Second Republic in February 1848. It guaranteed work for any unemployed laborer who could prove residence in Paris. It was designed by the socialist, Louis Blanc.

June Days

  • This was a violent uprising from June 22 – June 26, 1848 when Parisian proletarians battled the French Army. Workers were angry at the closure of the National Workshops. Over 10,000 were killed.

French Second Republic (1848 – 1852)

  • Term for the government that administered France from the fall of Louis Philippe to the beginning of the Second Empire.

Louis Napoleon Bonaparte (AKA: Emperor Napoleon III)

  • The nephew of Napoleon, he was elected president of the Second Republic and in 1852 he reestablished his uncle’s Empire as the “Second Empire.”

Second Empire (1852 – 1870)

  • Term for the government that administered France under the reign of Emperor Napoleon III. It was an authoritarian state that experienced many successes, but was destroyed by military defeat.

autonomy

  • self-government for a region

Magyar

  • A synonym for Hungarian.

reactionary

  • A philosophy that opposes any political or social reforms.

Diet of Frankfurt (1848 – 1849)

  • A German nationalist meeting that gathered in hopes of forming a unified German state. It ended in failure.

Kleindeutsch

  • The “Small German” faction at the Diet of Frankfurt. They favored the creation of a unified Germany under Prussian dominance and the exclusion of Austria.

Grossdeutsch

  • The “Big German” faction at the Diet of Frankfurt. They favored the creation of a unified Germany under Austrian dominance.

Giuseppe Mazzini

  • Italian nationalist leader who led the decades long effort for the creation of a unified Italian state.

Young Italy

  • The Italian nationalist movement led by Mazzini. By 1848 it had over 50,000 members all over the Italian peninsula.

Carboneri

  • It was a secret network of Italian nationalist groups that loosely cooperated in an effort to unify Italy.

Romanticism

  • A major European art movement that flourished between the 1790’s and the 1830’s. The Romantics focused on injecting passion and emotion into their art, music, and writings.

S

Unit 6 Vocabulary

Unit 6 Vocabulary

Agricultural Revolution

  • Term that refers to dramatic improvements and modernization of farming techniques and technologies. It led to significant increases in crop yields which improved the diet and health of the population.

capital

  • Money that is used for investment.

entrepreneurs

  • A person who organizes and operates a business.

hydropower

  • Energy that is generated by the flow of water.

textile

  • Of, or pertaining to cloth or to the production of cloth.

cottage industry

  • Economic term for the production of goods in the private homes of the peasants. Goods, such as cloth, were woven by families in order to raise additional income.

spinning jenny

  • One of the first industrial machines developed to speed up the production of cloth, it helped begin the factory production of textiles and started the Industrial Revolution.

steam engine

  • Designed by James Watt in 1769, this was the first generator of artificial power developed by man. The invention made the Industrial Revolution possible.

Claremont

  • Inventor Robert Fulton’s first successful steam powered boat, it completed a voyage up the Hudson River in New York in 1809.

Rocket

  • Inventor George Stephenson’s award-winning steam powered railroad that won a British national competition in 1829.

Greenwich Mean Time (GMT)

  • The first system of standardized world time, it divides the globe into 24 separate time zones.

Factory System

  • A new system of producing goods that appeared during the Industrial Revolution and led to the gradual disappearance of Cottage Industry. Workers came to work in factories using powered machinery.

“iron law of wages”

  • A famous expression found in David Ricardo’s Political Economy and Taxation. Ricardo asserted that workers were governed by the law of supply and demand just like any other commodity.

Great Exhibition (aka: Crystal Palace)

  • The world’s first World’s Fair, it ran from May-October 1851. Dozens of nations displayed their latest inventions and products for millions of daily visitors.

Irish Potato Famine (aka: The Great Hunger)

  • The potato crop of Europe was struck by a devastating fungus between 1845-1852, leading too mass hunger and political instability all over Europe. But nowhere was more devastated than Ireland. Over 1,000,000 Irish died.

Corn Laws

  • A series of tariffs passed by the British Parliament that were placed on imported grains in hopes of protecting British landowners and farmers. The tariffs kept bread prices higher for poor urban workers.

tenement

  • A run-down and typically overcrowded apartment building, usually in a poorer neighborhood of a city.

cholera

  • A bacterial disease usually caused by contaminated water.

typhoid

  • A bacterial disease usually caused by contaminated water.

tuberculosis (aka: TB)

  • A highly contagious bacterial infection that typically affects the lungs, it is one of the leading causes of death in the world. It devastated the overcrowded cities of the 19th century.

sanitation system

  • A complex system of pipes that supply clean, safe drinking water and separate pipes that remove waste.

Metropolitan Police of London (aka: “Bobbies”)

  • One of the first modern, urban police forces, they were first organized by Sir Robert Peel. The goal was to improve public safety in the city of London.

Factory Acts

  • A series of laws and regulations passed by the British Parliament in order to improve the working conditions and working hours of children and women.

Mine Acts

  • Laws passed by the British Parliament that banned the use of women, girls, and boys under the age of 10 in the mining industry.

exploitation

  • The action of treating someone unfairly in order to benefit from their labor.

labor unions

  • An organized association of workers, often in a specific trade or industry, formed to protect and advance the rights of members.

Combination Act

  • Passed by the British Parliament during the Napoleonic Wars, the law forbid workers from forming labor unions and banned collective bargaining.

strike

  • A labor protest caused when a large number of employees refuse to work in hopes of forcing company management to give in to demands.

Luddites

  • A movement of British workers who smashed factory machinery as a form of labor protest.

  • Anyone who is afraid of technology or technological progress.

bourgeoisie

  • Term referring to the urban, educated middle and upper classes. Karl Marx used the term to refer to the “oppressors” of workers.

proletariat

  • Term referring to the urban, working-class of Europe. Karl Marx used the term to refer to the oppressed class he hoped would embrace communism.

Great Reform Bill of 1832

  • Important law that granted voting rights to urban, middle-class men in Britain. It almost doubled the number of eligible voters.

franchise

  • Term that refers to the power to vote.

suffrage

  • Term that refers to the power to vote.

domestics

  • Term that refers to people, usually women, who are employed to work in a home as maids, cooks, and laundresses.

universal manhood suffrage

  • Political term that means that all adult man have the right to vote.

People’s Charter

  • A national petition in Britain that demanded universal manhood suffrage, secret ballots, and salaries for members of Parliament. It gathered over 6,000,000 signatures bbut was never accepted by Parliament.

abolition

  • The political and social movement that fought to end the slave trade and the practice of human slavery all over the world.

Congress of Vienna

  • One of the most important diplomatic events in European history, the Congress went from November 1814 to June 1815. The goal of the diplomats was to restore European order after the defeat of Napoleon.

Prince Metternich

  • he served as the Austrian Foreign Minister and later the Chancellor (Prime Minister) during most of the first half of the 1800’s. His conservative views dominated European international politics for decades after the Congress of Vienna.

restoration

  • The act of returning a monarch to their throne, a government to power, or the control of a previous regime.

legitimacy

  • Something that is legal, rightful, or appropriate.

balance-of-power

  • The European diplomatic goal of preventing any single nation from dominating the entire continent. Britain was especially dedicated to it.

Troppau Protocol

  • An 1820 diplomatic agreement between Austria, France, Prussia, and Russia that pledged military assistance to any European government threatened by revolution. Britain strongly opposed the agreement.

ideology

  • Ideas and ideals that form the basis of thoughts and attitudes toward economic and political goals.

conservatism

  • The political ideology that supports free-enterprise, private ownership of property, and traditional social values.

liberalism

  • The political ideology that supports personal liberty, individual rights, and equality before the law.

“The government that governs best, governs least.”

  • A phrase by John Stuart Mill that summarizes the philosophy of liberalism.

free trade

  • The economic policy that argues that international trade should have no restrictions, such as tariffs, quotas, or embargoes.

capitalism

  • An economic system in which business is controlled by private companies and individuals, not the state.

socialism

  • An economic theory that supports the state’s control of the major resources and businesses in society. Socialists believe that the state can ensure that all benefit equally from economic activity.

subjugate

  • To bring someone or something under domination or control, especially by conquest.

Utopian Socialism

  • A branch of socialism that advocated the formation of small, idealistic communities that focused on communal living around a specific business.

New Lanark

  • A large textile factory community in Scotland that was turned into a model Utopian Socialist experiment by Robert Owen. Owen built good worker housing, schools for the town’s children, and paid fair wages.

July Monarchy

  • The nickname for the reign of the French monarch, King Louis Philippe. It lasted from the July Revolution in 1830 until the Revolution of 1848.

Provisional Government

  • A temporary government set up after the overthrow of Louis Philippe in February 1848. It lasted until June 1848.

  • A term applied to any interim government set up to temporarily keep a state functioning until a new permanent regime can be formed.

National Workshops

  • An employment program established by the French Second Republic in February 1848. It guaranteed work for any unemployed laborer who could prove residence in Paris. It was designed by the socialist, Louis Blanc.

June Days

  • This was a violent uprising from June 22 – June 26, 1848 when Parisian proletarians battled the French Army. Workers were angry at the closure of the National Workshops. Over 10,000 were killed.

French Second Republic (1848 – 1852)

  • Term for the government that administered France from the fall of Louis Philippe to the beginning of the Second Empire.

Louis Napoleon Bonaparte (AKA: Emperor Napoleon III)

  • The nephew of Napoleon, he was elected president of the Second Republic and in 1852 he reestablished his uncle’s Empire as the “Second Empire.”

Second Empire (1852 – 1870)

  • Term for the government that administered France under the reign of Emperor Napoleon III. It was an authoritarian state that experienced many successes, but was destroyed by military defeat.

autonomy

  • self-government for a region

Magyar

  • A synonym for Hungarian.

reactionary

  • A philosophy that opposes any political or social reforms.

Diet of Frankfurt (1848 – 1849)

  • A German nationalist meeting that gathered in hopes of forming a unified German state. It ended in failure.

Kleindeutsch

  • The “Small German” faction at the Diet of Frankfurt. They favored the creation of a unified Germany under Prussian dominance and the exclusion of Austria.

Grossdeutsch

  • The “Big German” faction at the Diet of Frankfurt. They favored the creation of a unified Germany under Austrian dominance.

Giuseppe Mazzini

  • Italian nationalist leader who led the decades long effort for the creation of a unified Italian state.

Young Italy

  • The Italian nationalist movement led by Mazzini. By 1848 it had over 50,000 members all over the Italian peninsula.

Carboneri

  • It was a secret network of Italian nationalist groups that loosely cooperated in an effort to unify Italy.

Romanticism

  • A major European art movement that flourished between the 1790’s and the 1830’s. The Romantics focused on injecting passion and emotion into their art, music, and writings.