Transcript
Page 1: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

SOL Review PowerpointBy Gretchen MacIlwaine

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• Who was the monarch of France leading up to the revolution?

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• Louis XVI

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• How was the social structure of France set up before the revolution?

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• The three estates

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• Who made up the First Estates?

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• The clergy of the Catholic church, they paid no taxes.

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• Who made up the second estate?

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• The Nobility, they paid little in taxes.

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• Who made up the Third Estate?

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• Everyone else. 97% of the populations, paid very little taxes.

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• Why was the Three Estates system unfair?

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• Each estate had the same voting power in the government, the 1st and 2nd could always outvote the 3rd.

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• The third estate rebelled and began the revolution when they attacked and captured what building in paris?

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• The Bastille.

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• During the revolution, what was the period of time called when enemies of the revolution were arrested and executed?

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• The Reign of Terror.

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• Who was responsible for leading the Reign Of Terror?

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• Maximillien Robespierre.

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• What happened to King Louis XVI and his wife Marie Antoinette?

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• Beheaded on the guillotine.

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• What document was created that guaranteed certain rights to some people in France?

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• The Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen.

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• The ideals of what movement were used to justify the revolution?

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The Enlightenment.

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• In 1799, who rose to power in France?

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• Napoleon

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• Why did the people of France support Napoleon?

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• He was a popular war hero and promised peace and stability after the 10 years of chaos and revolution.

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• What was the name of the law code Napoleon created?

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• The Napoleonic Code.

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• What made the Napoleonic Code different than previous law systems?

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• Everyone was equal before the law.

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• With the start of the Napoleonic Wars, what was Napoleons ultimate goal?

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• The unification of Europe under French domination.

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• In 1812, Napoleon invaded what country?

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• Russia

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• What strategy did the Russians use against Napoleon?

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• Scorched-earth

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• What does scorched earth mean?

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• Burn or destroy anything that could be of use to the invading army. Draw the French deep into Russia and wait for winter to hit.

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• Following his defeat in Russia, France was invaded and Napoleon was exiled to Elba. He escaped and was finally defeated where?

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• Waterloo

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• What was the legacy of Napoleon?

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• Napoleonic Code, better roads in Europe, rise of Nationalism in Europe, end of Holy Roman Empire.

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• What was the peace conference after Napoleon called?

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• The Congress of Vienna.

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• The Congress of Vienna was controlled by people who wanted to restore Europe to how it had been before Napoleon. What were they called?

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• Reactionaries

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• The Congress of Vienna wanted to make it so that one country would not be more powerful than others. What is this called?

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• Balance of Power

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• What happened to the government in France as a result of the Congress of Vienna?

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• Monarchy restored with Louis XVIII.

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• The Congress of Vienna redrew the map of Europe. What country did not get restored?

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• The Holy Roman Empire.

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• Two new political philosophies began to emerge in the years after Napoleon. What were they?

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• Liberalism and Conservatism.

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• What are the main ideas of liberalism?

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• Things should change and move forward based on new ideas.

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• What are the main ideas of conservatism?

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• Things should stay how they are, or go back to the way they were before.

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• What two countries unified in the late 1800’s, partially as a result of the increased nationalism begun under Napoleon?

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• Germany and Italy.

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• Who led German unification?

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• Otto Von Bismarck.

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• What methods did Bismarck use to get the people to support unification?

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• He appealed to their sense of nationalism and started wars with Austria and France.

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• Who led the unification of Italy?

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• Giuseppe Garibaldi and Count Cavour.

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• What areas did each of them help unify?

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• Cavour united Northern Italy, Garibaldi united the South and then led the joining of North and South.

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• What was Realpolitik?

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• Bismarck’s philosophy of using whatever means are necessary to achieve his goals.

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• Latin America was controlled by what European countries?

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• Spain, France, Portugal.

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• What was the dominant religion in Latin America?

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• Roman Catholic.

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• How was the class structure set up?

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Viceroys - colonial officers

Creoles – Mixed descent

Mestizo - Natives

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• What two revolutions influenced the desire for independence in Latin America

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• American and French.

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• Who led the independence movement in Haiti?

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• Toussaint L’Ouverture.

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• Who did L’Ouverture lead the revolt against?

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• France

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• Who led the independence movements in South America?

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• Simon Bolivar

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• What was Bolivars goal?

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• To unify the northern portion of South America into one country.

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• What policy did the United States issue, stating that Europe must stay out of the Western Hemisphere?

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• The Monroe Doctrine.

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• Why was the Monroe Doctrine important?

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It told Europeans that they could no longer colonize Central of South America.

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• Why did the colonies of European countries think the years after WWII was a good time to try and gain independence?

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• European countries were weakened from the war and unable to hold onto all their territories.

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• In what areas of the world did the independence movements take place?

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• Asia, India, Africa

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• India was trying to gain independence from who?

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• Great Britain

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• Who led the Indian independence movement?

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• Mohandas Ghandi

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• What methods did Ghandi use to try and gain independence

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• Peaceful resistance and civil disobedience

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• When India gained independence, it was divided into what two countries?

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• India and Pakistan

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• Why led to India and Pakistan being separated?

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• Religious Divisions, India is Hindu, Pakistan is muslim.

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• Following independence, what form of government did India adopt?

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• Democracy. Today India is the largest democracy in the world.

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• Indian society is divided along what lines?

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• The Caste System

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• How were the revolutions in Africa different than in India?

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• Africa had both peaceful and violent revolutions, while India was relatively peaceful.

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• What country underwent a violent rebellion against British rule?

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• Kenya

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• Who led the independence fight against the British in Kenya

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• Jomo Kenyatta

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• Which European countries lost their colonies in Africa?

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• Britain, France, Belgium, Portugal

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• Which country had a violent rebellion against France?

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• Algeria

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• What was the policy of racial discrimination in South Africa called?

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• Apartheid.

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• Under apartheid, who controlled South Africa?

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• The minority white population controlled the government and military.

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• Who led the fight against apartheid in South Africa?

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• Nelson Mandela

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• What happened to Mandela as a result of his struggle against apartheid?

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• He was jailed for over 30 years. When he was finally released he became the first black president of South Africa.

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• The new countries of Jordan and Palestine were originally part of the Mandate system set up by what organization?

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• League Of Nations

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• What new country was created in the Middle East in 1948 as a homeland for the Jews

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• Israel

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• Golda Meir led Israel to victory in the Yom Kippur war. Which of the superpowers in the world supported Israel?

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The United States

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• Who was the leader of Egypt who built the Aswan High Dam, nationalized the Suez Canal, and established a relationship with the USSR?

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• Gamal Abdul Nasser

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• The fall of this city in 1453 encouraged Europeans to look for new water based trade routes

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• Constantinople

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• What did the Europeans want from Asia?

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• Spices, tea, silk, paper, porcelain, textiles

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• Europeans were also driven by the desire to spread what religion to new lands?

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• Christianity

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• This man sponsored early voyages of exploration.

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• Prince Henry The Navigator

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• What two European countries led the early stages of exploration?

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• Portugal and Spain

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• Who found a water route to India and established trade routes to there?

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• Vasco de Gama, who sailed for Portugal

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• Who was trying to reach Asia, but actually ended up finding North America?

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• Columbus who sailed for Spain

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• Who conquered the Aztecs in what is present day Mexico?

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• Hernando Cortez, who sailed for Spain.

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• Who conquered the Incans in present day Peru?

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• Francisco Pizarro, who sailed for Spain.

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• Who made the first attempt to sail around the world? He gets credit for it even though he died halfway.

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• Who made the first attempt to sail around the world? He gets credit for it even though he died halfway.

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• Magellan, who sailed for Spain.

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• Who was the first Englishman to sail around the world? He also led the English defense against the Spanish Armada in 1588.

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• Francis Drake.

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• Who was the French explorer who claimed Eastern Canada for France?

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• Jacques Cartier

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• How was Christianity spread to the New World?

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• Colonists moved to the New World and missionaries set out to convert Native Americans

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• What country led the colonization of Central and South America?

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• Spain

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• What country in South America does not speak Spanish

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• Brazil

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• What happened to most of the Native Americans within a few years of the arrival of Europeans?

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• They died either from war against the Europeans, or from European diseases like smallpox.

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• Who was at the top of the social classes in the New World colonies?

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• The people of pure European descent. The Natives were under them.

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• With most natives dead, Europeans turned where to find a source of labor?

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• Africa

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• Africans were forced into slavery and brought to the New World for what purpose?

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• To grow cash crops

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• What is a cash crop?

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• A crop grown only to sell and make money

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• The system of trade routes connecting Europe, Africa, and the New World became known as what?

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• The Triangular Trade.

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• What was the Middle Passage?

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• The part of the Triangle Trade that carried slaves from Africa to the New World.

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• What is the name given to the massive exchange of plants, animals, ideas, religions, people, and diseases between the Old and New World?

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• The Columbian Exchange

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• What things went from the Old World to the New World?

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• Horses, technology, diseases, religions.

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• What things went from the New World to the Old World?

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• Cash crops, corn, potatoes, tobacco.

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• European nations like Spain got very wealthy from what?

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• Taking gold and silver from the New World, and selling goods to their colonies there.

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• What was the original location of the Ottoman Empire?

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• Asia minor. What is present day Turkey.

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• The Ottoman Empire expanded to conquer what areas?

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• Southwest Asia, Northern Africa, and the Balkan peninsula

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• What was the capital city of the Ottoman Empire?

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• Istanbul. It used to be called Constantinople.

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• What was the religion of the Ottoman empire?

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• Islam

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• What goods did the Ottomans trade to Europe?

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• Coffee and ceramics.

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• What was the location of the Mughal Empire?

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• Present day India

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• What famous building was created by the Mughals?

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• Taj Mahal

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• Indian textiles influenced the development of a textile industry in what European country?

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• Great Britain.

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• What was the religion of the Mughals?

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• Islam

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• What was Japans policy towards European trade?

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• Isolationist, they wanted nothing to do with Europeans.

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• How did the Chinese control European influence in their country

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• They set up trading enclaves. These were the only places the Europeans could go to, limiting their impact on the people.

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• Who ruled Japan?

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• There was a powerless emperor, and a military leader called a Shogun who actually ruled.

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• What was the Commercial Revolution?

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• When European nations began competing for colonies and resources.

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• What economic theory says that colonies exist only to benefit the mother country?

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• Mercantilism.

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• Following WWII, who occupied Germany?

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• The USA, USSR, Britain, France

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• The British, French, and American sectors joined together to become what?

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• West Germany

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• In the years after WWII, what two countries became known as Superpowers?

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• The USA and USSR

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• The Nazi’s responsible for the Holocaust were put on trial where?

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• Nuremberg, several were executed for their crimes against humanity

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• The United States created what to help rebuild Western Europe after the war?

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• The Marshall Plan

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• What did the Marshall Plan do?

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• Gave money to European countries to help them rebuild

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• What international organization was created after WWII?

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• The United Nations

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• The UN issued what document, saying that all people have certain rights?

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• The Universal Declaration of Human Rights

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• Who was responsible for the occupation and rebuilding of Japan after the war?

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• General Douglas MacArthur

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• Following the war, West Germany and Japan quickly rebuilt and experienced what?

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• Great economic growth

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• What phrase was used to describe the split between Western Europe and Eastern Europe?

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• The Iron Curtain

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• What terms would describe the government and economy of Western European countries?

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• Democracies, capitalist

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• What terms would describe the government and economy of Eastern European countries?

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• Communism, socialist

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• What military alliance was formed after WWII, led by the USA?

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• NATO – North Atlantic Treaty Organization

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• What military alliance was formed after WWII, led by the Soviet Union?

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• The Warsaw Pact

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• As a condition for them giving up their militaries, the United States guarantees the security of what two countries?

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• Germany & Japan

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• What conference laid the foundations for what would become the Cold War?

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• Yalta

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• The United States created what doctrine to deal with the threat of communism?

Page 254: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Truman Doctrine

Page 255: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What did the policy of containment state?

Page 256: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• That we would fight to stop the spread of communism, but not attack it where it was already established

Page 257: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What was the point of containment?

Page 258: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• To stop communism from expanding, while not having a major war with the Soviet Union or China

Page 259: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What was the first military conflict of the Cold War?

Page 260: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The Korean War 1950-1953

Page 261: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What happened in the Korean War?

Page 262: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Communist North attacked the Democratic South. The UN and US helped the South. War ended in a stalemate with no winner. Korea divided along 38th Parallel.

Page 263: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• To stop people from leaving East Berlin, the Soviet Union built what?

Page 264: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The Berlin Wall

Page 265: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What role did the United States play in the Chinese Civil War?

Page 266: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• None, we did not get involved at all

Page 267: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Who was the leader of the Chinese Nationalists?

Page 268: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Chaing Kai-Shek

Page 269: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Who was the leader of the Chinese Communists, and became the leader of China after the Civil War ended?

Page 270: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Mao Zedong/Tse-tung

Page 271: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Following their defeat in the Civil War, the Chinese Nationalists fled to what island?

Page 272: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Taiwan

Page 273: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The Vietnam War began as a revolution against what European colonial power?

Page 274: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• France

Page 275: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Who led the North Vietnamese against the French and later against the USA?

Page 276: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Ho Chi Minh

Page 277: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Why did the USA get involved in Vietnam?

Page 278: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Because of our containment policy.

Page 279: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Why did the US use a strategy of limited warfare in Vietnam?

Page 280: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• We wanted to stop the aggressive North, but not provoke a war with the USSR or China

Page 281: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What was the end result of the Vietnam War?

Page 282: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The United States withdrew, South Vietnam fell to the communists afterwards.

Page 283: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What event happened in 1962 that almost led to a nuclear war between the US and USSR?

Page 284: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The Cuban Missile Crisis

Page 285: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What happened in the Cuban Missile Crisis?

Page 286: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The USSR tried to sneak nuclear missiles into Cuba, US found out and tried to stop them. Standoff lasted 13 days, ended with USSR removing the missiles.

Page 287: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What theory says that both sides having thousands of nuclear weapons means that neither will ever use them?

Page 288: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Deterrence. If one side uses theirs, the other will respond, and both will end up destroyed.

Page 289: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Who was the British Prime Minister who developed a closer relation with the US during the Cold War?

Page 290: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Margaret Thatcher

Page 291: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Who was the leader of the Soviet Union towards its end?

Page 292: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Mikhail Gorbachev

Page 293: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What events led to the eventual collapse of the USSR?

Page 294: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Invasion of Afghanistan in 1979, arms race with the USA, poor living conditions at home.

Page 295: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Why was the USA able to spend far more money on our military than the Soviet Union?

Page 296: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The capitalist economy generates more money for the government than the socialist version.

Page 297: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What role did Nationalism play in the end of the Soviet Union?

Page 298: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• People in Eastern European countries got tired of Soviet domination and worked to be free again.

Page 299: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The Enlightenment sought to apply the use of reason to what areas of life?

Page 300: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Government and philosophy.

Page 301: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• This English writer believed the best form of government was an absolute monarchy because people needed strong control and protection?

Page 302: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Thomas Hobbes.

Page 303: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What book did Thomas Hobbes write?

Page 304: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Leviathan.

Page 305: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What writer thought people were good and had natural rights?

Page 306: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• John Locke.

Page 307: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• According to Locke, what are natural rights?

Page 308: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Life, Liberty, and Property.

Page 309: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• According to Locke, what are people allowed to do if a government is unfair and abusive?

Page 310: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Revolt and overthrow it.

Page 311: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What French philosopher said the best form of government would include a separation of powers?

Page 312: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Baron von Montesquieu.

Page 313: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What book did Montesquieu write?

Page 314: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The Spirit of Laws.

Page 315: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• According to Rousseau, government is a contract between who?

Page 316: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The ruler and the ruled.

Page 317: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What book did Rousseau write?

Page 318: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The Social Contract.

Page 319: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What philosopher emphasized the use of reason, religious tolerance, freedom of speech , and separation of church and state?

Page 320: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Voltaire.

Page 321: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The ideas of the Enlightenment influenced what American?

Page 322: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Thomas Jefferson

Page 323: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Jefferson incorporated Enlightenment ideals into what documents?

Page 324: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The Declaration of Independence, Bill of Rights, and the Constitution.

Page 325: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The ideas of the Enlightenment can be credited with influencing revolutions in what countries?

Page 326: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The United States and France.

Page 327: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The Enlightenment also encouraged change in what other fields?

Page 328: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Art and Literature.

Page 329: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

Name two famous composers of the Enlightenment time period.

Page 330: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Bach and Mozart.

Page 331: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Who was a famous painter of the time?

Page 332: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Eugene Delacroix, painted “Liberty leading the people”

Page 333: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Who wrote the first novel?

Page 334: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Miguel Cervantes, wrote Don Quixote.

Page 335: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What new technologies were also developed during the Enlightenment era?

Page 336: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Better roads, farming techniques, ship design.

Page 337: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Where did the Industrial Revolution begin?

Page 338: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• England

Page 339: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Why did the IR begin in England?

Page 340: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• England had a supply of resources, money, and available labor.

Page 341: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What was the Enclosure Movement?

Page 342: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Large farms being formed, forcing small farmers out of business and leading them to move wherever jobs are.

Page 343: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What resources were important for Industrialization to begin?

Page 344: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Coal and Iron

Page 345: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Where did the IR spread to from England?

Page 346: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• United States and Western Europe

Page 347: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What industry led the industrialization movement?

Page 348: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Textiles.

Page 349: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What source of power was used to power the first machines?

Page 350: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Water power, factories were located near waterways.

Page 351: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What industries developed to support industrialization?

Page 352: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Mining, metal refining, railroads.

Page 353: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What invention allowed factories to move away from water and into the cities?

Page 354: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The Steam Engine.

Page 355: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Who is credited with inventing the steam engine?

Page 356: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• James Watt

Page 357: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• As factories moved to the cities, what happened?

Page 358: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• People moved to the cities because that’s where the jobs were.

Page 359: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What is the term for the growth of cities?

Page 360: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Urbanization

Page 361: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What were some positive effects of the IR?

Page 362: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Increased standard of living, population increases, education rises, literacy rates rise, better medicine, better living conditions, better transportation.

Page 363: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The IR led to the beginning of using who as a cheap labor source?

Page 364: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Children

Page 365: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What were some negative impacts of the IR?

Page 366: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Pollution, labor abuses.

Page 367: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Eli Whitney invented what?

Page 368: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The cotton gin. It was designed to make the lives of slaves easier, but actually led to increased slavery.

Page 369: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Henry Bessemer invented a better for making what?

Page 370: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• : Steel. His process made it much more affordable and easier to produce.

Page 371: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Edward Jenner saved many lives when he developed what?

Page 372: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• A vaccine for smallpox

Page 373: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Louis Pasteur advanced the scientific understanding of disease when he discovered what?

Page 374: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Bacteria.

Page 375: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Did everyone’s lives get better during the IR?

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• No, life got better for most people but not all.

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• Labor unions formed to fight for what?

Page 378: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Better working conditions, more pay, shorter hours.

Page 379: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Child labor was eventually ended through the work of?

Page 380: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Labor unions and government regulations.

Page 381: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What economic theory was developed by Adam Smith?

Page 382: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Capitalism

Page 383: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What book did Adam Smith write?

Page 384: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The Wealth of Nations

Page 385: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• According to Smith, what is important in capitalism?

Page 386: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Competition, no government intervention, people having choices.

Page 387: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Capitalism led to some people being rich and some being poor. A new economic theory came about that said everyone should be equal. What was it?

Page 388: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Socialism.

Page 389: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Who developed the ideas behind Socialism and Communism?

Page 390: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Karl Marx

Page 391: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What books did Karl Marx write?

Page 392: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Das Kapital and The Communist Manifesto.

Page 393: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• According to Marx, everyone should be __________.

Page 394: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Equal

Page 395: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• In Socialism, what role does the government play?

Page 396: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Redistribution of wealth and resources to ensure all are equal

Page 397: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What is it called when labor unions negotiate with business owners or management?

Page 398: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Collective Bargaining.

Page 399: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• As countries industrialized they needed more resources. This led to a desire for more colonies. What is the desire for an empire called?

Page 400: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Imperialism

Page 401: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Where did European countries look to establish colonies?

Page 402: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Asia and Africa

Page 403: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• European countries set up areas they controlled in China. What were these called?

Page 404: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Spheres of influence. Each European country had their own where only they could go to trade.

Page 405: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• European colonization led to the rise of what in Asia and Africa?

Page 406: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Nationalism.

Page 407: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• After World War I, what international organization was created to maintain the peace?

Page 408: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• League of Nations

Page 409: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The League was the idea of who?

Page 410: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• US President Wilson

Page 411: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What major power did not join the League?

Page 412: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• United States

Page 413: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What system was created to watch over the colonies and territories of the defeated countries?

Page 414: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Mandate System

Page 415: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The economic boom in the US was fueled in part by the growth of what?

Page 416: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Stock Market

Page 417: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Who rose to power in Italy?

Page 418: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Benito Mussolini

Page 419: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Italy invaded what African country in 1936?

Page 420: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Ethiopia

Page 421: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Who was the emperor of Japan during the Interwar Years?

Page 422: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Hirohito

Page 423: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What areas of Asia did Japan invade in a drive to capture resources and raw materials?

Page 424: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Korea, China, Manchuria

Page 425: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What is the term for a person who is forced to leave their homeland?

Page 426: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Refugee

Page 427: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Where have there been ethnic and religious conflicts in recent years?

Page 428: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Middle East, Northern Ireland, Balkins, Africa

Page 429: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What have conflicts in the Middle East been over?

Page 430: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Territory and Religion

Page 431: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What are some of the effects of globalization?

Page 432: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Rich countries exploit the poor, environmental pollution, use of resources.

Page 433: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• One of the major environmental issues facing the world today is what?

Page 434: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Climate Change

Page 435: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What is the relationship between economic and political freedom?

Page 436: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• As people gain economic freedom they begin wanting political freedom as well. Examples include Taiwan and South Korea.

Page 437: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What are some examples of international terrorism?

Page 438: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Munich Olympic attacks, 9/11/2001 attacks in the USA, car bombings, suicide bombings, airline hijackings.

Page 439: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• How did the Renaissance lead to the Reformation?

Page 440: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The ideas and spirit of seeking new information and questioning things led to people questioning the authority of the Catholic Church.

Page 441: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Whose actions began the Protestant Reformation?

Page 442: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Martin Luther

Page 443: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What did Martin Luther write and post?

Page 444: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• His 95 Theses, a list of complaints against the Church.

Page 445: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What happened to Luther?

Page 446: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• He was excommunicated from the Catholic Church and formed the Lutheran Church.

Page 447: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What are the main ideas of Lutheranism?

Page 448: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

Salvation by Faith.

Everyone is equal before God.

The Bible is the ultimate religious authority.

Page 449: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What is secularism?

Page 450: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Non-religious.

Page 451: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• How did the Renaissance and Reformation lead to a greater sense of individualism?

Page 452: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• People felt more free to question ideas and teachings, education increased, and people began to think of themselves in secular terms instead of religious

Page 453: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The Renaissance began where?

Page 454: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Italian City States

Page 455: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What does the word Renaissance mean? Of what?

Page 456: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Rebirth” of the ideas of the ancient world. Classical knowledge of Greece and Rome rediscovered.

Page 457: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What is Leonardo Da Vinci know for?

Page 458: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Painting the mona lisa and the Last Supper

Page 459: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What is Michelangelo known for?

Page 460: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The Sistine Chapel and sculpting the statue of David.

Page 461: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Why were trade routes important?

Page 462: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Allowed for the exchange of goods and ideas between places.

Page 463: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What were some advancements that were exchanged along trade routes?

Page 464: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

Paper, compass, silk from China

Textiles from India and Middle East

Page 465: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• This movement focused on the lives of individuals instead of religious matters.

Page 466: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Humanism

Page 467: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Who was the famous Dutch humanist who wrote a book attacking the Catholic Church?

Page 468: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Erasmus

Page 469: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What previous time periods had great influence on the beginnings of the Scientific Revolution?

Page 470: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The Renaissance and Reformation

Page 471: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Why did they have such influence?

Page 472: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• They encouraged people to think for themselves and weakened the power of the Catholic Church over people.

Page 473: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Louis XIV was from what dynasty?

Page 474: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Bourbon Dynasty

Page 475: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What did Louis XIV have built to show off the wealth and power of France?

Page 476: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Palace of Versailles

Page 477: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Which is the oldest of the world religions we have studied?

Page 478: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Hindiuism

Page 479: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What is known about the early history of Hinduism?

Page 480: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The founder and time are unknown. There is a general idea that is began approximately 6000 BCE.

Page 481: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Who is the founder of Judaism?

Page 482: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Abraham

Page 483: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Islam teaches that Muhammad received what?

Page 484: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The Third and Final Revelation

Page 485: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• In what regions of the world would you find Judaism today?

Page 486: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• North American and Israel

Page 487: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What was the term for pride in ones country, and a willingness or desire to fight to prove your country is superior?

Page 488: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Nationalism

Page 489: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What was term for placing great importance on the military, and wanting your military to be the strongest?

Page 490: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Militarism

Page 491: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What was the term for the desire of European nations to have colonies and an empire around the world?

Page 492: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• nationalism

Page 493: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Who led the United States in World War I?

Page 494: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Woodrow Wilson

Page 495: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What was the name of the peace plan Woodrow Wilson had?

Page 496: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The 14 Points

Page 497: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Wilson wanted the creation of what international organization?

Page 498: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• What role did Nationalism play in Europe in the lead up to WWII?

Page 499: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Allowed aggressive dictators to gain power by promising their people revenge and glory.

Page 500: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The failure of what international organization allowed aggression to occur?

Page 501: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The League of Nations

Page 502: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Why was the League of Nations unable to stop aggression?

Page 503: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• No power to enforce decisions, US did not join.

Page 504: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Why was Germany unable to block the trade routes to Britain?

Page 505: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• The British navy was stronger and once America entered the war we helped to secure the routes.

Page 506: SOL Review  Powerpoint By Gretchen  MacIlwaine

• Who was at the Potsdam Conference?

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• Truman, Stalin, Churchill

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• What did Truman issue that warned Japan to surrender?

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• The Potsdam Declaration

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• Good luck!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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