According to the attend section in unit 2, there was a great impact from The Enlightenment and The Great Awakening on colonial society in America. The first large-scale religious revival aligned with Enlightenment ideas, it also severed colonial ties with structures of religious authority. It created a unified movement for the four colonies. They were taught that individuals could find heaven if they worked hard enough, not just if they were predestined to go. and that allowed emotional expressions and that became The Great Awakening.
However, the harsh slave system is what lead the colonies together. It allowed the colonies to unify, find common cause, and allow the colonies to develop into a unique society as one. Alongside the Great
The Influences of a Democratic Society
Amid the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, colonial America saw
significant progressions. Population expanded exponentially with migrants coming in extensive
numbers. It was during this period of economic expansion that colonial America experienced two
major revivals that had lasting effects on the country with the regard to religion, government and
human nature. The Enlightenment focused on challenging authoritarian rule, and the Great
A…
Chapter 4 & 5 Guided Reading Questions
1. Define the policy of mercantilism in your own words and describe whom it benefited (and how) and whom it hurt (and how). What were the benefits and drawbacks of the system of easy credit between British merchants and American colonists? Mercantilism was basically a system to improve trade between the colonies and England. It gave favor to the idea of more export and less import. Under this idea, trading is balanced. Colonies made commodities that British…
Prompts:
1. Explain the ways the people of the New and Old Worlds affected each other when their societies came in contact in the late 15th century.
(Page 18) When they first came in contact with the natives, the Europeans learned of the rich deposits of gold and silver.
(Page 18) Diseases such as influenza, measles, chicken pox, mumps, typhus, and small pox were imported to the New World by the Europeans. The Europeans had already developed partial immunity to these diseases, but…
CHAPTER 3
America within the British colonial system
The king chose governors of each colony except RI and CT. They executed the local laws, appointed many minor officials, summoned and dismissed the colonial assemblies, and proposed legislation to them. Governors had no security of tenure, and they are thousands of miles away from London.
Each colony had a legislator except Pennsylvania. Which consists of two houses: lower and upper house. Lower house had general legislative powers. On the…
Europe provided markets, capital, & technology
Africa provided labor
New World provided raw materials & farmland
Chapter 2:
4) How did England’s victory over the Spanish Armada influence English colonization?
Helped ensure English naval dominance in North Atlantic
Nationalism spread throughout England
5) How was the Virginia charter significant and how did it lead to revolution a century and a half later?
First English charter for settlement in New World
Guaranteed overseas settlers same…
in return for manufactured goods. The southern colonies economy was based greatly on farming crops, such as tobacco, rice, and wheat. The middle colonies thrived off large productions of barley, wheat, oats, and rye. The New England colonies did not have great soil for farming and, in turn, most of their economy came from…
Chapter 15
APUSH
Katherin Umana
Chapter 15: The Ferment of Reform and Culture
Big Picture Themes:
1. The "Second Great Awakening" began in the 1830s. It's purpose was to wake people from lackluster
religion and, like the First Great Awakening, was led by passionate and emotional preachers.
2. The Mormons emerged from these beginnings and wandered westward to the Great Salt Lake.
3. Free public schools began in large measure.
4. There was push to ban alcohol called "temperance." This was…
the French, Spanish, and English in colonizing the New World. What common perception of the region did they share? Discuss the differences in their relationship with Native…
2.When and why did Europeans “discover” the Americas? What were the chief features of the Spanish Empire in America? The French and Dutch Empires in America? What was the relationship between the European explorers and colonists and the native peoples?
Reasons for discovery: Prosperity in Europe, Growing European populations, Desire for a shorter trade route, Advances in sailing, renaissance, Christianize the heathen, consolidation of European monarchies. Ferdinand and Isabella sent Columbus…
are being seen in a different light, with more emphasis on how they developed to their current point and how they were affected by and affected Europeans and the United States. This should now be considered American History only to the extent that it affected American History. Since the heavier influence from the areas is very recent, the past sections of American history should only be altered to include areas where a substantial influence by a Mexican or Latin American person, country, or custom…