Summary

These notes contain questions and answers on various historical topics, including the French and Indian War, the American Revolution, and early American settlements. The content covers key figures, events, and motivations related to this period.

Full Transcript

Q: What was the Treaty of Paris a result of? A: The French and Indian War. Q: What territory did Great Britain gain after the French and Indian War? A: France's territories in North America. Q: What financial state was Great Britain in after the French and Indian War? A: Great Britain was in debt....

Q: What was the Treaty of Paris a result of? A: The French and Indian War. Q: What territory did Great Britain gain after the French and Indian War? A: France's territories in North America. Q: What financial state was Great Britain in after the French and Indian War? A: Great Britain was in debt. Q: What did the Proclamation of 1763 restrict? A: Settlement west of the Appalachian Mountains. Q: What was the purpose of the Sugar Act? A: To raise revenue by taxing sugar and molasses. Q: What was the Stamp Act? A: A tax requiring colonists to pay for an official stamp on paper goods. Q: What did the Declaratory Act assert? A: Parliament's right to make laws binding the colonies. Q: What was "no taxation without representation" a response to? A: British taxes without colonial representation in Parliament. Q: What was the Boston Tea Party? A: A protest where colonists dumped British tea into Boston Harbor. Q: What was the Coercive Acts' (Intolerable Acts) goal? A: To punish Massachusetts for the Boston Tea Party. Q: What goods did the Townshend Acts tax? A: Imported goods like glass, lead, paint, paper, and tea. Q: Who was Crispus Attucks? A: The first casualty of the American Revolution at the Boston Massacre. Q: What was the result of the Boston Massacre? A: Increased tensions between colonists and British soldiers. Q: What did the Tea Act aim to do? A: Help the struggling British East India Company by selling tea directly to the colonies. Q: Who warned of the British advance before the battles of Lexington and Concord? A: Paul Revere. Q: What did the First Continental Congress do? A: Organize a boycott of British goods. Q: What was the outcome of the Second Continental Congress? A: The Declaration of Independence and the appointment of George Washington as commander of the Continental Army. Q: What was the Mayflower Compact? A: An agreement for self-government by the Pilgrims in Plymouth Colony. Q: Who was Anne Hutchinson? A: A Puritan leader who was banished from Massachusetts for her religious views. Q: What colony did Roger Williams found after being banished from Massachusetts? A: Rhode Island. Q: What was the Middle Passage? A: The voyage of enslaved Africans across the Atlantic to the Americas. Q: What was a primary reason for the beginning of slavery in North America? A: A shortage of laborers. Q: What replaced indentured servants in the American colonies? A: African slaves. Q: What was the Stono Rebellion? A: A slave rebellion in South Carolina in 1739. Q: Who was Moses in the context of the slave church? A: An important figure who symbolized freedom. Q: What did the Navigation Acts enforce? A: Colonists could only trade with Britain and certain goods had to pass through British ports. Q: What did the Columbian Exchange involve? A: The exchange of plants, animals, and diseases between the Old and New Worlds. Q: Who was Ferdinand Magellan? A: The leader of the first expedition to circumnavigate the globe. Q: What was Hernan Cortez famous for? A: Conquering the Aztec Empire in Mexico. Q: Why did King Henry VIII seek an annulment from Catherine of Aragon? A: She could not bear him a son, which he saw as necessary for succession. Q: Who was Anne Boleyn? A: The second wife of Henry VIII and mother of Queen Elizabeth I. Q: What was the Act of Supremacy? A: The law that declared Henry VIII the head of the Church of England. Q: Who succeeded Henry VIII as king? A: His son, Edward VI. Q: What religious change did Queen Mary I attempt during her reign? A: She tried to restore Catholicism in England. Q: Who was Queen Elizabeth I? A: The daughter of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn, who reigned for 45 years and established Protestantism in England. Q: What did the Treaty of Tordesillas divide? A: It divided the newly discovered lands between Spain and Portugal. Q: What was the significance of the Boston Massacre? A: It was a deadly confrontation between British soldiers and American colonists that escalated tensions. Q: What was the purpose of the English mercantilism system? A: To ensure that the colonies provided raw materials to Britain and consumed British manufactured goods. Q: What were the Intolerable Acts? A: British laws passed to punish Massachusetts for the Boston Tea Party. Q: Who was Balboa, and what did he discover? A: A Spanish explorer who was the first European to see the Pacific Ocean. Q: What did the Church of England encourage in relation to Spanish ships? A: To attack Spanish ships and steal riches (piracy). Q: What was the fate of the Roanoke colony? A: The colony disappeared, and no one knows what happened to the settlers. Q: What was the Spanish Armada? A: A Spanish fleet sent to invade England in 1588, but it was defeated. Q: What was the result of the defeat of the Spanish Armada? A: It boosted English pride and weakened Spain. Q: Who established Jamestown, and when? A: Jamestown was established by the English in 1607. Q: What was the main economic motivation behind Jamestown? A: To find gold and a western water passage to Asia. Q: What major problem did early Jamestown settlers face? A: They lacked farming skills and suffered from disease. Q: What extreme measures did Jamestown settlers resort to during the "starving time"? A: Cannibalism; some settlers ate human flesh to survive. Q: What changes occurred in Jamestown with the arrival of new colonists and Governor Lord De La Warr? A: The colony began to stabilize, with better leadership, laws, and the cultivation of tobacco. Q: How did the population of Jamestown grow between 1619 and 1624? A: By 1624, the population grew to 1,300 due to new colonists arriving. Q: How did Columbus's 1492 map differ from reality? A: It underestimated the size of the world and did not include the Americas. Q: Why did King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella sponsor Columbus’s voyage? A: To find a direct trade route to Asia and expand Spanish influence. Q: Where did Columbus first land during his voyage in 1492, and where did he think he was? A: He landed in the Bahamas and thought he had reached India.

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