AP World History 1750-1900 Vocab
Tanzimet Reforms
19th century reforms by Ottoman rulers designed to make government and military more efficient
Spanish Civil War
A conflict from 1936 to 1939 that resulted in the installation of fascist dictator Francisco Franco as ruler of Spain; Franco's forces were backed by Germany and Italy, whereas the Soviet Union supported the opposing republican forces
Declaration of Independence
A document modeled after the political philosophies of John Locke. It altered the natural rights identified by John Locke to include "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness"
Self Strengthening Movement
A late 19th century movement in which the Chinese modernized their army and encouraged western investment in factories and railways
Romanticism
A literary and artistic movement in 19th century Europe; emphasized emotion over reason
Queu
A long ponytail that Chinese men were forced to wear to distinguish them from the Manchus
Domestic System
A manufacturing method in which the stages of the manufacturing process are carried out in private homes rather than a factory setting
Maoris
A member of a Polynesian group that settled in New Zealand about 800 CE
Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen
A statement of political rights adopted by the French National Assembly during the French Revolution
Communism
An economic system in which the state controls the means of production
Liberalism
An enlightenment philosophy that favored civil rights, the protection of private property, and representative government
Guano
Bird droppings used as fertilizer; a major trade item of Peru in the late 19th century
Suez Canal
Canal constructed by Egypt across the Isthmus of Suez in 1869
Napoleonic Code
Collection of laws that standardized French law under the rule of Napoleon Bonaparte
Spanish American War
Conflict between the United States and Spain that began the rise of the United States as a world power
Economic Imperialism
Control of a country's economy by the business of another nation
Revolutions of 1848
Democratic and nationalistic revolutions, most of them unsuccessful, that swept through Europe
Spheres of Influence
Divisions of a country in which a particular foreign nation enjoys economic privileges
Jacobins
Extreme radicals during the French revolution
Theory of Relativity
Idea which argued that time and space were relative to one another
Theory of Natural Selection
Idea, first proposed by Charles Darwin, that species survive due to favorable characteristics
Conservatism
In 19th century Europe, a movement that supported monarchies, aristocracies, and state-established churches
Proletarian
In marxist theory, the class of workers in an industrial society
Factors of Production
Land, Labor, Capital, Entrepreneurship, which existed in Britain which allowed it to lead in the Industrial Revolution
Zaibatsu
Large industrial organization created in Japan during the Industrialization of the late 19th century
Conscription
Military draft
Monroe Doctrine
Policy issued by the United States in which it declared that the Western hemisphere was off limits to colonization of other powers
Indian National Congress
Political party that became the leader of the Indian Nationalist movement
Congress of Vienna
Restored legitimate monarchs to the thrones of Europe and to create a balance of power
Boxer Rebellion
Revolt against foreign residents of China
Sepoy Rebellion
Revolt of Indian soldiers against the British; caused by a military practice in violation of the Muslim and Hindu faiths (1857)
Natural Rights
Rights that belong to every person and that no government may take away
Great Trek
Slaveholding Boers, who in 1834, left the Cape Colony and moved to the interior of Africa
Young Turks
Society founded in 1889 in the Ottoman Empire; its goal was to restore the constitution of 1876 and to reform the empire
Boers
South Africans of Dutch descent
Sepoys
South Asian soldiers who served in the British army in India
Revolution of 1905
Strikes by urban workers and peasants in Russia; prompted by shortages of food and by Russia's loss to Japan in 1905
Bourgeoisie
The French class of merchants and artisans who were members of the 3rd estate and initiators of the French Revolution; in Marxist theory, a term referring to factory owners
Qing Dynasty
The Manchurian invaders who ruled China from 1644 to the early 1900s
Duma
The Russian parliament
Raj
The Sanskrit name for the British government in India
Entrepreneurship
The ability to combine the factors of land, labor and capital to create factory production
Social Darwinism
The application of Darwin's philosophy of natural selection to human society
Separation of Powers
The division of powers among the legislative, executive, and judicial branches of government
Estates
The divisions of society in pre-revolutionary France
Imperialism
The establishment of colonial empires
Enclosure Movement
The fencing of pasture land in England beginning prior to the Industrial Revolution
Bill of Rights
The first 10 amendments to the constitution of the United States
Berlin Conference
The meeting of European imperialist powers to divide Africa among them
Capital
The money and equipment needed to engage in industrialization
Feminism
The movement to achieve women's rights
Reign of Terror
The period of the most extreme violence during the French Revolution
Manifest Destiny
The policy in the US that led to its expansion from the Atlantic to the Pacific
Meiji Restoration
The restoration of the Meiji emperor in Japan in 1868 that began a program of industrialization and centralization of Japan following the end of the Tokugawa Shogunate
Extraterritoriality
The right of foreigners to live under the laws of their home country rather than those of the host country
Gran Columbia
The temporary union of the northern portion of South America after the independence movements led by Simon Bolivar
Estates-General
The traditional legislative body of France
Industrial Revolution
The transition between the domestic system of manufacturing and the mechanization of production in a factory setting
Treaty of Nanking
Treaty ending the Opium War that ceded Hong Kong to the British (1842)
Pogrom
Violence against Jews in tsarist Russia
Opium War
War between Great Britain and china began with the Qing dynasty's refusal to allow continued opium importation into China; British victory resulted in the Treaty of Nanking (1839-1842)
Sino-Japanese War
War between Japan and China, in 1895, over control over Korea
Russo-Japanese War
War between Russia and Japan over Manchurian territory; resulted in the defeat of Russia by the Japanese Navy
Boer War
War between the British and the Dutch over Dutch independence in South Africa; resulted in British ?