APUSH CH 3 IDENTIFICATION
Anne Hutchinson's heretical belief that the turly saved need not obey human or divine law
Antinomianism
Common fate of Roger Williams and Anne Hutchinson after they were convited of heresy in massachusetts bay
Banishment
The two major nonfarming industries of Massachusetts Bay
Fishing & Shipbuilding
Radical Calvinists who considered the Church of England so corrupt that they broke with it and formed their own independent churches
Separatists
The elite English university where John Cotton and many other Puritan leaders of New England had been educated
Cambridge
The name eventually applied to the Puritans' established church in Massachusetts and several other New England colonies
Congregational Church
English revolt of 1688-1689 that overthrew the Cattholic King James II and also led to the overthrow of the Dominioin of New England in America
Glorious Revolution
A major pan-Indian uprising of 1675-1676 that destroyed many Puritan towns but ultimately represented a major defeat for New England's indians
King Philip's War
The shipboard agreement by the Pilgrim Fathers to establish a body politic and submit to majority rule
Mayflower Compact
Vicious war waged by English settlers on their Narragansett Indian allies that virtually annihilated a major Indian tribe in Connecticut
Pequot War
William Penn's "city of brotherly love" that became the most prosperous and tolerant urban center in england's North American colonies
Philadelphia
Sixteenth-century religious reform movement begun by Martin Luther
Protestant Reformation
English Calvinists who sought a thorough cleansing of the Church of England while remaining officially within that church
Puritans
Collective term for the Pennsylvania statutes that prohibited the theater, cards, dice, and other activites and games deemed immoral
blue laws
Vast fuedal estates in the rich Hudson River valley that created an aristocratic elite in the New Netherland and later New York colony
patronshipps
