Semester 1 & 2 AP Euro Review
Boxer Rebellion
A 1900 uprising in China aimed at ending foreign influence in the country.
Battle of the Somme
A 1916 British offensive designed to take some pressure off the defenders at Verdun that saw many lives lost with little gain
Balfour Declaration
A 1917 British statement that declared British support for a National Home for the Jewish people in Palestine
Sergei Kirov
A Bolshevik party member whose assassination ("killed by fascist agents within the party") in 1934 was used by Stalin to justify the Great Purge
Horatio H. Kitchener
A British force, under _______ __ __________, met their foe at Omdurman, where 10,000 poorly armed Sudanese Muslim troops were cut down by the recently invented Maxim machine gun in a battle that killed only 28 Britons. Continuing up the Nile River, his armies found that a small French force had already occupied the village of Fashoda, resulting in a serious diplomatic crisis and threat of war.
Gosplan
A huge State Planning Commission created to set production goals and control flow of raw and finished materials
Battle of Stalingrad
A key Soviet victory during World War II that ended Hitler's effort to conquer the USSR; turning point on the Eastern Front
Palace of Versailles
A large royal residence built in the seventeenth century by King Louis XIV of France in Versailles, near Paris.
Stamp Act of 1765
A law passed by Parliament taxing a long list of items, mainly paper-based things like contracts and newspapers
Führer
A leader-dictator title used by Hitler during his reign over Germany
Imre Nagy
A liberal Communist reformer who was installed as the new Prime Minister of Hungary by Students and workers in October 1956. He proposed to democratize the country. He was executed by the Soviets.
José de San Martín
A liberal-minded military commander and South American revolutionary who defeated Spanish forces in Argentina and Chile.
Stream-of-consciousness technique
A literary format that uses interior monologue to explore the human psyche
Amerigo Vespucci
A mapmaker and explorer who said that the lands being explored to Europe's west were, in fact, a new continent, so America was named after him.
Council of Trent
A meeting held to discuss and reform practices of the Catholic Church. It reaffirmed some of the core beliefs of the Church while reforming other practices and cracking down on abuses
National Socialism
A movement and political party driven by extreme nationalism and racism, led by Adolf Hitler; its adherents ruled Germany from 1933 to 1945 and forced Europe into World War II.
Fascism
A movement characterized by extreme, often expansionist, nationalism, antisocialism, a dynamic leader, and glorification of war and the military
Zionism
A movement founded in the 1890s to promote the establishment of a Jewish homeland in Palestine.
Existentialism
A philosophy that stresses the meaninglessness of existence and the importance of the individual in searching for moral values in an uncertain world; popular on the European continent
Nativism
A policy of favoring native-born individuals over foreign-born ones
Jacobin Club
A political club in Revolutionary France whose members were well-educated radical republicans
Popular Front
A short-lived New Deal-inspired alliance of left wing political groups that launched a far-reaching program of social reform in France
Paris Commune
A socialist takeover of Paris in 1870. It was ultimately crushed by French army forces, but inspired later socialist revolts, such as the Russian Revolution of 1917
water frame
A spinning machine created by Richard Arkwright that had a capacity of several hundred spindles and used waterpower; it therefore required a larger and more specialized mill--a factory.
RADAR
A system that uses reflected radio waves to detect objects and measure their distance and speed
Millet System
A system used by the Ottomans whereby subjects were divided into religious communities, with each millet (nation) enjoying autonomous self-government under its religious leaders.
Trench warfare
A type of fighting used in WW I behind rows of dug out defensive fortifications, mines, and barbed wire
Hyperinflation
A very rapid rise in the price level of goods; seen in Weimar Germany in the 1920s
Hundred Years' War
A war between France and England that lasted from the middle of the fourteenth century to the middle of the fifteenth. The kings of England invaded France, trying to claim the throne.
Blitzkrieg
"Lightning war"; German strategy of using the air force to bomb the enemy first, quickly followed by mobile tanks (panzers) and troop carriers
Lebensraum
"Living space"; Nazi ideology saying the German race needed room to spread out and grow by taking over regions to the east and replacing "inferior" current occupants
Kristallnacht
"Night of Broken Glass"; 1938 pogrom against Jewish communities. Nazi gangs smashed Jewish stores, burned synagogues, and killed dozens of Jews
Vichy France
"Puppet" government in southern France; basically run by Germany during the German occupation of the rest of France
Gulag
"Re-education camps"; forced labor camps used by the Soviet regime to punish political opponents
il Duce
"The Leader"; Mussolini's nickname as the strongman of Italy
Mensheviks
"minority group," who wanted a more democratic, reformist party with mass membership.
Nonalignment
Policy of postcolonial governments to remain neutral in the Cold War and play both the United States and the Soviet Union for what they could get.
Marie Curie
Polish physicist who discovered radium constantly emits subatomic particles and thus does not have an atomic weight
Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany)
Portion of Germany aligned with the US
German Democratic Republic (East Germany)
Portion of Germany aligned with the USSR
Ferdinand Magellan
Portuguese explorer in the service of Spain who led the first expedition around the world.
Displaced persons
Postwar refugees, including 13 million Germans, former Nazi prisoners and forced laborers, and orphaned children
New Deal
Pres. F.D. Roosevelt's plan to reform capitalism in order to preserve it in the face of high unemployment and bank failures of the Great Depression
President Hindenburg
President of the German Reich. After the Reichstag fire was blamed on Communists, he was convinced to sign emergency acts to abolish freedom of speech and assembly, among other liberties.
Hideki Tojo
Prime Minister of Japan for much of WWII
Winston Churchill
Prime Minister of the UK from 1940-1945
Functionalism
Principle that buildings should serve as well as possible the purpose for which they were made, without excessive ornamentation
Alsace-Lorraine
Provinces along the French-German border that were ceded to the Germans after the Franco-Prussian war of 1870-71
Schleswig-Holstein
Provinces of Denmark that were majority German and were "liberated" by Austria and Prussia in 1864
Sigmund Freud
Psychologist who said human behavior was basically irrational, governed by the unconscious
Prince Henry the Navigator
Pushed Portuguese efforts to explore a sea route around Africa in order to reach Asia
Belgium
Put up a fight against Germany in 1914, delaying the Schlieffen Plan and contributing to its ultimate failure
Thirty Years' War
A war waged in the early seventeenth century that involved France, Spain, Sweden, Denmark, Austria, and numerous states of Germany. The causes of the war were rooted in national rivalries and in conflict between Roman Catholics and Protestants.
Wealth of Nations (1776)
Adam Smith's influential treatise on how the economies of countries should work. The basis of economic liberalism.
Bretton Woods Agreement
Agreement in 1944 that linked Western currencies to the US dollar and established the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank to facilitate free markets and world trade.
T.E. Lawrence
Aided Hussein in 1917 in a successful guerrilla war against the Turks on the Arabian peninsula
Czarevitch Alexis
Alexandra and Nicholas's son who had hemophilia and was supposedly healed by Rasputin. He was heir to the throne.
Operation Torch
Allied forces invaded North Africa from the west, trapping Axis troops in the middle of Brits coming from the east. Helped take N. Africa, which will be used as a launching pad toward Italy
1st Battle of the Marne
Allied victory early in the war that halted the Schlieffen Plan and began a stalemate on the Western Front. Associated with the Parisian taxis used to shuttle troops to the battle
General Paul von Hindenburg
Along with Erich Ludendorff, established a military dictatorship in Germany and called for the ultimate mobilization for total war
General Erich Ludendorff
Along with Paul von Hindenburg, established a military dictatorship in Germany and called for the ultimate mobilization for total war
Truman Doctrine
America's policy geared to containing communism to those countries already under Soviet control.
Dwight D. Eisenhower
American General who began in North Africa and became the Commander of Allied forces in Europe; architect of the D-Day invasions
Benjamin Franklin
American ambassador to Paris during the war. He was an overall intelligent Enlightenment thinker
Battle of Iwo Jima
American amphibious invasion during World War II stemmed from the need for a base near the Japanese coast. Following elaborate preparatory air and naval bombardment, three U.S. marine divisions landed on the island in February 1945. This place was defended by roughly 23,000 Japanese army and navy troops, who fought from an elaborate network of caves, dugouts, tunnels and underground installations. Despite the difficulty of the conditions, the marines wiped out the defending forces after a month of fighting, and the battle earned a place in American lore with the publication of a photograph showing the U.S. flag being raised in victory.
General Douglas MacArthur
American general best known for his command of Allied forces in the Pacific Theater during World War II.
2.5
Amount, in billions of gold marks, the Germans were expected to pay the Allies in reparations each year
Dadaism
An artistic movement of the 1920s & 1930s that attacked all accepted standards of art and behavior and delighted in outrageous conduct
Guild system
An association of merchants or artisans that oversees the practice of a particular craft in that town
COMECON (Council for Mutual Economic Assistance)
An economic organization of Communist states intended to rebuild the East Bloc independently of the West
Revisionism
An effort by moderate socialists to update Marxist doctrines to reflect the realities of the time.
Ludwig Wittgenstein
Austrian philosopher who later immigrated to England and brought with his logical positivist ideas. "Of what one cannot speak, of that one must keep silent"
Marie Antoinette
Austrian princess that became the Queen of France; was hated by most people and was executed
Friedrich Engels
Author of "The Condition of the Working Class in England" and co-author of "The Communist Manifesto" with Karl Marx
Adam Smith
Author of "The Wealth of Nations" and father of capitalism
Thomas Malthus
Author of the "Essay on the Principle of Population" which argued that population was outgrowing food supply
Thomas Paine
Author of the influential pamphlet "Common Sense", he proposed that the island of Britain was too small a body to rule over the large colonial territory
Guomingdang (National People's Party)
Authoritarian party led by Jian Jeishi (Chaing Kai-shek)
Class-conciousness
Awareness of belonging to a distinct social & economic class whose interests might conflict with those of other classes
Corn Laws
British laws governing the import and export of grain, which were revised in 1815 to prohibit the importation of foreign grain unless the price at home rose to improbable levels, thus benefiting the aristocracy but making food prices high for working people.
Combination Acts
British laws passed in 1799 that outlawed unions and strikes, favoring capitalist business owners over skilled artisans
Cecil Rhodes
British military commander who believed in expansion and founded the De Beers Mining Company
Appeasement
British policy granting concessions to Hitler in order to avoid war
Rudyard Kipling
British writer who wrote of "The White Man's Burden" and justified imperialism
V.I. Lenin
By spring 1921, _____ and the Bolsheviks had won the civil war. He decided to switch from War Communism to the New Economic Policy (NEP). He died in 1924 following a series of strokes and did not leave a chosen successor.
Transubstantiation
Catholic belief that the bread and wine actually become the body and blood of Christ.
Cornelius Jansen
Catholic bishop of Ypres who called for a return to the austere, strict Christianity of St. Augustine. Accepted predestination was outlawed by Rome
Christian Democrats
Center-right political parties that rose to power in Western Europe after WW II
Heinrich Brüning
Chancellor of Germany who tried cutting back spending and balancing the budget and forcing down prices and wages to help bring Germany out of the Great Depression. This tactics did not work.
Louis Philippe
Charles's cousin who was seated by the upper middle class. He was concerned with the middle class and often favored them over the other classes.
Robert Jackson
Chief US prosecutor at Nuremberg
Red Chinese
Chinese Communists under Mao Zedong who began building a new society that adapted Marxism to Chinese Conditions.
Sun Yatsen
Chinese revolutionary, first president and founding father of the Republic of China
Guangzhou (Canton)
Chinese trade regulation required all foreign merchants to live in the southern port of _________.
Second Battle of El-Alamein
Churchill would later call this battle the "Hinge of Fate." It turned the tide of the war as British forces began pushing Germans back from the east.
Hiroshima
City in Japan, the first to be destroyed by an atomic bomb, on August 6, 1945.
St. Petersburg
City in Russia founded by Tsar Peter the Great; From 1713-1728 and 1732 - 1918, it was the capital of imperial Russia
War of the Roses
Civil war for the English crown between the York (white) and Lancaster (red) families
Weimar Republic
Civilian government in Germany that replaced William II and the imperial gov't in 1918. Forced to accept the Treaty of Versailles
War Guilt Clause
Clause in the Treaty of Versailles that forced Germany to accept blame for starting World War I and therefore had to pay astronomical reparations
Atlantic Wall
Coastal defense built by Nazis surrounding coast of Europe and Scandinavia, designed to repel invasion by the Allies in Western Europe
Big Science
Combination of theoretical work with sophisticated engineering in a large bureaucratic organization to increase funding for technological advancements
Matthew Perry
Commodore of the US Navy who opened up Japan with the Treaty of Kanagawa. Practiced gun boat diplomacy
Korean War
Communist North Korea invaded South Korea in 1950. This war kept Korea divided. It further stimulated economic growth.
Josip Broz Tito
Communist chief of Yugoslavia who stood up to Stalin in 1948 and kept his country independent of the Soviet Bloc
Potsdam Conference
Conference in July 1945. Demands for free elections (refused by Stalin), turn attention to the defeat of Japan
Tehran Conference
Conference in November of 1943. Talked about strategies to win the war, Germany first then Japan, and advocated for a second front in France.
Opium Wars
Conflict between Britain and China in 1839 over the opening of China to foreign trade; Britain wins and China weakens
Crimean War
Conflict from 1853-56 that featured an alliance of GB, France, Ottoman Empire, & Sardinia defeating Russia
Total war
Conflict in which all a country's resources go to the war effort. Distinctions between soldier & civilian are blurred, gov'ts plan and control the economy & social life
Seven Years' War
Conflict that succeeded the War of Austrian Succession. In this war, Austria tried to win back Silesia, while France took on Britain across the globe, notably the French & Indian War in North America
Prince Klemens von Metternich
Conservative foreign minister of Austria and the architect of the Congress of Vienna
Sultan Abdülhamid II
Conservatives detested the religious reforms' departure from Islamic tradition and threw their support to ______ __________ __, who abandoned the model of European liberalism in his long and repressive reign.
Cartesian Dualism
Descartes's view that all of reality could ultimately be reduced to mind and matter.
Afrikaners
Descendants of the Dutch settlers in the Cape Colony in southern Africa
Walter Gropius
Designed the Fagus shoe factory. Glass façade and cube-like feel are new architectural elements. ________ founded the Bauhaus, a school of fine and applied arts that brought together many leading architects, designers, and theatrical innovators.
Orientalism
Discourse that positions the West as culturally superior to the East
Isaac Newton
Discovered the law of universal gravitation as well as the concepts of centripetal force and acceleration. His great accomplishment was a single explanatory system that could integrate the astronomy of Copernicus and Kepler's laws with the physics of Galileo and his predecessors.
Triumph of the Will
Documentary based on the 1934 Nazi Party rally at Nuremberg
Cornelius Vermuyden
Dutch engineer who created new farmlands by draining swamps in the Dutch Republic & England
Erasmus
Dutch, believed all Christians should read the bible, wrote the education of a Christian Prince and the Praise of Folly, thought that education is the means to reform and Christianity is an inner attitude of the heart and spirit
Rasputin
Eccentric monk assassinated because of his corrupt influence on the Russian royal family
John Maynard Keynes
Economist who famously denounced the Treaty of Versailles, saying it would impoverish Germany, encourage Bolshevism, and hurt all countries
David Ricardo
Economist who posited that because of pop. growth, wages would always sink to subsistence levels... the "iron law of wages"
Theory of special relativity
Einstein's theory that time and space are relative to the observer and that only the speed of light remains constant
Olaudah Equiano
Former slave who won fame by publishing his autobiography in England
Theodor Herzl
Founder of the Zionist movement
War Raw Materials Board
Rationed and distributed raw materials. Every useful material from foreign oil to barnyard manure was inventoried and rationed. Launched successful attempts to produce substitutes for scarce war supplies. Food was rationed in accordance with physical need.
Ego
Freud's term for a balancing force between the id and the demands of society
Id
Freud's term for our inborn basic drives
Herbert Hoover
Reacted to the Great Depression with dogged optimism and limited action.
Sudetenland
Region of Czechoslovakia containing many ethnic Germans. Hitler demanded it and it was handed over to him at the Munich Conference
John Calvin
Religious reformer who believed in predestination and a strict sense of morality for society
Northern Renaissance
Renaissance that occurred in Europe north of the Alps. Before 1497, Italian Renaissance humanism had little influence outside Italy. From the late 15th century, its ideas spread around Europe.
Charles de Gaulle
Resigned from provisional gov't in France in 1946. He was reelected French president in 1958. He was reinstated as Prime Minister of France in 1962 and calmed the situation in Algeria.
Triple Alliance
Germany, Austria-Hungary, & Italy. The first two will make up the core of the Central Powers in WW I
Red Shirts
Giuseppe Garibaldi's band of 1,000 patriotic guerrilla freedom fighters in Italy
Works Progress Administration
Gov't agency that constructed infrastructure in order to put people to work.
Guest worker programs
Government-run programs in western Europe designed to recruit labor for the booming postwar economy.
Galileo Galilei
Great achievement was the elaboration and consolidation of the experimental method. He discovered that a uniform force produced a uniform acceleration and formulated the law of inertia.
Luddites
Group of handicraft workers who attacked factories in northern England, smashing machines they believed were putting them out of work
Consumer Revolution
Growth in consumption and new attitudes toward consumer goods that emerged in North West Europe in latter 18th century
Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen
Guaranteed liberty, property, security, and resistance to oppression to all free Frenchmen
Archduke Franz Ferdinand
He was assassinated on June 28, 1914 in Sarajevo, Bosnia. His death was the spark that ignited the war.
Henry M. Stanley
He was sent by Leopold to the Congo basin, where he established trading stations, signed unfair treaties with African chiefs, and planted the Belgian flag.
Alexander Ypsilanti
Hero of Greek independence in the 1820s. He was a general in the Russian army who helped organize revolts against the Ottomans, but died before Greece won its independence
General Francisco Franco
Hitler intervened in the Spanish Civil war to help _______ ___________ _______ and the revolutionary Fascists defeat the republican government.
SA
Hitler's "storm troopers" or "brown shirts"; a paramilitary group used violence to intimidate political opponents
Mein Kampf
Hitler's autobiographical book outlining his ideology as well as his future plans
SS
Hitler's personal elite bodyguard; would grow after the Night of Long Knives and would eventually take over responsibility for carrying out concentration camp system
New Order
Hitler's program based on racial imperialism, which gave preferential treatment to the Nordic peoples; the French, an "inferior" Latin people, occupied a middle position; and Slavs and Jews were treated harshly as "subhumans."
Lin Zexu
In 1839, the Chinese government sent special envoy ___ ____ to Guangzhou to deal with drug dealers. He punished Chinese who purchased opium and seized the opium supplies of the British merchants, who then withdrew to the barren island of Hong Kong.
Eduard Berstein
Revisionist socialist who wrote "Evolutionary Socialism" to encourage a change in socialist tactics to be more gradualist and less violent
Qing (Manchu) Dynasty
In 1860 the two-hundred-year-old ____ Dynasty in China appeared on the verge of collapse; efforts to repel foreigners had failed, and rebellion and chaos wracked the country.
Alfred Dreyfus
In 1894, a Jewish captain in the French army was falsely accused and convicted of treason, an action that was supported by anti-Semites and most of the Catholic establishment and opposed by civil libertarians and most of the more radical republicans.
Cold War
Rivalry between the US & USSR that divided much of Europe into a Soviet-aligned Communist bloc and a US-aligned capitalist bloc from 1945-1989
White Man's Burden
Rudyard Kipling's well known poem that is understood as a forceful if somewhat anxious justification for Western imperialism.
Czar Alexander II
Ruler of Russia who freed the serfs in 1861 following a disastrous showing at the Crimean War. He would be assassinated by radicals in 1881.
Czar Alexander III
Ruler who imposed strict censorship codes and oppressed minority groups to establish a uniform Russian culture. Tried to avoid the fate of his father.
Czar Nicholas I of Russia
Russian emperor, often considered the personification of classic autocracy; for his reactionary policies, he has been called the emperor who froze Russia for 30 years
Alexander Kerensky
Russian lawyer and politician who served as the minister of the Russian Provisional Government. Big mistake was remaining in WW I
"Night of the Long Knives"
SA leaders arrested and executed on June 30, 1934 by Schutzstaffel (SS = black-shirted elite soldiers of Hitler's personal bodyguard). They were led by Heinrich Himmler. purge of Nazi leaders by Adolf Hitler on June 30, 1934. Fearing that the paramilitary SA had become too powerful, Hitler ordered his elite SS guards to murder the organization's leaders, including Ernst Röhm.
Simone de Beauvoir
Satre's life-long intellectual partner and extentialist; An important feminist in the modern feminist movement
Petrarch
Saw the 14th century as a new golden age and revival of ancient Roman culture, admired Livy and wrote a letter to him
Sykes-Picot Agreement of 1916
Secret deal between Britain and France that agreed that Ottoman territories would be administered by European powers in what will later be called the mandate system.
Home Rule
Self-government
Adelheid Popp
Self-taught working woman who became an influential socialist leader and editor of German socialist newspaper.
John Kay
Inventor of the flying shuttle, which allowed weavers to work more quickly on their looms
Guglielmo Marconi
Inventor of the radio
Tewfiq
Ismail's weak son who took over his father's throne
King Leopold II of Belgium
Sent explorers to the Congo, which set off a scramble for African territory among the Europeans
Declaration of Independence
Issued in July 1776, this compiled list of grievances against the English government also said that all men are created equal with rights to life, liberty, & the pursuit of happiness
Black Shirts
Italian Fascist members of Mussolini's combat squads who attacked anyone who disagreed with their party.
Giuseppe Mazzini
Italian nationalist whose writings spurred the movement for a unified and independent Italy. Led a failed revolution in 1848 that briefly established a republic in Rome.
Giuseppe Garibaldi
Italian patriot and leader of the Red Shirts whose conquest of Sicily and Naples led to the formation of the Italian state
Benito Mussolini
Italian politician who led the National Fascist Party and created Fascism
Lorenzo d' Medici
Italian statesman and de facto ruler of the Florentine Republic, who was the most powerful and enthusiastic patron of the Renaissance.
Vittorio Orlando
Italian statesman and prime minister during the concluding years of World War I and head of his country's delegation to the Versailles Peace Conference.
December 7, 1941
Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, which brought the US into World War II, happened on this date
Nagasaki
Japanese city in which the second atomic bomb was dropped on August 9, 1945
Walter Rathenau
Jewish industrialist; Under him the War Raw Materials Board launched successful attempts to produce substitutes, such as synthetic rubber and nitrates for scarce war supplies
Louis Blanc
Journalist who urged workers to agitate for universal voting rights and take control of the state peacefully. He also pushed for the government to set up workshops to guarantee full employment
Otto von Bismarck
Jules Ferry of France and ____ ___ _______ of Germany arranged an international conference on Africa in Berlin in 1884.
"Secret Speech"
Khrushchev denounced Stalin for abuses of power in front of Communist delegates at the 20th Party Congress in 1956
Leonid Brezhnev
Khrushchev's successor. Under him the USSR began a period of limited re-Stalinization and economic stagnation. He talked about Stalin's "good points" and downplayed his crimes. Launched a massive arms buildup to catch up to, and ultimately surpass, the American arsenal.
Victor Emmanuel III
King of Italy who gave Mussolini legitimacy as dictator
Tsar Nicholas II
Last Russian emperor and last of the Romanov Dynasty. He was forced to abdicate in the February Revolution
Atahualpa
Last ruling Inca emperor of Peru. He was executed by the Spanish for a fake ransom; won the civil war against his brother
Battle of the Bulge
Last-ditch effort by Nazis to repel Allied advance into Germany
Hundred Days of Reform
Launched in 1898 by the Chinese government in an attempt to meet foreign challenge
Enabling Act
Law pushed through the Reichstag that gave Hitler absolute dictatorial power for 4 years
Mustafa Kemal
Leader of Turkish nationalists who overthrew the last Ottoman sultan and held off Western forces trying to dismember their country after WW I
V. I. Lenin
Leader of the Bolsheviks. His slogan of "Peace, Land, & Bread" galvanized many Russians against the Provisional Gov't. First premier of the USSR
Heinrich Himmler
Leader of the SS and given task of organizing and executing the Holocaust
Mao Zedong
Led the Chinese Communists in the Chinese Civil War. He was supported by a popular grassroots uprising among peasants who wanted land reform and Soviet aid. He was able to defeat Jiang.
New Economic Policy (NEP)
Lenin's 1921 law to re-establish limited economic freedom in an attempt to rebuild agriculture and industry in the face of econ. disintegration; replaced war communism
Bolsheviks
Lenin's radical, revolutionary arm of the Russian part of Marxist socialism, which successfully installed a dictatorial socialist regime in Russia.
Prime Minister William Gladstone
Liberal Prime Minister of Ireland who introduced bills to give Ireland self-government in 1866 and in 1893, both of which failed to pass.
Industrious Revolution
Shift that occurred as families in northwestern Europe focused on earning wages instead of producing good for household consumption
Suleiman
Sultan during the Ottoman golden age; extended his rule deep into Europe
Lusitania
Sunk in 1915 by a German submarine. 129 American killed. Forced Germany to stop unrestricted submarine warfare until 1917.
"The Blitz"
Sustained bombing of Britain by Nazi Germany between 1940 and 1941, including a span of 57-consecutive nights of bombings in London by the Luftwaffe
Ulrich Zwingli
Swiss Priest; believed everyone should read the bible
Holocaust
Systematic effort of the Nazi state to exterminate all European Jews and other groups deemed "undesirable"
Leni Riefenstahl
Talented German filmmaker. Her propaganda films, Triumph of the Will & Olympia, brought her worldwide attention and acclaim
Economic miracle
Term used to describe the rapid growth, often based in the consumer sector, in post-WW II Western Europe
Alsace and Lorraine
Territories along the French-German border won by Germany after the Franco-Prussian War in 1871
Bosnia & Herzegovina
Territories annexed by Austria in 1908, causing Serbia to get angry and challenge A-H to the brink of war.
Treaty of Versailles
The 1919 peace settlement that ended war between Germany and the Allied powers.
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
The Enlightenment thinker who wrote "Emile" about how education should involve more exploration of the natural world, in addition to book learning
Louis XVI
The French king during the French Rev; he ran away and was seen before crossing the border; he was powerless and seen as a traitor
Karl Marx
The German intellectual who wove the diffuse strands of socialist thought into a distinctly modern ideology, Marxist socialism--or Marxism. He argued that class struggle over economic wealth produced change in human history; one class had always exploited the other, and with the advent of modern industry, society was split between the upper class--the bourgeoisie--and the working class--the proletariat. German philosopher who co-authored "The Communist Manifesto" and spread his vision of "scientific socialism" throughout Europe
Simon Bolivar
The Latin American George Washington known as "El Liberdator" as he helped several regions break away from Spain. He created the short-lived "Gran Colombia" and served as its president
David Lloyd George
The Liberal Party, inspired by _____ _____ ______, enacted the People's Budget and substantially raised taxes on the rich; this income helped the government pay for national health insurance, unemployment benefits, old-age pensions, and a host of other social measures.
Gavrilo Princep
The Serbian assassin of the Austrian heir in 1914
Serbians
Members of the "Black Hand" who went to Sarajevo, Bosnia to assassinate Franz Ferdinand were of this nationality
Warsaw Pact
Military alliance among the USSR and its Communist satellite states
Claude Monet, Edgar Degas, Mary Cassatt
Most famous impressionist painters
Battle of Sadowa
Most important conflict in the Austro-Prussian War of 1866 that saw Prussia win decisively
God, glory, and gold
Motivations for explorers
Ismail
Muhammad Ali's grandson. He was a westernizing autocrat who promoted large irrigation networks, which boosted cotton production and exports to Europe, and supported the completion of the Suez Canal in 1869.
Sultan Mahmud II
Ottoman Sultan; his dynasty survived because Britain and other European powers preferred a weak and dependent Ottoman Empire to a strong, economically independent state under Muhammad Ali and thus allied with the Ottomans to discipline Ali.
Muhammad Ali
Ottoman viceroy who seized power in Egypt and established a separate Egyptian state. Modernized the state and attempted to take down the sultan in the 1830s
Edward Said
Palestinian professor of culture studies, wrote "Orientalism" (1978)
Volksgemeinschaft
People's community; the Nazi racial community, united by blood and culture
97
Percentage of Frenchmen who voted to make Louis Napoleon the French emperor in 1853
40
Percentage of adults in Britain in the 1930s who went to the cinema at least once a week
75
Percentage of homes in UK & Germany in the late 1930s with a radio
30
Percentage of people in 1933 in the USA who were out of work
20
Percentage of the US labor force that worked for the Works Progress Admin. at some point in the 1930s.
Victor Hugo
Perhaps the most influential romantic writer of France, author of "The Hunchback of Notre Dame" and "Les Miserables"
Humanism
Philosophy that celebrates human cultural achievements and emphasizes human reason and ethics.
Mandate system
Plan following the end of WW I to allow Britain & France to administer former Ottoman territories, rather than granting those territories independence
Stadtholder
The executive officer in each of the United Provinces of the Netherlands, a position often held by the princes of Orange.
Maxim machine gun
The first automatic machine gun; invention that allowed conquest of the interior of Africa
Articles of Confederation
The first constitution of the United States introduced in 1783. It did not develop a strong enough central government or create enough tax revenue to sustain itself beyond 1789.
Kaiser William I
The first ruler of the Second Reich established in January 1871
1914
The first year of WW I
Collectivization of agriculture
The forcible consolidation of individual peasant farms into large state-controlled enterprises in the USSR under Stalin
Charles Tallyrand
The foreign minister of France
Robert Castlereagh
The foreign minister of Great Britain
Global mass migration
The mass movement of people from Europe in the nineteenth century; one reason that the West's impact on the world was so powerful and many sided.
Battle of Sedan
The most important conflict of the Franco-Prussian War, at which Napoleon III was captured
Enclosure
The movement to fence in fields in order to farm more effectively, at the expense of poor peasants who relied on common fields for farming & pasture
Viceroyalties
The name for the four administrative units of Spanish possessions in the Americas: New Spain, Peru, New Granada, and La Plata.
National self-determination
The notion that peoples should be able to choose their own national governments through democratic majority-rule elections and live free from outside interference in nation-states with clearly defined borders.
Sino-Japanese War of 1894-95
The parallel movement toward domestic reform and limited cooperation with the West collapsed under the harsh peace treaty that followed China's defeat in the ______________________________.
Superego
The part of the personality in Freud's theory that is responsible for making moral choices based on internalized cultural or parental standards
Reign of Terror
The period from 1793 to 1794 during which Robespierre's Committee of Public Safety tried and executed thousands suspected of treason and a new revolutionary culture was imposed
Postcolonial migration
The postwar movement of people from former colonies and the developing world into Europe.
Decolonization
The postwar reversal of Europe's overseas expansion caused by the rising demand of the colonized peoples themselves, the declining power of European nations, and the freedoms promised by US and Soviet ideals.
Pablo Picasso
The premier artist of cubism - a highly analytical approach to art concentrated on complex geometry
Virtú
The quality of being able to shape the world according to one's own will
Louis XIV
The quintessential absolute monarch; I am the state; the Sun King; at war all the time; Versailles; hated nobles because of Le Fronde; spent so much money that even Colbert could not save him
Reconquista
The retaking of the Iberian Peninsula by Spanish forces from the Moors. It was completed in 1492.
Great Rebellion (Sepoy Rebellion of 1857; Indian Rebellion of 1857)
The revolt of Indian soldiers in 1857 against certain practices that violated religious customs as well as rule by the English more generally
Illegitimacy Explosion
The sharp increase in out-of-wedlock births that occurred between 1750-1850 caused by low wages & a breakdown of community controls
Liberty, equality, fraternity
The slogan of the French revolutionaries
Edward VI
The son of Henry VIII and Jane Seymour; only reigned 6 years; pro-Anglican; book of Common prayer written during his reign
What is the Third Estate?
The third estate is everything, the third estate is currently nothing, the third estate wants to be something
Proletarianization
The transformation of large numbers of small peasant farmers into landless rural wage earners
Gunboat Diplomacy
The use or threat of military force to coerce a government into economic or political agreements; similar to brinkmanship
Muhammad Ali
The viceroy of Egypt who modernized the region and threatened to depose the sultan in the 1830s before the western powers stepped in to prop up the weak Sultans Mahmud II and Abdul Mejid
Iron Law of Wages
Theory proposed by English economist David Ricardo suggesting that the pressure of population growth prevents wages from rising above the subsistence level.
Jane Seymour
Third wife of Henry VIII who gave birth to Edward VI and died during childbirth
Mercantilism
national economic policy designed to maximize the trade of a nation and especially to maximize the accumulation of gold and silver
Berlin Blockade
one of the first major international crises of the Cold War. During the multinational occupation of post-World War II Germany, the Soviet Union blocked the Western Allies' railway, road, and canal access to the sectors of Berlin under Western control.
Brinkmanship
the art or practice of pursuing a dangerous policy to the limits of safety before stopping, typically in politics.
Skepticism
the doubt that absolute "rightness" is ever attainable
Battle of Okinawa
the last major battle of World War II, and one of the bloodiest. On April 1, 1945—Easter Sunday—the Navy's Fifth Fleet and more than 180,000 U.S. Army and U.S. Marine Corps troops descended on the Pacific island of _________ for a final push towards Japan. The invasion was part of Operation Iceberg, a complex plan to invade and occupy the Ryukyu Islands, including _______.
Hohenzollern Dynasty
the ruling house of Brandenburg-Prussia (1415-1918) and of imperial Germany
Island Hopping
the strategy employed by the United States to gain military bases and secure the many small islands in the Pacific.
Fur-collar crime
those higher up the social scale prey on those who are less well-off
Restoration of the English Monarchy
took place in the Stuart period. It began in 1660 when the English, Scottish and Irish monarchies were all restored under King Charles II
Dutch East India Company
trading company founded in the Dutch Republic in 1602 to protect that state's trade in the Indian Ocean and to assist in the Dutch war of independence from Spain
Ivan III the Great
tripled the territory of Russia
Defenestration of Prague
two Catholic deputies to the Bohemian national assembly and a secretary were tossed out the window (into a moat) of the castle of Hradshin by Protestant radicals. It marked the start of the Thirty Years War.
Pope Martin V
unanimously elected pope in a conclave held during the Council of Constance, which had been called to end the Great Schism, a split in the Western church caused by multiple claimants to the papacy.
Pogrom
violent attack on a minority group, often a Jewish community
Pope Paul III
This was the Pope that called the Council of Trent
Common Sense
Thomas Paine's influential pamphlet attacking British rule in North America & monarchy in general, and proposing American independence
William III of Orange and Mary
Took over England after Glorious Revolution
James I
Took over after Elizabeth I; divine right; hated Parliament because he believed was appointed by God
Warsaw Uprising
Tragic miscalculation as a rebellion in Poland ended with rebels being crushed by Nazis as Soviets waited to take over the city
Treaty of Brest-Litovsk
Treaty between Russia and Germany that would end Russia's involvement in WWI in 1917 Document that announced the withdrawal of Russia from WWI
Permanent Revolution
Trotsky's doctrine that socialism in the Soviet Union could succeed only if a socialist revolution swept through Europe.
Greek Civil War
Truman asked Congress to provide military aid to anticommunist forces. With American support, they resisted communism and remained in the Western Bloc.
Woodrow Wilson
U.S. President during WWI. Served 1913-1920. Kept America neutral until 1917. His plan for the post-War world was called the 14 Points, and included measures for collective security and a lasting peace
Franklin D. Roosevelt
U.S. President who condemned the belligerent attacks on Japan made in Asia. Said December 7, 1941 (Pearl Harbor) would be a "date which would live in infamy." Died on April 12 and is succeeded by Vice President Harry S. Truman.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
U.S. President who condemned the belligerent attacks on Japan made in Asia. Said December 7, 1941 (Pearl Harbor) would be a "date which would live in infamy." Died on April 12 and is succeeded by Vice President Harry S. Truman.
George Marshall
US Secretary of State who offered an economic package to help Europe rebuild after WWII.
John F. Kennedy
US president who reaffirmed US commitment to never abandon Berlin. When Khrushchev ordered missiles with nuclear warheads to be installed in Castro's Cuba, he responded with a naval blockade of Cuba.
Vincenzo Gioberti
a Catholic priest who called for a federation of existing states under the presidency of a progressive pope, an idea that received initial cautious support from Pius IX
Alfred von Schlieffen
a German field marshal and strategist who served as chief of the Imperial German General Staff from 1891 to 1906. He came up with the Schlieffen plan.
David Livingstone
a Scottish Christian Congregationalist, pioneer medical missionary with the London Missionary Society, an explorer in Africa, and one of the most popular British heroes of the late-19th-century in the Victorian era.
Scorched-earth strategy
a military strategy of burning or destroying buildings, crops, or other resources that might be of use to an invading enemy force.
Midwives
a person (typically a woman) trained to assist women in childbirth.
Healers
a person who claims to be able to cure a disease or injury using special powers
Immigrants
a person who comes to live permanently in a foreign country
Emigrants
a person who leaves their own country in order to settle permanently in another
Apothecaries
a person who prepared and sold medicines and drugs.
General George Patton
a senior officer of the United States Army who commanded the U.S. Seventh Army in the Mediterranean and European theaters of World War II, but is best known for his leadership of the U.S. Third Army in France and Germany following the Allied invasion of Normandy in June 1944.
English Civil War
a series of armed conflicts and political machinations between Parliamentarians ("Roundheads") and Royalists ("Cavaliers") over, principally, the manner of England's government.
Peace of Westphalia 1648
a series of treaties that ended the Thirty Years' War over succession within the Holy Roman Empire
Spinning jenny
a simple, inexpensive, hand-powered spinning machine created by James Hargreaves in 1765
Rudolphine Tables
a star catalogue and planetary tables published by Johannes Kepler in 1627, using some observational data collected by Tycho Brahe
Joseph II
abolished serfdom and decreed that peasants could pay landlords in cash rather than through labor on their land.
Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness
castigated the "pure selfishness" of Europeans in supposedly civilizing Africa.
Voltaire
challenged traditional Catholic theology, as well as the optimism of philosophers. He mixed the glorification of science and reason with an appeal for better individuals and institutions.
Empress dowager Tzu Hsi
combined shrewd insight with vigorous action to revitalize the bureaucracy and led a palace coup that imprisoned the emperor, rejected the reform movement, and put reactionary officials in charge.
Leon Trotsky
convinced the Petrograd Soviet to form a special military-revolutionary committee in October and make him its leader, which placed military power in the capital in Bolshevik hands. Russian revolutionary and Communist theorist who helped Lenin and built up the army during the Russian Civil War. "Permanent revolution" proponent
Baron de Montesquieu
his theory of the separation of powers was fundamental to how many people viewed government
Leopold II
influenced by the ideas of the Enlightenment and was determined to construct an efficient state apparatus at the expense of feudal interests. During his 25-year reign over the Grand Duchy of Tuscany, he rationalized his states' taxation and tariff systems and encouraged the development of representative institutions
Maria Theresa
initiated church reform, a series of administrative renovations which strengthened the central bureaucracy, and improved the agricultural population.
Charles II
invited back to England from exile in France, attempted to conciliate Parliament by creating an advisory council of five men who were also members of Parliament
Kurt von Schuschnigg
Austrian chancellor who tried to resist Nazi encroachment, but could not prevent his country from being taken over by Hitler
Neville Chamberlain
British Prime Minister who gave in to Hitler's demands in 1930s in order to preserve peace
Blousen noirs
(Black Jackets) French youth inspired by James Dean and Marlon Brando who had rebellious clothing and cynical attitudes.
Boer War
1899-1902; a war in which the British defeated Dutch Boers in South Africa
Putting-out system
18th-century method of distributing materials to workers, who processed them and returned the finished products to the merchant capitalist
Lateran Agreement
1929 agreement in which Mussolini recognized the Vatican as an independent state, and gave it heavy financial support in return for public support from the pope
Nuremberg Laws
1935 statutes defining the status of Jews and withdrawing citizenship from persons of non-German blood.
Battle of Verdun
A German offensive in 1916 that cost 700,000 lives while gaining virtually no territory
King Otto I of Greece
A German prince who was a descendant of Greek royalty (including the Comnenus dynasty), he became the first king of a newly independent Greece
Methodism
A Protestant revival movement started by John Wesley, whose members were known for pious devotion
Pietism
A Protestant revival movement that emphasized a warm & emotional religion & the power of Christian rebirth in everyday affairs
Marshall Plan
A United States program of economic aid for the reconstruction of Europe (1948-1952)
People's Budget
A bill to increase social welfare spending in Britain by taxing the rich more and setting up pensions and national health insurance
Continental System
A blockade imposed by Napoleon to halt all trade between continental Europe and Britain, thereby weakening the British economy and military
Wet-nursing
A business in which women were paid to breast-feed other women's babies
Meiji Restoration
A chain of events that restored practical imperial rule to Japan in 1868 under Emperor Meiji; resulted in modernization of the country
Russo-Japanese War
A conflict fought over Korea, and a loss for the Russians. It marked the first time that an eastern nation defeated one of Europe's great powers
Dreyfus Affair
A divisive case in which a Jewish captain was falsely accused of treason. Brought forth anti-Semitism among some and resulted in a greater separation of church & state in France
Indulgence
A document issued by the Catholic Church lessening penance or time in purgatory, widely believed to bring forgiveness of all sins.
Quinine
A drug used for fighting malaria and other fevers; allowed for the conquest of Africa
Nuclear Family
A family group consisting of parents & their children with no other relatives
Cheka
A fearsome secret police that was dedicated to suppressing counter-revolutionaries of all types, including clergymen, aristocrats and wealthy Russian bourgeoisie, deserters from the Red Army, and political opponents of all kinds.
Separate Spheres
A gender division of labor with the wife at home and the husband as wage earner outside the home
Tariff protection
A government's way to aiding its own economy by laying high taxes on imported goods from other countries
Conciliarists
A group of church members who believed that a council had the power to elect and depose of popes.
Neocolonialism
A postcolonial system that perpetuates Western economic exploitation in former colonial territories.
Eugenics
A pseudoscientific doctrine that says selective breeding of humans can improve the general characteristics of a national population; helped inspire Nazi ideology of "race and space"
Totalitarianism
A radical dictatorship that exercises complete claims over the beliefs and behavior of its citizens by taking control of econ, social, intellectual, & cultural aspects of society
Henry Labouchére's Brown Man's Burden
A satire of Kipling's The White Man's Burden
Ptolemy's Geography
A second century work that synthesized the classical knowledge of geography and introduced the concepts of longitude and latitude
Jansenism
A sect of Catholicism originating with Cornelius Jansen that emphasized the heavy weight of original sin & accepted predestination
Navigation Acts
A series of English laws that controlled the import of goods to Britain & British colonies
"great purge"
A series of show trials in the late 1930s in which false evidence was used to incriminate party administrators and Red Army leaders under Stalin's watch
Tanzimat
A set of reforms designed to remake the Ottoman Empire on a Western European model
John Wesley
An Anglican priest who founded Methodism to spread a message of conversion & salvation for all
Lady Mary Wortley Montagu
An English aristocrat who brought the practice of inoculation back to England from the Ottoman Empire in the 1720s
Heinrich von Treitschke
An influential nationalist historian of Germany who wrote: "Every virile people has established colonial power... All great nations in the fullness of their strength have desired to set their mark upon barbarian lands and those who fail to participate in this great rivalry will play a pitiable role in time to come."
Kellogg-Briand Pact
An international agreement signed by 15 countries in 1928 to renounce war as an instrument of foreign policy and settle disputes peacefully
Battle of Gallipoli
An offensive against the Ottomans by British, French, and ANZAC troops. Failed to secure the Dardanelles
League of Nations
An organization of nations formed after World War I to promote cooperation and peace.
Whites
Anti-Bolshevik coalition in the Russian Civil War
NATO
Anti-Soviet military alliance of Western governments
Count Camillo Benso di Cavour
Architect of Italian unification. He set up a nominally democratic government headed by King Victor Emmanuel II after bringing the Italian states together in 1860.
Modernism
Artistic and cultural movements of the late 1800s /early 1900s typified by radical experimentation that challenged traditional forms of expression
Socialist realism
Artistic movement that followed the dictates of the Communist ideals, enforced by state control in the USSR and East Bloc countries in the 1950s and 60s
Surrealism
Artistic style influenced by Freudian psychology, portraying images of the unconscious and attempting to call attention to the bankruptcy of mainstream society in order to change the world
Impressionism
Artistic style whose adherents looked to the world around them for subject matter and tried to portray their sensory "impressions" in their work
ANZAC forces
Australian and New Zealand Army Corps, combined corps that served with distinction in World War I during the ill-fated 1915 Gallipoli Campaign, an attempt to capture the Dardanelles from Turkey.
Adolf Hitler
Austrian born Dictator of Germany, implemented Fascism and caused WWII and Holocaust.
Battle of Britain
Battle fought in the air between the Luftwaffe and the Royal Air Force (RAF). Hitler started with military targets, but soon started indiscriminate bombing of British cities. The RAF started taking down German planes at a rate of 3:1, and Germany backed off. This battle was won using RADAR and breaking the German Enigma code. Through this battle, the Nazis hoped to gain control of the air and break British morale.
Jawaharlal Nehru
Became India's prime minister after India's independence. He believed in nonalignment.
Napoleon III aka Louis Napoleon
Became emperor of France in 1852; presided over the modernization of Paris. Ultimately would be captured and forced into exile as a result of the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-71.
Harry S Truman
Became president when FDR died; gave the order to drop the atomic bomb
Harry S. Truman
Became president when FDR died; gave the order to drop the atomic bomb
Logical Positivism
Belief that a concept is meaningful only if it can be empirically verified, and therefore rejects most of the concerns of traditional philosophy as nonsense; popular in English-speaking countries
Kulaks
Better-off peasants who were stripped of land and livestock under Stalin and were generally not permitted to join collective farms
Kulturkampf
Bismarck's campaign against the Catholic Church to undermine Catholics' loyalty to the pope in favor of the Kaiser
Reds
Bolsheviks and their supporters in the Russian Civil War
Royal Air Force (RAF)
British Air Force
David Lloyd George
British PM during WWI. During the Paris Peace Conference, he was concerned with maintaining the British Empire
Sultan Abdul Mejid
Created the Imperial Rescript of 1856, which called for equality before the law regardless of religious faith, a modernized administration and army, and private ownership of land.
Leonardo da Vinci
Created the Mona Lisa, the Last supper, the most famous artist of all time
Michel de Montaigne
Created the genre "essay"; lived during religious wars and overseas expansion; created skepticism; rejected superiority of one culture or race
Fidel Castro
Cuban communist revolutionary and politician who governed the Republic of Cuba as Prime Minister from 1959 to 1976 and then as President from 1976 to 2008
Czarina Alexandra
Czar Nicholas II traveled to the front in order to lead and rally Russia's armies, leaving the government in the hands of his wife. She arbitrarily dismissed loyal political advisers and turned to her court favorite, the disreputable and unpopular Rasputin.
Soren Kierkegaard
Danish theologian who wrote that it was impossible to prove the existence of God, but that people must take a leap of faith and accept God
June 6, 1944
Date of D-Day; A turning point of WW II at which Allied forces successfully opened up a front on French soil by taking the Normandy beaches
Mary Tudor
Daughter of Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon; She was very Catholic and tried to turn England back to Catholicism
Otto von Bismarck
Declared after 1871 that Germany was a "satisfied" power that had no territorial ambitions and wanted only peace; his first concern was to keep and embittered France diplomatically isolated and without allies. Another concern of his was the threat to peace posed by the multinational empires of Austria-Hungary and Russia, particularly in southeaster Europe, where the waning strength of the Ottoman Empire was creating a power vacuum in the Balkans. His accomplishments in foreign policy were great, but his carefully planned alliance system began to unravel after the new German emperor William II dismissed him in 1890.fr
Cardinal Richelieu
Declared war on Spain, their long rival during 30 years war; he was Catholic but cared more about beating Spain; Chief minster to Louis XIII, increased royal power, wiped out Protestantism in France, but internationally didn't care about religion
Ho Chi Minh
Defeated the French army fighting in Vietnam in 1954.
Charivari
Degrading public rituals used by village communities to police personal behavior & maintain moral standards
Halie Selassie
Emperor of Ethiopia
Elizabeth I
English Queen and politique who united Protestants and Catholics through compromise, took the middle path to solve problems
English East India Company
English company formed for the exploitation of trade with East and Southeast Asia and India
Edward Jenner
English doctor who developed a smallpox vaccine in the 1790s
James Cook
English explorer who claimed the east coast of Australia in 1770. He would later be killed in the Hawaiian islands in 1779, after charting much of the Pacific Ocean
Thomas More
English humanist who described an ideal society in Utopia
Daniel Defoe
English novelist & economic writer who enthusiastically endorsed cottage industry as a way for people to supplement their family incomes
Vera Brittain
English war nurse who wrote an autobiography called Testament of Youth
National Liberation Front
Established by the Algerian rebels and revolted against French colonialism in the early 1950s.
Tycho Brahe
Established himself as Europe's leading astronomer and made detailed observations of the new star of 1572. He collected mass amounts of data while trying to create new and improved tables of planetary motion.
Armenians
Ethnic group in the Ottoman Empire who were largely Christian. When they supported Russians invading that territory, the Ottomans killed and deported them in large numbers, resulting in an ethnic cleansing
blood sports
Events that involved inflicting violence, usually on animals, that were popular during the 18th century with the European masses
Johannes Kepler
Examined Brahe's data and developed 3 new laws of planetary motion. 1. the orbits of the planets around the sun are elliptical 2. the planets do not move at a uniform speed in their orbits 3. the time a planet takes to make its complete orbit is precisely related to its distance from the sun He completed the Rudolphine Tables
Oliver Cromwell
Executes Charles I and becomes Lord Protector of the Commonwealth; basically a military dictator
Jacques Cartier
Explored the St. Lawrence River; French
Jingoism
Extreme, chauvinistic patriotism, often favoring an aggressive, warlike foreign policy
Beer Hall Putsch
Failed Nazi coup d'etat in 1923 inspired by Mussolini's successful March on Rome. Sent Hitler and other Nazis to jail
Vincent van Gogh
Famous Expressionist
Filippo Tommaso Marinetti
Famous Futurist; Italian author and editor
Salvador Dalí
Famous surrealist who was deeply influenced by Freudian psychology and portrayed images of the unconscious in his art.
Yalta Conference
Feb. 1945 strategy meeting between Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin, at which the Allies planned the postwar world
Ludwig von Beethoven
First and greatest romantic composer who used contrasting themes and tones to produce dramatic conflict & inspiring resolutions in his music
Victor Emmanuel II
First king of a united Italy
Catherine of Aragon
First wife of Henry VIII. Henry wanted a divorce, but Charles V and the Catholic Church said no. He made his own church, so he could annul the marriage. She was Charles V relative
Young Turks
Members of a Turkish reformist and nationalist political party active in the early 20th century.
Triple Entente
France, Russia, and Great Britain, all of whom will form the core of the Allied Powers in WW I
Bartolome de las Casas
Franciscan who spoke against the cruelty of the Spanish; says they were like beasts and the natives were innocent, willing to convert, and taken advantage of constantly
Cossacks
Free groups and outlaw armies originally comprising runaway peasants living on the borders of Russian territory from the fourteenth century onward. By the end of the sixteenth century they had formed an alliance with the Russian state.
Edouard Daladier
French Prime Minister at the start of WW II who - along with Chamberlain - refused to give up Poland to the Nazis
Germaine de Stael
French champion of Romanticism, who encouraged the adoption of the spontaneity and enthusiasm of Germans in her study "On Germany". An early advocate of feminism and critic of Napoleon
Dunkirk
French city that served as the site of British troops stranded in France, and their miraculous rescue by sea
Jean-Paul Satre
French existentialist who argued there are no God-given, timeless truths. "Existence precedes essence": humans are born and then try to define what they are on their own
Napoleon Bonaparte
French general who became emperor of the French after leading a coup d'etat against the Directory
Madame du Coudray
French midwife who wrote the textbook "Manual on the Art of Childbirth" to address complaints of incompetent midwives
Henri Bergson
French philosopher who believed that immediate experience & intuition were as important as rational & scientific thinking for understanding reality
Georges Clemenceau
French president during WWI. He wanted to punish Germany harshly to prevent any future aggression from their longtime rival.
Adolphe Thiers
French president of the 3rd republic, beginning in 1870. He crushed the Paris Commune tried to bring stability to the new government in the aftermath
Napoleonic Code
French set of laws promulgated in 1804 that reasserted the 1789 principles of the equality of all male citizens before the law and the absolute security of wealth and private property, as well as the restriction of rights accorded to women by previous revolutionary laws
Jean Juarès
French socialist leader who formally repudiated revisionism, but he remained at heart a gradualist and optimistic secular humanist
War Communism
The Russian policy of nationalizing industry and seizing private land during the Russian Civil War.
Moses Mendelssohn
German Jewish philosopher, critic, and Bible translator and commentator who greatly contributed to the efforts of Jews to assimilate to the German bourgeoisie.
Joseph Goebbels
German Nazi politician and Reich Minister of Propaganda of Nazi Germany from 1933 to 1945.
Karl Dönitz
German admiral who played a major role in the naval history of World War II. He briefly succeeded Adolf Hitler as the head of state of Germany. He began his career in the Imperial German Navy before World War I
Luftwaffe
German air force
September 1, 1939
German armies invaded Poland to start World War II
Spring Offensive of 1918
German attack on the Western Front. Initially it was successful due to numerical superiority following Russian withdrawal from the War. Halted at the 2nd Battle of the Marne
Bauhaus
German interdisciplinary school of fine & applied arts that brought together many leading modern architects, designers, and theatrical innovators
Friedrich Nietzsche
German philosopher who questioned the conventional values of Western society, believing that reason, progress, & respectability stifled self-realization and excellence
Werner Heisenberg
German physicist who formulated the "uncertainty principle" saying that the nature of the universe is ultimately unknowable and unpredictable, lacking any absolute objective reality
Gustav Stresemann
German president who compromised with France in 1923 to end the Ruhr crisis
Enigma
German secret code during the war; broken by British cryptographers using a system called Ultra
Schlieffen Plan
German strategy heading into the war - attack France 1st and Russia 2nd instead of both at the same time. Violated Belgian neutrality
Martin Luther
German theologian who led the Reformation by first posting his 95 Theses on the church in Wittenberg in 1517
Albert Einstein
German-Jewish scientist & author of the theory of special relativity; only the speed of light is constant - time and space are relative to the observer. Matter & energy are interchangeable
Kaiser William II
He forced Otto von Bismarck to resign in the 1890s, keeping the spotlight on himself. He started pushing for Germany to challenge British naval superiority, causing rising tensions
Frederick II the Great
He has military conquests; takes Silesia from Austria which increases Prussian population and adds valuable industries.
Sergei Witte
He is an economic minister to Czar Alex III who preformed many reform minded actions to improve industry, including bringing in Western advisers
Jiang Jieshi (Chaing Kai-shek)
He lead the Authoritarian National People's Party. He was supported by US aid, but forced to flee to the island of Taiwan in 1949.
Christopher Columbus
He mistakenly discovered the Americas in 1492 while searching for a faster route to India and spices; seen as cruel and a hero
James Watt
He took the steam engine created by Thomas Newcomen and made it a viable energy source by reducing wasted energy
Reichstag Fire
In February 1933, in the midst of an electoral campaign plagued by violence (much of it caused by Nazi toughs), the Reichstag building was partly destroyed by fire. Hitler blamed the Communists and convinced Hindenburg to sign emergency acts that abolished freedom of speech and assembly as well as most personal liberties. Hitler most likely had his people burn it down.
Tabula Rasa
In Locke's philosophy, this was the theory that at birth the (human) mind is a "blank slate" without rules for processing data, and that data is added and rules for processing are formed solely by one's sensory experiences.
Revolution of 1905
In response to Russia's defeat in the Russo-Japanese War and the massacre of Bloody Sunday, the pent up discontent of the Russian people resulted in this uprising
Karl Lueger
In the early 1890s, ____ ______, the mayor of Vienna from 1897 to 1910, and his Christian Socialist Party won electoral victories by appealing to the German-speaking lower middle class with a combination of fierce anti-Semitic rhetoric and municipal ownership of basic services. He inspired Hitler.
Treaty of Nanking
In this treaty, China ceded the island of Hong Kong to Britain, paid an indemnity of $100 million, and opened up four large cities to unlimited foreign trade with low tariffs.
Mohandas Gandhi
Indian nationalist who started a mass movement preaching nonviolent "noncooperation" with the British.
Robert Owen
Influential Scottish factory owner and utopian socialist. He tried to show that factories could be profitable even when treating and paying workers well.
Charles X
Louis's conservative successor who wanted to re-establish the old order in France but was blocked by the opposition of the deputies, so in 1830 he turned to military adventure in an effort to rally French nationalism and gain popular support
2nd Battle of the Marne
Ludendorff's exhausted, overextended forces were stopped in July 1918 at this Battle, where 140,000 American soldiers saw action.
Consubstantiation
Luther's belief that the bread and wine is not changed but that Christ is present in spirit only
Otto von Bismarck
Machiavellian Prussian chancellor who engineered the unification of Germany under his rule using war to bring the German states together.
Russification
Making ethnic groups into more loyal Russians by enforcing policies of one language and one religion under Czar Alexander III
Cottage Industry
Manufacturing with hand tools in peasant homes and work sheds
95 Theses
Martin Luther argued that indulgences undermined the seriousness of the sacrament of penance, competed with the gospel, and downplayed the importance of charity in Christian life. These complaints were nailed to Wittenberg Church.
Berlin Conference
Meeting at which Europeans agreed on rules for colonizing Africa
Diet of Worms
Meeting of the leadership of the Holy Roman Empire, under the leadership of Charles V, during which Luther refused to recant his beliefs
Louis XVIII
Napoleon's successor - the Bourbon monarch who took over France during Napoleon's exiles Bourbon monarch who was made king in 1814 after Napoleon's defeat. He was the younger brother of Louis XVI and acted as a moderate reformer in his decade of rule.
Duma
National legislature of Russia. It did not have much power, as the tsar had an absolute veto
Mau Mau Rebellion
Nationalist Rebellion in Kenya that British forces brutally crushed in the early 1950s
Albert Speer
Nazi minister of armaments who put to work millions of POWs and slave laborers.
October Manifesto
Nicholas II's attempt to end the Revolution of 1905 by promising reform, full civil rights, and the creation of a new national legislature
One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich
Novel by Aleksander Solzhenitsyn published in 1962. It portrays in grim detail life in a Stalinist concentration camp and is a damning indictment of the Stalinist past.
Doctor Zhivago
Novel written by Russian author Boris Pasternak. It is a literary masterpiece and a powerful challenge to communism. It tells the story of a poet who rejects the violence and brutality of the October Revolution of 1917 and the Stalinist years. This book appeared in the West in 1957, but not in the Soviet Union until 1988.
March on Rome
October 1922 demonstration that put pressure on the Italian gov't and propelled Mussolini to power
D-Day
On June 6, 1944, American, British, and other Allied forces landed on the beaches of Normandy, France under General Dwight D. Eisenhower in history's greatest naval invasion. Secured enough area in Normandy that Allied commanders could use it as a staging ground for reinforcements and starting point for an invasion of German-occupied territories. In a hundred dramatic days, more than 2 million men and almost half a million vehicles broke through the German lines and pushed inland. Eisenhower pushed through on a broad front. This successfully quashed German resistance, but also allowed the Soviets to arrive in Berlin before Anglo-American forces.
Richard Huelsenbeck
One of the founders of the Dadaist movement.
Battle of Tannenberg
Opening conflict on the Eastern Front that cost many Russian lives, but diverted some German attention from their massive offensive in the west
Ukraine
Site of peasant resistance to collectivization; resulted in a man-made famine as retaliation from the Soviet government that killed 3 million people
Common Market
Six countries who sought to reduce tariffs in order to create a single economic bloc to compete on the world stage
Battle of Midway
Six months after the attack on Pearl Harbor, the United States defeated Japan in one of the most decisive naval battles of World War II. Thanks in part to major advances in code breaking, the United States was able to preempt and counter Japan's planned ambush of its few remaining aircraft carriers, inflicting permanent damage on the Japanese Navy. An important turning point in the Pacific campaign, the victory allowed the United States and its allies to move into an offensive position.
Giacomo Matteotti
Socialist that was murdered in Italy after challenging the Fascists; his death spurred Mussolini's repressive fascist measures
Modern girl
Somewhat stereotypical image of the modern and independent working woman popular in the 1920s
Nikita Khrushchev
Soviet premier who took power in 1953 wanted to "De-Stalinize" Soviet Union.
Hernando Cortés
Spanish conquistador who defeated the Aztecs and conquered Mexico; diseases and alliances helped him and the fact that the Aztec Ruler thought that he was a god
Francisco Pizarro
Spanish explorer who led the conquest of the Inca Empire of Peru; disease, alliances, and a Incan civil war that just ended helped them win
Five-year plan
Stalin's "revolution from above"; Soviet attempt to artificially engineer the industrial revolution and transform society into a communist state; generate new attitudes, new loyalties, a new socialist humanity, and transform industry in the country
Socialism in One Country
Stalin's belief that the Russian-dominated Soviet Union had the ability to build socialism on its own.
Ethiopia
State that had survived the 2nd wave of imperialism in the 1880s, but was invaded in 1935 by Italian forces to build an Italian empire
Anschluss with Austria
The annexation of Austria by Germany in 1938.
Hussein ibn Ali
The chief magistrate of Mecca; rebelled against the Turks, proclaiming himself king of the Arabs. refused to ratify the Treaty of Versailles, in protest at the Balfour Declaration and the establishment of British and French mandates in Syria, Iraq, and Palestine.
Soviet Bloc
The communist nations closely allied with the Soviet Union, including Bulgaria, Cuba, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, Poland, and Romania, whose foreign policies depended on those of the Soviet Union.
Janissaries
The core of the sultan's army, composed of slave conscripts from non-Muslim parts of the empire; after 1683 it became a volunteer force.
just price
The idea that prices should be fair, protecting both consumers and producers and that they should be imposed by the government if necessary
Nuremberg trials
The international military tribunal accused German leaders of committing war crimes; defined "crime against humanity" and stopped the cycle of violence
Jethro Tull
The inventor of the seed drill, a machine that improved farming by planting seeds in an even manner at a uniform depth.
Czar Nicholas II
The last czar of the Russian Empire and Romanov Dynasty.
1918
The last year of WW I
New Imperialism
The late-nineteenth-century drive by European countries to create vast political empires abroad.
Colonel Ahmed Arabi
The leader of the Egyptian Nationalist Party
De-Stalinization
The liberalization of the post-Stalin USSR led by reformer Nikita Khrushchev
Reichstag
The lower house of the German legislature. It was elected by universal male suffrage, but could be vetoed by the upper house or the kaiser
Louis XIII
This French king appointed Cardinal Richelieu; young when he took control; didn't really do much Richelieu did everything
Ivan IV the Terrible
This autocrat became known as "Tsar" which is the Slavic contraction for "Caesar," with all its connotations. He ascended to the throne at age three and later married Anastasia of the Romanov family. He set about to declare war on the remnants of Mongol power. He virtually abolished the old land system of the nobility and made it so all had to serve the Tsar in order to hold any land.
Suez Canal Company
This company had been the last symbol and substance of Western power in the Middle East. It was nationalized by Nasser in July 1956.
August 14, 1945
V-J Day; Japan surrenders to end the fighting of World War II
"Peace, Land, & Bread"
V.I. Lenin's slogan that galvanized many Russians against the Provisional Gov't
Confraternities
Voluntary lay groups organized by occupation, devotional preference, neighborhood, or charitable activity
General Henri-Philippe Petain
WW I vet put in charge of Vichy France; disbanded the Third French Republic and wielded a lot of power under German reins
Henri-Philippe Petain
WW I veteran and leader of the Vichy France government French military commander who had to deal with mutinies within his ranks in 1917. Promised no more grand offensives to placate troops
Dawes Plan (1924)
War reparations agreement that reduced Germany's yearly payments, made payment dependent on econ. prosperity, and granted US loans to promote German economic recovery
Halbstarken
West German youth inspired by James Dean and Marlon Brando who had rebellious clothing and cynical attitudes.
Neo-Europes
Where colonists sought to replicate economies and social structures they knew at home
Moroccan Crisis 1905
William II declared Morocco independent, rattling the cage of France and putting much of the West on notice about German territorial ambitions.
Fourteen Points
Woodrow Wilson's plan for eternal peace following the end of WW I
"Big Three"
Woodrow Wilson, Georges Clemenceau, & David Lloyd George at the Paris Peace Conference
Great Depression
Worldwide economic slump from 1929-1939, unique in its severity and duration
Two Treatises on Government
Written by John Locke during the Glorious Revolution. Writes about natural rights (life, liberty, and property) and states that it is the government's job to protect these rights.
Winston Churchill
a British statesman, army officer, and writer, who served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1940 to 1945 and again from 1951 to 1955.
The Prince
Written by Machiavelli, uses the examples of classical and contemporary rulers to argue that the function of a ruler (or any government) is to preserve order and security. Weakness only leads to disorder, which might end in civil war or conquest by an outside. To preserve the state, a ruler should use whatever means he needs (brutality, lying, manipulation) but should not do anything that would make the populace turn against him.
Leviathan
Written by Thomas Hobbes in support of Absolute Monarchy. Says that in the state of nature there is anarchy because man is inherently evil. It was written during the English Civil War.
Essay on the Principle of Population
Written by Thomas Malthus in which he wrote that population growth will eventually be higher than the resources available and this would lead to poverty and malnutrition.
Mary Wollenstonecraft
Wrote "A Vindication of the Rights of Man" (1790) and "A Vindication of the Rights of Woman" (1792), the latter a founding text of the feminist movement
Boris Pasternak
Wrote Doctor Zhivago
Aleksander Solzhenitsyn
Wrote One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich
James Joyce
Wrote Ulysses which weaves an extended ironic parallel between the aimless wanderings of an ordinary man through the streets and pubs of Dublin and the adventures of Homer's hero Ulysses on his way home from Troy.
Baldassare Castiglione
Wrote the Courtier, the ideal Renaissance man, well rounded
T.S. Eliot
Wrote the poem The Waste Land, which depicts a world of growing desolation and expresses the widespread dispair that followed the First World War.
Abbé Sieyes
Wrote the widely known pamphlet What is the 3rd Estate?
1848
Year in which Giuseppe Mazzini's attempt at creating a democratic republic in Rome failed
1871
Year in which the German Empire was united, following the completion of the Franco-Prussian War
Gamal Abdel Nasser
Young Egyptian army officer who drove out the pro-Western king. He became president of a new Egyptian republic in 1954. He advocated for a nonalignment strategy and played the superpowers off one another. He Nationalized the Suez Canal Company.
Jules Ferry
_____ _____ of France and Otto von Bismarck of Germany arranged an international conference on Africa in Berlin in 1884.
Josef Stalin
a Soviet revolutionary and politician of Georgian ethnicity. Governing the Soviet Union from the mid-1920s until his death in 1953, he served as General Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union from 1922 to 1952 and as Premier of the Soviet Union from 1941 to 1953. Initially heading a collective government, by 1937 he was the country's de facto dictator. Ideologically a Marxist and a Leninist, he helped to formalize these ideas as Marxism-Leninism while his own policies became known as Stalinism. Leader of the Soviet Union after the death of Vladimir Lenin. Believed in building up socialism in one country
Economic liberalism
a belief in free trade and competition based on Adam Smith's argument that the invisible hand of the free market would benefit all individuals
J.A. Hobson's Imperialism
a forceful attack on the expansion of empire that: a) contended that the economic needs of unregulated capitalism motivated the rush to acquire colonies. b) argued imperial possessions did not pay off economically for the colonizing country as a whole; only unscrupulous special-interest groups profited, at the expense of both European taxpayers and natives. c) argued that the quest for empire diverted popular attention away from domestic reform and the need to reduce the gap between rich and poor.
Enlightened Absolutism
a form of government in the 18th century in which absolute monarchs pursued legal, social, and educational reforms inspired by the Enlightenment
Baroque art
a highly ornate and often extravagant style of architecture, art and music that flourished in Europe from the early 17th until the late 18th century. It followed the Renaissance style and preceded the Neoclassical style
Jules Michelet
a historian influenced by romanticism who wrote books on the history of France, promoted the growth of national aspirations and encouraged the French people to search the past for their special national destiny
Deductive Reasoning
a logical process in which a conclusion is based on the concordance of multiple premises that are generally assumed to be true
Inductive Reasoning
a logical process in which multiple premises, all believed true or found true most of the time, are combined to obtain a specific conclusion
Congress of Vienna
a meeting of ambassadors of European states chaired by Austrian statesman Klemens von Metternich, and held in Vienna from November 1814 to June 1815. The objective of the Congress was to provide a long-term peace plan for Europe by settling critical issues arising from the French Revolutionary Wars and the Napoleonic Wars.
Thomas Jefferson
an American statesman, one of the Founding Fathers of the United States and the principal author of the Declaration of Independence
James II
an open Catholic who placed many Catholics in high administrative positions and declared universal religious tolerance
Faith Alone
asserts God's pardon for guilty sinners is granted to and received through faith alone, excluding all "works"
2nd Balkan War
began when Serbia, Greece, and Romania quarreled with Bulgaria over the division of their joint conquests in Macedonia. On June 1, 1913, Serbia and Greece formed an alliance against Bulgaria, and the war began on the night of June 29/30, 1913, when King Ferdinand of Bulgaria ordered his troops to attack Serbian and Greek forces in Macedonia. The Bulgarians were defeated, however, and a peace treaty was signed between the combatants on Aug. 10, 1913. Under the terms of the treaty, Greece and Serbia divided up most of Macedonia between themselves, leaving Bulgaria with only a small part of the region
Catherine the Great
brought western culture to Russia, made domestic reforms, and expanded Russia's territory. Additionally, she made legal and educational reforms. However under her reign, the Russian nobility reached its most exalted position and the serfs were more oppressed than ever.
Jan Hus
denied papal authority, called for translations of the Bible into the local Czech language, and declared indulgences useless. He was burned at the stake
René Descartes
discovered analytic geometry which provided scientists with an important new tool. He used deductive reasoning to ascertain scientific laws.
Emperor Franz Joseph
emperor of Austria and king of Hungary, who divided his empire into the Dual Monarchy, in which Austria and Hungary coexisted as equal partners. In 1879 he formed an alliance with Prussian-led Germany Emperor of Austria, King of Hungary, and monarch of other states in the Austro-Hungarian Empire, from 2 December 1848 to his death. From 1 May 1850 to 24 August 1866 he was also President of the German Confederation.
Emperor Hirohito
emperor of Japan from 1926 until his death in 1989. He took over at a time of rising democratic sentiment, but his country soon turned toward ultra-nationalism and militarism.
Charles Fourier
envisaged a socialist utopia of mathematically precise, self-sufficient communities and advocated the total emancipation of women
Universal Law of Gravitation
every body in the universe attracts every other body in the universe in a precise mathematical relationship, where the force of attraction is proportional to the quantity of matter of the objects and inversly proportional to the square of the distance between them.
Sir Frances Bacon
formalized the empirical method into the general theory of inductive reasoning known as empiricism
1st Balkan War
fought between the members of the Balkan League—Serbia, Bulgaria, Greece, and Montenegro—and the Ottoman Empire. The Balkan League was formed under Russian auspices in the spring of 1912 to take Macedonia away from Turkey, which was already involved in a war with Italy. The Balkan allies were victorious.
War of Austrian Succession
fought by Austria, Britain, and the Netherlands against Prussia, France, and Spain in support of the right of succession of Maria Theresa to the Austrian throne and against the territorial aims of Prussia.
War of Spanish Succession
fought by Austria, England, the Netherlands, and Prussia against France and Spain, arising from disputes about the succession in Spain after the death of Charles II of Spain.
Heliocentric view
having or representing the sun as the center, as in the accepted astronomical model of the solar system.
Frederick William IV of Prussia
king of Prussia from 1840 until 1861, whose conservative policies helped spark the Revolution of 1848. In the aftermath of the failed revolution, Frederick William followed a reactionary course
Nicolas Copernicus
mathematician and astronomer who formulated a model of the universe that placed the Sun rather than the Earth at the center of the universe
Petrograd Soviet
modeled on the revolutionary soviets of 1905, acted as a parallel government and issued its own radical orders, weakening the authority of the provisional government. A huge, fluctuating mass meeting of two to three thousand workers, soldiers, and socialist intellectuals.
Henri de Saint-Simon
optimistically proclaimed that the key to progress was proper social organization in which leading scientists, engineers, and industrialists would carefully plan the economy and guide it forward by undertaking vast public works projects
Maximilien Robespierre
radical Jacobin leader and one of the principal figures in the French Revolution. In the latter months of 1793 he came to dominate the Committee of Public Safety, the principal organ of the Revolutionary government during the Reign of Terror, but in 1794 he was overthrown and executed in the Thermidorian Reaction.
Treaty of Lausanne
recognized the territorial integrity of Turkey.
Auxiliary Service Law
required all males between seventeen and sixty to work only at jobs considered critical to the war effort.
Glorious Revolution
resulted in the deposition of James II and the accession of his daughter Mary II and her husband, William III, prince of Orange
Charles V
ruler of the Hapsburg empire beginning in 1519; the defender of the Catholic faith; one of the most powerful people of his time
Black Hand
secret Serbian society of the early 20th century that used terrorist methods to promote the liberation of Serbs outside Serbia from Habsburg or Ottoman rule and was instrumental in planning the assassination of the Austrian archduke Franz Ferdinand
Spanish Inquisition
set up in 15th century Spain, to investigate and punish converted Jews and Muslims thought to be insincere
John Locke
stressed that all ideas are derived from experience; wrote Two Treatises on Government
Sovereignty
supreme power or authority
Henry VIII
was the English King who declared himself head of the Church of England, 6 wives, divorced, beheaded, died, divorced, beheaded, survived
Clerical pluralism
when church leaders hold more than one office (benefices)
León Blum
won as head of the Socialists, the largest portion of the Popular Front in France
Franklin Delano Roosavelt
won the 1932 election in a landslide, promising a "New Deal for the forgotten Man."
Utopia
written as a dialogue between Thomas More and Raphael Hythloday, a character More invented who has recently returned from the newly discovered land of Utopia somewhere in the New World. More and Hythloday first discuss the problems in Europe, and then Hyhloday describes how these have been solved in Utopia, ending with a long discussion of the Utopians' ban on private property.
Giovanni Pico della Mirandola
"Wrote Oration on the Dignity of Man," which has been called the "Manifesto of the Renaissance."
New social class hierarchy
1. Peninsulares - 100% European; from Europe 2. Creoles - 100% European; born and raised in the New World 3. Mestizos - European and native mix 4. Mulattoes - European and African mix
Niccoló Machiavelli
A statesman of Florence who advocated a strong central government in his most famous work, "The Prince"
Black Death
A widespread epidemic of bubonic plague that occurred in several outbreaks between 1347 and 1400. It originated in Asia and then swept through Europe, where it killed about a third of the population.
Mexica Empire
Also known as the Aztec Empire, a large and complex Native American civilization in modern Mexico and Central America that possessed advanced mathematical, astronomical, and engineering technology.
Incan Empire
An empire in Modern day Peru conquered by Francisco Pizarro and conquistadors in the early 16th century
Montezuma II
Aztec emperor who died while in custody of the Spanish conquistador Hernando Cortés; thought that Cortés was a god so he sent him gifts and that led to his defeat
Jean-Baptiste Colbert
Chief Minister of Finance under Louis XIV; mercantilism; brought in a lot of money, but Louis XIV undid everything he did with his outrageous spending; export more than import; make everything citizens need so no more need to import
Cardinal Mazarin
Chief Minister to Louis XIV; centralizing royal power; increased taxes for war which caused Le Fronde
Charles I
Constantly fighting with Parliament; refused to sign the petition of right, but needed Parliament for money; when he asked for money to put down Scottish rebellion Parliament declared independence
Bartholomew Dias
Found the "end" of Africa; Cape of Good Hope
St. Ignatius of Loyola
Founder of the Jesuits, an army like religious order; fought the reformation with education
William Shakespeare
Greatest dramatist of his time; From England under Elizabeth I; wrote about human problems, changing times, and global expansion
Johann Gutenberg
Invented the printing press in 1448
Frederick I "The Soldier King"
Known to be crude, dangerous, and psychoneurotic; truly establishes Prussian absolutism and gives it character. He had a bizarre passion for the army.
Jesuits
Members of the Society of Jesus, founded by Ignatius Loyola, whose goal was the spread of the Roman Catholic faith.
Michelangelo
Painted the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, and one of the David statues, the melancholy genius, from Florence, worked for Lorenzo Medici
Edict of Nantes
Passed by King Henry IV in 1598, it granted the Huguenots liberty of conscience and worship.
Joan of Arc
Peasant girl who led French army to victory over the English in the 100 Years' War
Anne Boleyn
Second wife of Henry VIII, beheaded, gave birth to a daughter
Treaty of Tordesillas
The 1494 agreement giving Spain everything to the west of an imaginary line drawn down the Atlantic Ocean and giving Portugal everything to the east
Columbian Exchange
The exchange of animals, plants, and diseases between the Old and the New Worlds.
Vasco da Gama
The first European to reach India by sea sailing around the tip of Africa. His initial journey was very profitable, encouraging others to follow his lead.
Jamestown, VA
The first permanent English settlement in North America, founded in 1607 in Virginia. was named for King James I of England. It was destroyed later in the seventeenth century in an uprising of Virginians against the governor.
Babylonian Captivity
The period from 1309 to 1376 when the popes resided in Avignon rather than in Rome. The phrase refers to the seventy years when the Hebrews were held captive in Babylon.
Malacca
The port of _______ was famous for Chinese porcelains, silks, camphor, pepper, cloves, and nutmeg.
Gustavus Adolphus
This Swedish king, a devout Lutheran, arrived in Germany and scored several victories before becoming fatally wounded in the battle at Lutzen.
Conversos
a Jew who publicly recanted the Jewish faith and adopted Christianity under the pressure of the Spanish Inquisition.
Printing press
a machine for printing text or pictures from type or plates.
Puritans
a member of a group of English Protestants of the late 16th and 17th centuries who regarded the Reformation of the Church of England under Elizabeth as incomplete and sought to simplify and regulate forms of worship.
New innovations for long voyages
caravel, improvements in cartography, magnetic compass, astrolabe, gunpowder, sternpost rudder, lateen sail
Clerical absenteeism
church leaders only collect money and don't fulfill their duties
Peace of Augsburg 1555
officially recognized Lutheranism and allowed German rulers to choose either Lutheranism or Roman Catholicism as the official religion of their territory
Christine de Pizan
the daughter and wife of highly educated men who held positions at the court of the king of France. She was widowed at twenty-five with young children and an elderly mother to care for, and she decided to support her family through writing. She began to write prose works and poetry and gained commissions to write a biography of the French king Charles V, several histories, a long poem celebrating Joan of Arc's victory, and a book of military tactics. She became the first woman in Europe to make her living as a writer.
Catholic Reformation
the period of Catholic resurgence initiated in response to the Protestant Reformation, beginning with the Council of Trent and ending at the close of the Thirty Years' War
Secularism
the principle of separation of the state from religious institutions
Act of Supremacy
two acts of the Parliament of England passed in 1534 and 1559 which established King Henry VIII of England and subsequent monarchs as the supreme head of the Church of England.
John Wycliffe
wrote that Scripture alone should be the standard of Christian belief and practice and that papal claims of secular power had no foundation in the Scriptures. He urged that the church be stripped of its property. He also wanted Christians to read the Bible for themselves and produced the first complete translation of the Bible into English.