<p>I know there’s already a thread, but someone started to put up information/notes so I think there should be a new thread so people can see it in the front page…</p>
<p>Here goes the super-long notes…</p>
<p>I know there’s already a thread, but someone started to put up information/notes so I think there should be a new thread so people can see it in the front page…</p>
<p>Here goes the super-long notes…</p>
<p>FOR THOSE WHO ARE USING BARRON’S: the pages are listed, if not, then use it as notes…
Yes, I took notes as I read the book. How painstaking
</p>
<p>Chapter 19: World Exchange (1450-1750)
Galleons trade warships pg. (277)
Indentures English contracts used to attract settlers of N. America: working as laborers for a period, 4-7 years, in exchange for passage to new colonies (pg. 279)
India Act 1784, British government getting involve of Indian politics (pg. 274)
Metis mulattos: African-European, but primary French (pg. 273)
Presidios military garrisons: 1769, Spanish began to consolidate colonies in N. America. 1st at San Diego (pg. 278)
Puritans religious Protestants: strictness in beliefs and morals
Sepoy native Indian soldier in a service of European power: helped gain political control in India (pg. 274)
Shimabara Rebellion Japanese Christian revolts pg. (275)
Treaty if Nerchinsk Sino-Russian treaty of border near China: conquest of Siberia (pg. 280)
Treaty of Paris signed in 1763, French recognizing English control in India (pg. 274) </p>
<p>Chapter 20: Liberal Democratic Movements (1450-1850)
Bourgeois characteristic of middle class: refers to liberation (pg. 292)
Caudillos generals in Latin Americas (pg. 298)
Civil Code 1804, Napoleons greatest civil achievement: based on Roman law in which 2 fundamental principles: equality of citizens before the law and security of wealth and private property, but recognized men as head of family which made women dependent. (pg. 295)
Congress System periodically meeting to settle international crises: regarding to Congress of Vienna (pg. 297)
Congress of Vienna led by Klemens von Metternich of Austria, and composed of representatives of Russia, Prussia, Austria, and Great Britain, construction of peace settlement based on balance of power principles was undertaken (pg. 297)
Creole American-born Spanish (pg. 297)
Enlightenment the intellectual movement centered in France: advocated using scientific methods to study human society (pg. 290)
Declaration of the Rights of Man issued by National Assembly: closely followed the American Declaration of Independence (pg. 294)
Democracy system of government in which all citizens (however defined) have equal political and legal rights, privileges, and practices (pg. 289)
François-Marie Arouet known by pen name, Voltaire, most famous and representative philosophe: includes civil rights (pg. 291)
Juntas set up by Creoles where groups of people controlling the government after a revolution (pg. 298)
National Assembly renamed by the 3rd estates (middle classes) in France when 1st and 2nd estates refused to meet with 3rd estates: swore in Tennis Court Oath to not disband until a constitution was written. (pg. 294)
Republicanism a political system in which the power to govern is granted by the people (however defined) rather than inherited or assumed by force (pg. 289)
Philosophes a group of intellectuals thinkers in France (pg.291)
Thomas Hobbes the first English philosopher to apply natural laws to society: wrote Leviathan (pg. 291)
Sans culottes lower classes who had suffered inflation and food shortages: group who called for the slogan of liberty, equality, and fraternity (France) (pg. 294)
The Social contract (1762) by Jean-Jacques Rousseau: sovereign power is vested in people, not the monarch, and the general will is sacred and absolute. (pg. 291)</p>
<p>Chapter 21: Industrial Revolutions and European Imperialism (1750-1914)
Afrikaners Dutch settlers in Africa (pg. 315)
Berlin Conference 1884-1885 declared effective occupation the determining factor in laying claim of colonization in Africa (pg. 316)
Boers Dutch settlers in Africa (pg. 315)
Bourgeoisie capitalist factory owners: middle class (pg. 306)
Boxer Rebellion 1900 a rebellion by the people of China to end foreign domination (pg. 317)
Communist Manifesto by Karl Marx and Frederick Engels: applied theory of Georges Hegel to economic relationships between classes <a href=“pg.%20309”>Germany</a>
Doctrine of lapse native states without a clear successor fell under British rule <a href=“pg.%20316”>Asia</a>
Great Trek Dutch settlers in Africa migration to northern side due to Britain conquest (pg. 316)
James Hargreaves invented cotton spinning jenny: wheel turned by hand (pg. 304)
Laissez-faire opposition to government interference: a form of liberalism often called classical liberalism~ against socialism (pg. 307)
Neo-imperialism type of imperialism where competition abroad often led to acquisition of territory, not for its own sake, but to keep other European countries from doing so (pg. 314)
Proletariat urban workers (pg. 306)
Richard Arkwright invented the water frame that supplied the power (pg. 304)
Sepoy Rebellion 1857 catalyst to British acquirement of India (p. 316)
Taiping Rebellion 1853 favor redistribution of land, equality between men and women, and reduction in taxes: took 14 years to suppress and cost 20 million lives, weakened Chiing rule (pg. 316)
Trans-Siberian Railroad built 1891-1905. Linked Europe and Asia (pg. 314)
<strong>EXTRA NOTES</strong>
Only Ethiopia in northeast Africa & Liberia on the West African coast remained independent ~ 1914 (pg. 315) </p>
<p>I like this idea! Keep them coming please! :D</p>
<p>^ Agreed. Thank you for this.</p>