PPT-Chapters 3 & 4 Colonial North America & Rising Expectations

Author : natalia-silvester | Published Date : 2018-11-07

This eighteenthcentury woodcut shows enslaved black men women and children engaged in the steps involved in the curing of tobacco The slavery codes regulated slaves

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Chapters 3 & 4 Colonial North America & Rising Expectations: Transcript


This eighteenthcentury woodcut shows enslaved black men women and children engaged in the steps involved in the curing of tobacco The slavery codes regulated slaves and asserted the rights of slave owners. Rebecca Grossman. 7C1 ID4. Early Settlers. Early settlers brought with them small amounts of extra food. Once they arrived in the new world they relied on what was around them to survive. They hunted for meat but needed to balance what they ate. . French North America. In 1608. , the French established their first North American settlement at Quebec along the St. Lawrence River. The leader of the settlement was Samuel de Champlain who eventually earned the title of “Father of New France.”. Conquest by the Cradle. A Mingling of the Races. The Structure of Colonial Society. Clerics, Physicians, and Jurists. Workaday America. Horsepower and Sailpower. Dominant Denominations. The Great Awakening. & Colonization of The Americas. I. The Spanish Caribbean. A. The indigenous Tainos or Arawaks . Taino Indians, Dominican Rep., 1500 CE. B. The . Encomienda. system. 1. subjugated by the Spanish to mine gold & silver. DUBLIN. Then, and now.. The Easter Rising, also known as the Easter Rebellion, was an armed insurrection in Ireland during Easter Week, 1916.. It caused a lot of damage on the city, and not only material, but also innocent people lost their lives then. Some of them fighting, others only living their normal . Germination of Rising. After 1902, even in peace time, the Ireland police were more military and the military more police-like than in Britain. . Miliary. parties were called out to suppress industrial unrest (as Lockout 1913), to protect the property, and to assist police action against nationalist paramilitaries.. The . World’s lowest lying nation . – the highest point is only 1.3 . metres. above sea level. A rise of 1 . metre. would make the islands uninhabitable. Since the 1950s, sea levels have increased 0.8-1.6 . Colonial Society. What determined a place in society:. Wealth. Gender. Race. Differences between social rank could be seen in clothing, houses, and manners. Wealth in Land. Foundation of real wealth was the land. North America is the . 3. rd. largest continent, containing . 16.5%. of the earth’s total land area.. North America is the . 4. th. . most . populous. continent with a population around . 515 million. Much growth through natural increase. Exceptional longevity in New England. Large influx of non-English Europeans. Scots-Irish Flee English Oppression. Largest non-English group. The Scots fled England for Ireland, then the Scots-Irish came to North America. The rights of. The Role of Women in Colonial America. Women did not have the same rights as men during the colonial era. They couldn’t own land or vote.. They mostly served to help out on their homes or farms.. Table of Contents. Colonial Women. Clothing. Colonial Homes. Colonial Food. Colonial Food-continued. Colonial Food-continued. Garden. Daily Chores. Quilting. Candle-Making. Home Décor. Women’s Rights . AP Chapter 3. New France. 1605 Samuel de Champlain set out to monopolize the northern fur trade. . and founded the settlement of Quebec. Champlain controlled the fur trade and created alliances with the natives. Syllabus Review. Professor . Kristalyn . M. . Shefveland. Fall . 2015. About your professor. My name is Dr. Kristalyn Shefveland and I am a specialist in Colonial and Native American History. I received my PhD in American History from the University of Mississippi in May 2010. My research interests include Colonial America, Native America, the Southeast, the Atlantic World and the British Empire. I am eager to learn about you and your specific interests in History. .

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