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Mexico

To what extent did American Western expansion help cause the Texas Revolution, and how were Mexican politics affected by the out

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Indiana Magazine of HistoryEncoded byAptara Inc.Digital Library Program, Indiana UniversityBloomington, IN2007Copyright 2007 Trustees of Indiana UniversityIndiana University provides the information contained in this file for non-commercial, personal, or research use only. All other use, including but not limited to commercial or scholarly reproductions, redistribution, publication or transmission, whether by electronic means or otherwise, without prior written permission of the copyright holder is strictly prohibited.Indiana Magazine of History The Texas Revolution William C. Binkley Book ReviewRudolph L. BieseleIndiana Magazine of HistoryBloomington, INIndiana University Department of History in cooperation with

Chapter 6- Directions, Diversities, and Decline

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9Africa Kush The Kush were established by 1000 BCE on the Nile The kush conquered Egypt around 750 BCE Monarchy King with divine right Axum Defeated Kush and took over by 300 BCE Strong influence from Arabian peninsula Converted to Christianity Ethiopia Took over the Axum Christian Monarchy Ghana First great state Japan and Northern Europe Japan By 200 CE had extensive agriculture Migrations from Korea populated this area Practiced Shintoism Numerous gods from the natural world Nature spirits 700 CE Northern Europe Teutonic or celtic people Regional kingdoms Germany, England and Scandinavia Slavic people No written language except for basic latin Primitive agriculture Scandinavian sailors The Americas Teotihuacan Central mexico Urban center Temple pyramids Social distinction

Chapter 6- Directions, Diversities and Declines

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9Africa Kush The Kush were established by 1000 BCE on the Nile The kush conquered Egypt around 750 BCE Monarchy King with divine right Axum Defeated Kush and took over by 300 BCE Strong influence from Arabian peninsula Converted to Christianity Ethiopia Took over the Axum Christian Monarchy Ghana First great state Japan and Northern Europe Japan By 200 CE had extensive agriculture Migrations from Korea populated this area Practiced Shintoism Numerous gods from the natural world Nature spirits 700 CE Northern Europe Teutonic or celtic people Regional kingdoms Germany, England and Scandinavia Slavic people No written language except for basic latin Primitive agriculture Scandinavian sailors The Americas Teotihuacan Central mexico Urban center Temple pyramids Social distinction

Chapter 1 APUSH Notes

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Chapter 1 New World Beginnings 33,000 B.C. - A.D. 1769 225 Million Years Ago - Pangaea started to break apart. 10 Million Years Ago - North America was shaped by nature - Canadian Shield 2 Million Years Ago- Great Ice Age 35,000 Years Ago - The oceans were glaciers and the sea level dropped, leaving an isthmus connecting Asia and North America. The Bering Isthmus was crossed by people going into North America. 10,000 Years Ago - Ice started to retreat and melt, raising the sea levels and covering up the Bering Isthmus. Peopling the Americas Evidence suggests that early people may have come to the Americas in crude boats, or across the Bering Isthmus. By the time Columbus arrived in America in 1492, over 54 million people may have been living in North & South America.

Chapter 32 Vocabulary

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Chp 32 Vocab Third world: term for nations not among the capitalist industrial nations of the first world and the industrialized communist nations of the second world. Francisco Madero: Moderate democratic Mexican reformer; challenged Porfirio Diaz in 1910 and initiated a revolution after losing fraudulent elections; assassinated in 1913. Pancho Villa: Mexican revolutionary leader in Northern Mexico after 1910.? Emiliano Zapata: Mexican revolutionary commander of a guerilla movement centered at Morelos; demanded sweeping land reform. Victoriano Huerta: Gained power in Mexico after the death of Madero in 1913; forced from power in 1914. ?Alvaro Obregon: Became leader of Mexican government in 1915; elected president in 1920.

U.S. History from 5,500 B.C. To Before the American Revolution, vocabulary

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U.S. History from 5,500 B.C. to Before the American Revolution History 1302 at Tarrant County College Agricultural revolution 5,500 BCE in Mesoamerica, the southern half of Mexico and Latin America, People became more sedentary and grew crops like maize Tenochtitlan Capital of Aztecs, site of present-day Mexico City, 100,000 people in 1500 Leif Eriksson 11th century, Norse seaman, First European to come to the Americas, around Canada Ponce de Leon 1513 in Florida for the Fountain of Youth Vasco de Gama 1497-1499 Water route to India Marco Polo Returned from Asia with exotic spices, cloths, dyes, exotic tales, Europeans craved trade, but limited by long land trip Ferdinand and Isabela

Important terms and Ideas from an american pageant chapters 28-32

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Unit VII Terms and Important Ideas Terms Chapter 28 Jacob Riis Lincoln Steffens Theodore Dreiser Ida Tarbell Robert La Follette Florence Kelley Upton Sinclair John Muir Initiative Referendum Recall Muckrakers 17th Amendment 18th Amendment Elkins Act Hepburn Act Muller v. Oregon Triangle Shirtwaist fire The Jungle Dollar diplomacy New Nationalism Chapter 29 Woodrow Wilson Victoriano Huerta Venustiano Carranza Pancho Villa John J. Pershing New Freedom Underwood Tariff 16th Amendment Federal Reserve Act Clayton Act Central Powers Allies Lusitania Sussex Chapter 30 George Creel Bernard Baruch Herbert Hoover Henry Cabot Lodge Warren G. Harding Self-determination ?normalcy? Zimmerman note Fourteen Points League of Nations Committee on Public Information Espionage and Sedition Acts
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