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Anne Hutchinson

ch3 notes

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Settling the Northern Colonies North and south colonies were very different Different political views Patterns of settlement Economies Moral values Tobacco shaped the southern colonies, religious devotion shaped the northern colonies The Protestant Reformation Produces Puritanism Martin Luther unknowingly started the Protestant Reformation when he nailed his protests against catholic doctrines to the door of Wittenberg?s cathedral He believed that the Bible was God?s word alone

Understanding of Puritans

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Background of Puritanism 1620 - William Bradford came with a group of individuals from Europe and formed Plymouth Plantation. In the Fall of 1620 there were 101 men, women, and children present. By the Spring of 1621 there were only 50 survivors. 1628 - John Winthrop and followers came over from Europe in order to establish a ?pure? religious movement. The Puritans believed in the innate depravity of man. They also believed that some people were ?predestined? to experience an afterlife with God. Only the ?elect? or ?chosen? were in a good relationship with God. The Puritans believed that God was working in their daily lives. The Puritans would ?search? their daily lives in order to find any symbols from God.

APUSH Enduring Vision Chapter 3 outline

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Outline Chapter 3 Expansion and Diversity: The Rise of Colonial America, 1625-1700 The Stuart Dynasty in England Name, Reign????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????? Relation to America James I, 1603-1625 VA., Plymouth founded; Separatists persecuted Charles I, 1625-1649 Civil Wars, 1642-1649; Mass., MD formed Interregnum, 1649-1660 Commonwealth; Protectorate (Oliver Cromwell) Charles II, 1660-1685 The Restoration; Carolina, Pa., N.Y. founded; Conn. chartered James II, 1685-1688 Catholic trend; Glorious Revolution, 1688 William and Mary, 1689-1702 (Mary died in 1694) King William's War, 1689-1697 The New England Way One of the earliest regions to prosper in North America was New England.

The scarlet Letter

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Shikha Patel September 18, 2013 Period 1 The Scarlet Letter Chapters 1-7 Chapters 1-3 1. The throng of people is townspeople who are there to see Hester Prynne be punished for her crime. 2. According to Hawthorne, the first two places allotted for in any new community are a cemetery and a prison. 4. I think that Hawthorne is using the rosebush as a symbol of wilderness and nature?s beauty. Everything else that is surrounding this area is dreary and ugly but this the rosebush is a beautiful piece of nature. The rose bush is supposed to bless the people that go into the church. The book mentions Anne Hutchinson and says that the bush sprang up when Anne Hutchinson got there.

APUSH Vocab Unit I

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Unit I Vocab Indentured servants Identifying information? occurred in the 17th century. About 75% of the English migrants who went to the New World came as servants who were signed to indentus. Analysis ? indentured servants were a big part of the population of the colonist. They worked the lands until they were freed and then went to live on the outsides of the colonies. They soon started getting mad because their former servants were no help for when they moved out. Trade & Navigation Acts Identifying information? Analysis ? Mayflower Compact Identifying information? (1620s) the pilgrims created this document while they were still on route to the new world on the Mayflower. Not a constitution, but an early example. Signed by many about 40 adult males.

Period 2 Flash cards

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Wampanoag tribal leader whose ability to create alliances among native tribes allowed for successful raids into new England villages in the late 1600?s This European imperial power settled primarily in present day Canada and along the missisiippi river The first permanent settlement in north America was established in 1607 This was the leading cash crop in the middle colonies by the mid 1700?s These members of the Anglican church hoped to reform and reshape their religion from the inside This New England town was gripped with jelous speculation and accusations of whichcraft This person was kicked out of the mass bay colony for challenging puritans beliefs in predestination and gender roles

the american pageant ch 3 puritan belief

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Chapter 3 - Settling the Northern Colonies 1. Protestant ethic 2. Mayflower Compact - 1620 3. Fundamental Orders 4. Navigation Laws 5. The Puritans 6. General Court 7. Separatists 8.Quakers 9. New England Confederation 10. Calvinism 11. Massachusetts Bay Colony 12. Dominion of New England 13. Pilgrims 14. Predestination 15. Freemen 16. visible saints 17. covenant 18. Protestant Reformation 19. King Philip II 20. John Cotton 21. Sir Edmond Andros 22. The elect 23. Patroonship 24. William Bradford 25. Peter Stuyvesant 26. Thomas Hooker 27. William Penn 28. John Winthrop 29. Henry Hudson 30. John Calvin 31. Anne Hutchinson 32. Roger Williams

APUSH American Pageant 14th Edition Chapter 3 Outline (DETAILED)

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Name Teacher August 14, 2013 AP US History Chapter 3 Settling the Northern Colonies The Protestant Reformation Produces Puritanism Martin Luther Against Catholicism Denounced authority of priests and popes Declared Bible is only source of God?s word Started the Protestant Reformation John Calvin Calvinism Institutes of the Christian Religion Predestination Cannot be saved from predetermined fate except by conversion Puritans Became unhappy with slow progress of Reformation in England Separatists Wanted to break away from Church of England The Pilgrims End Their Pilgrimage at Plymouth Separatists Fled England for Holland 1608 Wanted to find a place where they can be English and Purified Protestants Targeted America Mayflower Missed destination, landed at Plymouth Bay
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