Question | Answer | . |
Joint Stock Company/Corporation | Corporation that people invest in hoping that the exploration or colony financed will make a profit. | |
Charter | Document (a formal paper) that gives a group of people the right to establish (make) a colony. | |
Quaker | Believed that all people were equal in God's eyes. Settled Pennsylvania and created a colony where all had political and religious freedom. | |
Religious Toleration | Being tolerant(accepting) of all religions. | |
Puritan | Protestant reformer people who wanted change) who wanted to "purify" the church. They were kicked out of England and settled in Massachusetts. | Purify: reform or change |
Pilgrim | Protestant reformer who wanted to simplify the church. They settled in Plymouth. | Protestant: People who chose to be separated from the Church. |
House of Burgess | Representative assembly (group of people) in Virginia. The first representative body in the English colonies. | |
Mayflower Compact | Document drawn up by the Pilgrims before getting off the Mayflower that told how the colony would be governed. | |
New England Town Meetings | Democratic meetings where the people in the town got to vote on local issues. | |
Mayflower Compact | 1620 agreement for ruling the Plymouth colony. It established the precedent of democratic rule in the English colonies. | |
Witch Trials | Putting a group of people on trial as "scape goats" to explain why something bad is happening. | |
Triangular Trade | Illegal trade between the colonies and Europe, Asia and Africa. England didn't shut it down since they were making a lot of money off of it. | |
Mercantilism | Economic policy that states that colonies exist for the financial(money) benefit of the mother country. | |
Democracy | Political system where people have a say in electing representatives and making laws. | |
Indentured Servant | Person who trades their labor in order to learn a trade or pay for a trip to the colonies. | |
Immigration | Moving to a new country permanently. | |
Emmigration | Leaving your old country to move somewhere else. | |
Navigation Acts | Laws established by England in the 1660's to regulate(control) colonial trade. | |
Representative | A person who stands or acts for a larger group, the person is chosen from the group by an election. | (blank) |
Peninsula | a portion of land nearly surrounded by water and connected with a larger body | (blank) |
Contaminate (ed) | to soil, stain, corrupt, or infect by contact or association, such as a bacteria | (blank) |
Native | belonging to a particular place by birth | (blank) |
Deteriorate (ed) | to become impaired in quality, functioning, or condition | (blank) |
Passage | a specific act of traveling or passing especially by sea or air | (blank) |
| (blank) | (blank) |
Servitude | : a right by which something (as a piece of land) owned by one person is subject to a specified use or enjoyment by another | (blank) |
Lower class | people who had less money, education | (blank) |
Merchant ship | the operator of a retail business travels between ports (cities) to sell their goods | (blank) |
Decade (s) | a group or set of 10: as a: a period of 10 years | (blank) |
Accommodate | to provide (give)a person with something that is desired or needed, to live or do a job. | (blank) |
Inhabitant | a person that occupies a particular place, such as a house, city, or state for a period of time | (blank) |
Original | first, the first group of people, or the first person to do something | (blank) |
Conquest | territory appropriated in war, land won after fighting for it in a war | (blank) |
Mestizo | mixed groups of people, such as Spanish and English people living together | (blank) |
Migrate (ed) | to move from one country, place, or locality to another place | (blank) |