American_Pageant_3 Word Scramble
|
Embed Code - If you would like this activity on your web page, copy the script below and paste it into your web page.
Normal Size Small Size show me how
Normal Size Small Size show me how
| Question | Answer |
| The principal motivation shaping the earliest settlements in New England was | religious commitment and devotion |
| Compared with the Plymouth Colony, the Massachusetts Bay Colony was | larger and more economically prosperous |
| One reason that the Massachusetts Bay Colony was not a true democracy is | only church members could vote for the governor and the General Court |
| One distinctive feature of Rhode Island Colony is that | it enjoyed the most complete religious freedom of all the English colonies |
| Before the first settlement in New England, local Indian population had been devastated by | disease epidemics caused by contact with fisherman |
| The Indian tribe that first encountered the English colonists in New England were the | wampanoags |
| The puritan missionary efforts to convert the Indians to Christianity were | mostly weak and ineffective |
| King Phillip's war represented | the last major Indian effort to halt New Englands' encroachment on their lands |
| The primary value in the New England Confederation lay in | providing the first small step to intercolonial cooperation |
| The event that sparked the collaps of the Dominion of New England was | the glorious revolution in england |
| The Dutch colony of New Netherlands was | harshly and undemocratically governed |
| The short-lived Swedish colony conquered by the Dutch New Netherlands was | New Sweden |
| William Penn's colony of Pennsylvania | actively sought settlers from Germany and other non-British countries |
| The middle colonies of New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Delaware | had more ethnic diversity than either New England or the southern colonies |
| Besides Pennsylvania, quakers were also heavily involved in founding | New Jersey and Delaware |
| The dominant religious group in Massachusetts bay | Puritans |
| Founder of the most tolerant and democratic of the middle colonies | William Penn |
| Mass flight from the religious dissidents from persecutions of Archbishop Laud and Charles I | Great Puritan Migration |
| Small colony that eventually fused into Massachusetts Bay | Plymouth |
| Religious dissenter convicted of heresy and antinomianism | Anne Hutchinson |
| Indian leader who successfully waged war against New England | King Phillip |
| German monk who began the protestant reformation | Martin Luther |
| Religious group persecuted in Massachusetts and New York, but not Pennsylvania | quakers |
| Representative assembly of Massachusetts Bay | General Court |
| Promoter of Massachusetts Bay as a "city upon a hill" | John Winthrop |
| Conqueror of New Sweden who eventually lost New Netherlands to England | Peter Stuyvesant |
| Reformer whose religious ideas inspired English Puritans, Scotch Presbyterians, French Hugenots and Dutch Reformed | John Calvin |
| Wampanoag chieftain who befriended English Colonists | Massasoit |
| Colony whose government sought to enforce God's Law on believers and non-believers alike | Massachusetts Bay |
| Radical founder of the most tolerant New England Colony | Roger Williams |
| Sixteenth-century reform movement started by Martin Luther | protestantism |
| English Calvanists who sought a thorough cleansing from within the Church of England. | Puritans |
| Radical Calvanists who thought the Church of England so corrupt that they broke with it and formed their new and independant churches | Separatists |
| The shipboard agreement signed by the Pilgrim Fathers to establish a body politic and submit to majority rule | Mayflower Compact |
| Puritan term for the belief that Massachusetts Bay had a special arrangement with God to become a holy society | covenant |
| Charles I's political action of 1629 that led to persecution of the Puritans and the formation of the Massachusetts Bay Company. | dismissal of parliament |
| The two major nonfarming industries of Massachusetts Bay. | fishing and shipbuilding |
| Anne Hutchinson's heretical belief that the truly saved need not obey human or divine law. | antinomianism |
| Common fate of Roger Williams and Anne Hutchinson after they were convicted of heresay in Massachusetts Bay. | Banishment or exile |
| Villages where New England Indians who converted to Christianity were gathered. | "praying" villagies |
| Successful military action by the colonies united in the New England Confederation. | King Phillip's War |
| English revolt that also led to the overthrow of the Dominion of New England in America. | Glorious revolution |
| River valley where vast estates created an aristocratic landholding elite in New Netherland and New York. | Hudson |
| Required, sworn statements of loyalty or religious belief, resisted by Quakers. | test oaths |
| Common activity in which the colonists engaged to avoid the restictive, unpopular Navigation Laws. | smuggling |
Created by:
guesswho
Popular U.S. History sets