Foundations of govt, British history, DOI, Articles of Confederation

studied byStudied by 22 people
5.0(2)
get a hint
hint

Athens

1 / 51

Tags and Description

52 Terms

1

Athens

The birthplace of democracy

New cards
2

Cleisthenes

The person who introduced democracy in ancient Athens

New cards
3

Direct democracy

A form of democracy where people vote directly for laws. (Ancient Athens)

New cards
4

Representative democracy

A form of democracy where people vote for representatives who vote for laws. (US, Roman Republic)

New cards
5

Roman Republic

Birthplace of representative democracy. Had the 3 branches of govt, with 2 consuls making up the executive branch.

New cards
6

Democracy

People vote on issues directly, majority can directly overrule minority with no protections for the minority

New cards
7

Republic

Representatives are selected by voters to vote on issues. The constitution protects the minority.

New cards
8

Virginia Company charters

charters given to the VA Company of London by King James in 1606. Gave Jamestown settlers the same rights as Englishmen

New cards
9

Mayflower Compact

A document for self rule agreed upon by puritan settlers trying to establish self-governance in the New World.

New cards
10

Thomas Hobbes

An enlightenment thinker who thought that people were inherently bad and that a social contract was needed to keep them in line. Believed in absolute monarchy.

New cards
11

John Locke

An enlightenment thinker who believed in God-given rights. Thought that the govt’s job is to protect those rights, and if they aren’t doing that then it justified revolution.

New cards
12

Montesquieu

An enlightenment thinker who believed in separation of power, proposing a system of checks and balances.

New cards
13

Voltaire

An enlightenment thinker who wrote about many first amendment rights, such as freedom of speech, religious tolerance, and separation of church and state.

New cards
14

Jean-Jacques Rousseau

An enlightenment thinker who thought that entering a social contract meant that people have to forfeit some natural rights. Believed in direct democracy, “we the people”

New cards
15

Magna Carta

An agreement between King John and his barons to limit his power. Established the rule of law, and ended absolute power.

New cards
16

English Petition of Right

An agreement between King Charles I and Parliament. It established many rights like trial by jury, no troops in homes, no false imprisonment, protection of private property. It also limited the King’s power by mandating that he consult parliament before creating taxes,

New cards
17

English Bill of Rights

An agreement between Parliament and William & Mary that guaranteed the rights to a fair trial, no cruel/unusual punishment, and created a constitutional monarchy in England.

New cards
18

Boycotts

Colonists responded to unfair taxation, a lack of representation and being denied fair trials through _________.

New cards
19

Declaration of Independence

The document that renounced England and said that the U.S. was an independent nation.

New cards
20

Thomas Jefferson

The author of the Declaration of Independence

New cards
21

27

The Declaration of Independence contained how many gradiences against the British?

New cards
22

Articles of Confederation

The first form of government in the U.S., which created a loose confederation of states. States had the vast majority of power, and they remained sovereign and independent.

New cards
23

No chief executive

A problem with the Articles of Confederation. There was no symbol for the country, and there was no one person to make decisions in crisis situations.

New cards
24

Laws needed 9/13 colonies votes to be approved

A problem with the Articles of Confederation. It resulted in nothing really being able to get national laws passed.

New cards
25

National govt couldn’t tax people

A problem with the Articles of Confederation. It resulted in the national government being underfunded. This power was exclusively given to states.

New cards
26

National govt couldn’t raise an army

A problem with the Articles of Confederation. The states didn’t want to send in men for a national army, so the country in whole was left mostly defenseless.

New cards
27

No federal court system

A problem with the Articles of Confederation. Resulted in any interstate cases not having a clear way to be handled. It also led to bias being created in cases between states.

New cards
28

Amendments had to be approved by all states

A problem with the Articles of Confederation. Resulted in amendments to the articles effectively not being able to be passed because it would take forever for every state to agree.

New cards
29

National govt couldn’t collect state debts

A problem with the Articles of Confederation. Resulted in the states being able to take money from the national govt and never having to repay it. It led to the national government being even more poor.

New cards
30

National govt couldn’t settle state disputes

A problem with the Articles of Confederation. Resulted in the states being able to do whatever they want, and many state conflicts going on for an extended period of time.

New cards
31

Legislative

Under the Articles of Confederation, there was only one branch. This branch was the ______ branch.

New cards
32

Shay’s Rebellion

A rebellion caused by Massachusetts farmers who were angry when high taxes caused them to loose their farms. They stormed a federal arsenal and were stopped by George Washington’s private militia. It caused people to realize that the national govt was too weak, and that the articles of confederation were flawed because the national govt was unable to raise a militia to fight it.

New cards
33

Constitutional convention

A meeting to consider amendments to the articles of confederation. Eventually, the framers decide to create an entirely knew constitution.

New cards
34

55

How many delegates were there at the constitutional convention?

New cards
35

George Washington

A VA delegate who was named the president of the constitutional convention. He wanted a strong government with authority.

New cards
36

James Madison

A VA delegate at the constitutional convention. He authored the Virginia plan and took a lot of notes.

New cards
37

George Mason

A VA delegate at the constitutional convention. He didn’t sign the constitution because of the lack of the bill of rights. He eventually influenced the creation of the bill of rights.

New cards
38

Roger Sherman

A Connecticut delegate at the constitutional convention. Proposed the Connecticut compromise, which helped to settle the issue of representation in congress.

New cards
39

William Patterson

A New Jersey delegate at the constitutional convention. Helped make the New Jersey Plan.

New cards
40

James Wilson

A Pennsylvania delegate at the constitutional convention. Argued for a single chief executive.

New cards
41

VA Plan

A plan for how representation in the legislature should be determined. It proposed having 2 houses of the legislature, with representation in both being based on a state’s population.

New cards
42

NJ Plan

A plan for how representation in the legislature should be determined. It proposed a unicameral legislature with equal representation for all states.

New cards
43

Connecticut compromise

The final solution for how representation would be determined in the legislature. There would be two houses of legislature, with the representation in one being based on population and the representation in the other being equal between the states.

New cards
44

Southern states

Wanted slaves to be counted as people when determining representation for congress as they had a large slave population.

New cards
45

Northern states

Did not want slaves to be counted as people when determining population as they had less slaves.

New cards
46

The 3/5ths compromise

A compromise between the north and the south on whether slaves should be counted when determining representation in the House of Representatives.

New cards
47

Electoral college

The compromise reached at the constitutional convention for how the president would be elected. One side wanted the common folk to vote, but the other side thought that they were too uneducated. This solution created electors, who would vote on behalf of the state for whatever the population had chosen.

New cards
48

Virginia Declaration of Rights

A Virginia document written by George Mason that said that the govt shouldn’t violate people’s natural rights. It inspired parts of the DOI and Bill of Rights.

New cards
49

Virginia Statute for Religious Freedoms

A precursor to the first amendment’s section on religious freedom. Written by Thomas Jefferson.

New cards
50

Federalists

One of the early political groups.

  • Wanted a big government.

  • Didn’t support a bill of rights

  • Favored division of power among different branches

New cards
51

Anti-Federalists

One of the early political groups.

  • Wanted more power for the states. Supported states’ rights.

  • Wanted the legislative to have more power than the executive branch

  • Feared a strong executive because they were scared of a tyrant

  • Wanted a bill of rights

New cards
52

The Federalist Papers

85 essays written by Hamilton, Madison nd Jay. Their purpose was to defend the constitution and gain support for it from the states to get it ratified.

New cards

Explore top notes

note Note
studied byStudied by 7 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 98 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(2)
note Note
studied byStudied by 62 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(2)
note Note
studied byStudied by 9 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 7 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 10 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 111 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)

Explore top flashcards

flashcards Flashcard38 terms
studied byStudied by 3 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard51 terms
studied byStudied by 151 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(2)
flashcards Flashcard80 terms
studied byStudied by 52 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(2)
flashcards Flashcard90 terms
studied byStudied by 52 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard30 terms
studied byStudied by 11 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard40 terms
studied byStudied by 4 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard43 terms
studied byStudied by 5 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard96 terms
studied byStudied by 40 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)