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Page 1: 14 and 1500s

14 and 1500s

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Reasons why the Renaissance began in Italy

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• Humanism, humanists, and their works

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• Innovations in Renaissance art, artists, and their works

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• The New Monarchs and Machiavelli

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• The Age of Exploration (Old Imperialism)– Motives– Technology– Countries Involved– Columbian Exchange

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• Commercial Revolution (Price revolution) and mercantilism

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• The Protestant Reformation and Reformers

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• Religious Wars in France

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• Revolts in the Netherlands

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• Causes of the Scientific Revolution along with scientists, their theories, and works they wrote

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• The De Medici

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• Charles V

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• Hapsburg-Valois Wars

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• Phillip II of Spain

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• Serfdom in eastern Europe

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• Peasants’ Revolt in Germany

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• Time of Troubles in Russia

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• Papal Schism, Conciliar Movement, and Babylonian Captivity

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• Catholic Counter Reformation

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• Peace of Augsburg

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• Gutenberg and results of his invention

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• Causes of the Scientific Revolution• Copernicus• Galielo• Kepler• Harvey

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• Baroque art movement

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• Michel de Montaigne

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Northern Renaissance

• Art, writers, etc.

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1600s

• Anglo-Dutch Wars

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• English Civil War– James I– Charles I– Cromwell– Charles II– James II

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• Peter the Great

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• Putting Out System

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• Colbert

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• Cossack Revolts in Russia

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• Hobbes and Locke

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• Louis XIV

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• Test Act in England

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1700s

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• Agricultural Revolution and Enclosure Movement

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• The Enlightenment, Salons and Deism

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• Philosophes– Rousseau– Voltaire– Montequieu– D’Holbach– Hume– Diderot

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• War of the Spanish Succession and Peace of Utrecht

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• Frederick William I of Prussia

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• Seven Years’ War

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• Catherine the Great

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• Partitions of Poland

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• Louis XVI and the French Revolution

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• Napoleon

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• The Industrial Revolution and Inventions

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• French Utopian Socialism

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• Malthus and Ricardo

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• Wollstonecraft

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• Adam Smith and Capitalism

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• Jenner and Vaccinations• Hausmann and Paris

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• Neoclassical Art and Rococo Art

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1800s

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• Congress of Viena

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• Revolutions of 1830 and 1848

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• Great Britain: reform Bill of 1832; Poor Law Reform; Chartists; People’s Budget; Corn Laws; Mines’ Act; Reform Bill of 1867

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• The New Imperialism– Motives– Locations– People– Countries involved– Post WWII

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• Crimean War

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• German and Italian unification– People involved– Methods used– results

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• The Zollverein

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• Great Famine in Ireland• Home Rule Bill

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• Spencer and Social Darwinism

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• Science in the 19th century• Comte and positivism• Darwin• Pasteur• Freud• Mendeleev

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• Karl Marx and Engels

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• Friederich List

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• Nietzsche

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• Romanticism in art– Artists– Characteristics– works

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• Dreyfus Affair and Third Republic in France

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• Alexander I of Russia and Sergei Witte

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• Mill On Liberty

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• Realism in art

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• Impressionism in art

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• Marie Curie

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• The Dreyfus Affair and Zola

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1900s

• Russo-Japanese War

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• Russian Revolutions

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• Balkan Wars

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• Women’s suffrage movement in England

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• Social Welfare legislation

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• Planck and Quantum Theory• Eistein and theory of relativity

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• Keynes and economics

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• Rutherford and atoms

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• existentialism

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• Lenin and his NEP program

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• The Totalitarian Dictators– Mussolini– Hitler– Stalin

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• Dawes Plan and Great Depression in Europe

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• WWI

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• WWII

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• Marshall Plan

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• NATO and Warsaw Pacts

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• The European Union

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• Civil War in Yugoslavia

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• The Cold War

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• Balfour Declaration and founding of Israel

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• Student rebellion in France, 1968

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• Spanish Civil War

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• Women after WWII

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Fall of Communism in eastern Europe and the Soviet Union

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• Bauhaus style of architecture

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• Dadaism, Cubism, Post Impressionism and surrealism in art

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• New technologies in the 20th century