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World History 2. 2/9 to 2/13. Sunday 2/9 Do Now . List the 5 intellectuals of the Enlightenment and the main beliefs each intellectual had. Due: 5 Enlightenment beliefs and examples. . Sunday 2/9 - Scientific revolution .
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World History 2 2/9 to 2/13
Sunday 2/9 Do Now • List the 5 intellectuals of the Enlightenment and the main beliefs each intellectual had. • Due: 5 Enlightenment beliefs and examples.
Sunday 2/9 - Scientific revolution • Scientific Revolution: replace old assumptions with new theories to launch a change in European thought. • Encouraged to:1. Question Beliefs2. Observe3. Experiment • Discoveries cause people to believe that there are new truths to be found.
Sunday 2/9 – Scientific beliefs • Medieval: geocentric theory – earth was center of universe. (appears that sun moves around the earth) • Copernicus: geocentric theory did not explain movement of sun, planets, and moon.- 25 years of study- heliocentric theory – sun was center of universe-1543 – year he published his beliefs and year he died because he feared…..
Sunday 2/9 – Scientific beliefs • Kelper: used math to determine that planets, starts, and moon travel in elliptical orbits.
Sunday 2/9 – Scientific beliefs • Galileo Galilei:1609- created telescopeJupiter had 4 moons Sun has spotsMoon has rough surface • This meant that planets, sun, stars, moons are not made of pure substances (previous belief) • Problems with the church – Galileo on trial and confessed that he and Copernicus were wrong. (fear of death)
Sunday 2/9 – Scientific beliefs • Scientific Method: logical procedure for gathering and testing information. (influenced by Bacon and Descartes)1. problem/question2. hypothesis3. test/observe4. interpret/conclude • Francis Bacon: experiment • Descartes: use math/logic
Sunday 2/9 – Homework • Complete Questions 10 - 17 in your guided notes using your textbook. (Use pages 626-628 in your textbook) • Due:Thursday 2/9 • 1. Newton summary (law of motion) • 2. List the inventor, inventions, and use of inventions that were discovered in 1590, 1643, 1714, and 1742. • 3. Significance of Vesalius, Jenner, and Boyle.
Monday 2/10 Do Now • In what ways did science and scientific beliefs change? How does this reflect the beliefs during the Enlightenment period?
Monday 2/10 – Enlightenment spreads • 1700’s – Paris was the intellectual Capital of Europe. • Salons: Wealthy women in Paris held social gatherings in drawing rooms. New ideas between scientists, artists, writers, politicians, and intellectuals could be exchanged.
Monday 2/10 – Enlightenment Spreads • Diderot’s Encyclopedia - financed by Marie Therese Geoffrin - collection of works from scholars and intellectuals - banned because believed to cause moral corruption and encourage revolutions.
New Artistic Style: start to see order and reason in artistic style. • Baroque: grand/ornate design (Johann Sebastian Bach and George Friedrich Handel)http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=APNI2CC0k6A Change to…. Neoclassical:simple and elegant pieces with ideas from classical Greece and Rome. (Ludwig Van Beethoven, Wolfgang Mozart, Franz Joseph Haydn) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k_UOuSklNL4
Monday 2/10 – Enlightenment Spreads • Literature:- fiction, suspense, creative plots, explore character actions. • Pamela - Samuel Richardson – servant who refused to follow masters orders • Tom Jones – Henry Fielding – orphans in England
Tuesday 2/11 Do Now • Explain some ways in which Enlightenment thoughts spread and describe how this can be seen in music and literature.
Tuesday 2/11 – Monarchs • Enlightened Despots: monarchs who embraced new ideas and made reforms in alignment with Enlightenment thinkers.
Tuesday 2/11 – Monarchs • Fredrick the Great (II): King of Prussia 1740-17861. Religious Freedom2. Improved Education3. Abolished use of torture4. Serfdom is wrong (but didn’t attempt to change because he needed nobles support)
Tuesday 2/11 - Monarchs • Joseph the II :king of Austria from 1780-1790 (son of Maria Theresa) 1. Freedom of Press2. Freedom of Worship3. Abolished serfdom – peasants need to be paid
Tuesday 2/11 – Monarchs • Catherine the Great: Queen of Russia from 1762-1796. Voltaire and Montesquieu1. Religious Toleration2. Abolished torture and capital punishmentPreached this but never accomplished • Did little for serfs/peasants – led to revolt – originally favored to end serfdom but after revolt she decided she needed noble support more than peasant support.
Tuesday 2/11 – Monarchs • Assignment:complete the graphic organizer for chapter 22.3 on the spread of Enlightenment ideals. • Due:Thursday 2/13
Wednesday 2/12 Do Now • Why do people revolt? What are some revolutions you know of? How do the beliefs during the Enlightenment set the stage for revolutions?
Wednesday 2/12 – American Rev. English Colonies in America - Background • 1700 – 250,000 people • 1770 – 2,150,000 people • People in America for 150 years13 colonies – each with own government • Sense of Independence
Wednesday 2/12 – American Rev. • 1651 – Navigation Act – prevented colonists from selling any of their most valuable goods to anyone but Britain. • Colonists pay high taxes on goods they bought from French and Dutch • But, Britain and Colonists both thrived…..Colonists Raw Materials BritainBritain Manufactured Goods Colonists
Wednesday 2/12 American Rev. • 1754 – French and Indian War – France and Native Americans fight with Britain and Colonists for land • Britain was victorious and gained most of French territories. • Led to Debt – Britain believed colonists should pay for debt because they benefit from the land gained.
Wednesday 2/12 American Rev. • 1765 – Stamp Act – Pay tax on stamp put on any official documents such as deed, will, newspapers, etc. • “No Taxation Without Representation” – colonists outraged with stamp act – never had to pay tax directly to Britain before and believed it violated their rights. British parliament voted for stamp act, but colonists are not represented in British Parliament.
Wednesday 2/12 American Rev. • 1773 – Boston Tea Party – protest on import ta on tea- dumped large amount of British tea in the Boston Harbor. • Colonists start form 1st and 2ndContinental Congress – colonists ban together to make plan against British. • 1775 – Lexington, Massachusetts – gunfire between colonists and British Army ***REVOLUTION***
Wednesday 2/12 American Rev. • Assignment:complete the cause and effect chart explaining the causes of the American Revolution. • Due:Thursday 2/13
Thursday 2/13 Do Now • Describe the causes of the American Revolution.
Thursday 2/12 American Rev. • Declaration of Independent: Thomas JeffersonDeclares rights of citizensAll men are created equal States colonists separation from Britain • “ We hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty, and pursuit or happiness.”
Thursday 2/12 American Rev. • Colonists Succeed1. motivation2. over-confident British generals made many mistakes3. Time – after awhile British citizens called for peace because funding for war in America was expensive. 4. Louis XIV lends a hand (support independence, but also wanted to weaken rival – Britain)
Thursday 2/12 American Rev. • America becomes a Republic – citizens rule through elected representatives • Weak National Government- Congress to declare war, enter treaties, coin money- problems because debt • Want Strong National Government- Federal System: 3 branches – legislative, judicial, executive. Power in state and national government- Checks and Balances: president veto (reject) law from Congress, but Congress could pass with 2/3 vote.
Thursday 2/12 American Rev. • Federalists:support constitution • Anti-Federalists: fear government had too much power • Bill of Rights:protect basic rights such as freedom of speech, press, assembly, and religion.
Thursday 2/12 • Assignment:Many of the beliefs used in creating American government stem from Enlightenment thinkers. Complete the worksheet connecting American values to those of Enlightenment thinkers. Due:Sunday 2/16