SLO Review

SLO REVIEW
Part I: A New Test
Scientific
Revolution/Enl
ightenment
Scientific
Revolution/Enl
ightenment
The French
Revolution
Events in the
French
Revolution
Napoleon
100
100
100
100
100
200
200
200
200
200
300
300
300
300
300
400
400
400
400
400
500
500
500
500
500
SCIENTIFIC
REVOLUTION/ENLIGHTENMENT - 100
This scientist’s observation indicated that
the heavenly bodies were composed on
material substance like Earth, not of pure
orbs of light like the Catholic Church
proposed.
SCIENTIFIC
REVOLUTION/ENLIGHTENMENT – 100
Galileo
Å
SCIENTIFIC
REVOLUTION/ENLIGHTENMENT - 200
Copernicus disproves Ptolemaic system
by demonstrating this.
SCIENTIFIC
REVOLUTION/ENLIGHTENMENT - 200
The Earth moves around the Sun and the
moon revolves around the Earth
Å
SCIENTIFIC
REVOLUTION/ENLIGHTENMENT - 300
This philosopher believed that civilization
corrupts and limits the individual and
famously said, “A man is born free and
everywhere else he is in chains.”
SCIENTIFIC
REVOLUTION/ENLIGHTENMENT - 300
Jean Jacques Rousseau
Å
SCIENTIFIC
REVOLUTION/ENLIGHTENMENT - 400
This individual is known as the father of
modern rationalism and said “I think,
therefore I am.”
SCIENTIFIC
REVOLUTION/ENLIGHTENMENT - 400
Rene Decartes
Å
SCIENTIFIC
REVOLUTION/ENLIGHTENMENT - 500
Explain a social contract.
SCIENTIFIC
REVOLUTION/ENLIGHTENMENT - 500
An agreement between citizens and their
government over who has power.
Å
SCIENTIFIC
REVOLUTION/ENLIGHTENMENT - 100
This political philosopher is known for
exploring the ideas of checks and
balances in a government with three
branches.
SCIENTIFIC
REVOLUTION/ENLIGHTENMENT - 100
Montesquieu
Å
SCIENTIFIC
REVOLUTION/ENLIGHTENMENT - 200
This Enlightenment philosopher came up
with the concept of inalienable rights to
life, liberty, and property.
SCIENTIFIC
REVOLUTION/ENLIGHTENMENT - 200
John Locke
Å
SCIENTIFIC
REVOLUTION/ENLIGHTENMENT - 300
This female writer famously wrote A
Vindication of the Rights of Women which
argued for the expansion of political and
societal rights for women.
SCIENTIFIC
REVOLUTION/ENLIGHTENMENT - 300
Mary Wollstonecraft
Å
SCIENTIFIC
REVOLUTION/ENLIGHTENMENT - 400
Adam Smith developed laissez-faire which
said this.
SCIENTIFIC
REVOLUTION/ENLIGHTENMENT - 400
The government should not regulate or
hinder the economy
Å
SCIENTIFIC
REVOLUTION/ENLIGHTENMENT - 500
This writer, along with Fredrick Engels,
wrote the Communist Manifesto which
detailed the struggle of the Proletariat
against the bourgeoisie.
SCIENTIFIC
REVOLUTION/ENLIGHTENMENT - 500
Karl Marx
Å
THE FRENCH REVOLUTION - 100
This French estate had pay the taille, or tax.
THE FRENCH REVOLUTION - 100
Third Estate
Å
THE FRENCH REVOLUTION - 200
This individual was the brutal head of the
Committee of Public Safety and one of
the major leaders of the French
Revolution.
THE FRENCH REVOLUTION - 200
Maximilien Robespierre
Å
THE FRENCH REVOLUTION - 300
This female author wrote the Declaration
of the Rights of Woman and Citizen.
THE FRENCH REVOLUTION - 300
Olympe de Gouges
Å
THE FRENCH REVOLUTION - 400
France’s social divide between the clergy,
the nobility, and the commoners was
known as this.
THE FRENCH REVOLUTION - 400
Three Estates System
Å
THE FRENCH REVOLUTION - 500
The Declaration of the Rights of Man and
Citizen proclaimed this.
THE FRENCH REVOLUTION - 500
Equal rights for all men, but no political
rights for women
Å
EVENTS OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION 100
The French National Assembly swore the
Tennis Court Oath which said this.
EVENTS OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION 100
Vowed to continue to meet until they had
produced a French constitution of rights
Å
EVENTS OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION 200
The ladies of Paris marched on Versailles
as a last resort to remedy this problem.
EVENTS OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION 200
Bread prices
Å
EVENTS OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION 300
These were the most significant effects of
the European Enlightenment.
EVENTS OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION 300
French and American Revolutions
Å
EVENTS OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION 400
This event was the “spark” of the French
Revolution.
EVENTS OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION 400
Storming of the Bastille
Å
EVENTS OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION 500
This was the most violent phase of the
French Revolution and the point of the
highest number of executions with the
guillotine.
EVENTS OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION 500
The Reign of Terror
Å
NAPOLEON - 100
Napoleon held this position “for life”
before becoming Emperor.
NAPOLEON - 100
Consul
Å
NAPOLEON - 200
This island successfully kept Napoleon in
exile.
NAPOLEON - 200
St. Helena
Å
NAPOLEON - 300
The Duke of Wellington defeated
Napoleon at this battle.
NAPOLEON - 300
Battle of Waterloo in Belgium
Å
NAPOLEON - 400
Possibly Napoleon’s most detrimental
mistake was caused by a combination of
scorched earth policy and this.
NAPOLEON - 400
Bitter Russian winter
Å
NAPOLEON - 500
The Napoleonic Code treated women
this way.
NAPOLEON - 500
Less than equal to men
Å
FINAL JEOPARDY QUESTION
ANSWER