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October 1 & 2, 2015Please take out your Time Tracker and
something with which to write
HomeworkRead p. 456-459p. 459 #4 & 5Textbooks Next Class? No
Quote of the Day
“.”
-
Why Do We Review the Quiz?
Learn from your mistakes
Improve for the next quiz
Catch any mistakes made by Coach Kenney
“The only real failure in life is the failure to learn from your mistakes”
Unit 2-The Age of Revolution
One-Pager Handout (Study Guide on back)
Warm Up #10Answer the following in your 3-Ring Binders:New Sheet/One Paragraph for EACH/Proper
Grammar
1.In your opinion, who should have more power in government: The President or Congress? Why?
1.Is there ever a situation where a government should be overthrown? EXPLAIN.
j
Revolutions in England
1603-1689
Limited Monarchy 1600s = Absolute Monarchy was the rule.
England was the exception.
1215 King John agreed to share power with the wealthy members of society.
Magna Carta (Great Charter)
Limited Monarchy (c0nt.)
House of Commons
House of Lords
Seats elected by themiddle class.
Seats inherited by members of thelandowning families.
The wealthier classes in England were represented in a two house body called:
Parliament
Limited Monarchy (c0nt.)
Parliament traditionally held the “power of the purse.”
Parliament controlled access to the wealth of the country.
If the king needed money, he would go to Parliament and ask them to pass tax laws.
Power Struggle
Monarch vs. Parliament
Tudors Stuarts
p. 421
Tudors Stuarts
1485-1603
Good relations w/ParliamentLimited Monarchy
Henry VIII
Elizabeth I
No Heir
Related
Ruled England
~believed in Divine Right
1603
Ruled Scotland 1st
Bad relations w/ParliamentAbsolute Monarchy
James I
Charles I
Baller Sheet #1-English Rulers
jElizabeth I James I
Charles I Oliver Cromwell
Baller Sheet #1-English Rulers (cont.)
jCharles II James II
William & Mary George I & III
Baller Sheet #2-Philosophies & Acts
jdivine right of kings Petition of Right
Triennial Act Test Act
Baller Sheet #2-Philosophies & Acts (cont.)
jExclusion Act Habeas Corpus
Act of Settlement Act of Union
Divide & Conquer p. 421
Elizabeth I-Together
Number off from 1-6
1.James I
2.Charles I
3.Oliver Cromwell
4.Charles II
5.James II
6.William & Mary
HomeworkRead p. 456-459p. 459 #4 & 5Textbooks Next Class? No