File - Mrs. Craig: FHS World History

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Today in Class:
English Democracy Overview
Points
Date
Title
Description of historical content
Type of work
1)
10
October
15
Intro: English
Democracy Text
Brainstorm
Scan and list main points of Chapter 1, Section 5 about English
Democracy
2)
EC 10
10-15
Extra Credit: Chapter
1, Section 5
Take notes on this section (DUE WITH PACKET).
3)
10
10-16
Competition
Houses of History: England video
4)
10
10-20
English Democracy
Overview
Lecture Craig
5)
6)
7)
8)
9)
10)
King,
highest
point
Lords- land owners
Vassals- pledged loyalty to lords
Knights, warriors- provided by vassal, fought for lord
1. 1215: Magna Carta: too bossy, reign
in power
2. 1430- 40 Shilling Franchise
3. Women get electoral powers
4. Henry the VIII leaves the palace
6. 1605- Gun Powder Plot
7. Tudor Dynasty/ Protestant
Reformation
8. 1642- English Civil War
1647- King Charles Arrested
1649- King Beheaded
9. Century of Revolution
1660- Return of the King
1707- Wales union with England
1801- Ireland Unifies with
9. Petition of Right
10.Long Parliament/ Women Rush on
Parliament
11.Commonwealth
12.Charles II/King James II
13. Glorious Revolution/English Bill of
Rights
14. Roman Catholic Church/ Great Schism
1054
15. Martin Luther 95 Theses
16. Protestant Reformation
17. Growth of the Roman Catholic Church
18. Protestant Reformation
19. Glorious Revolution
20. English Bill of Rights
Topic
1
Magna Carta
Due Process of Law
Limited monarchy
2
Parliament
“What touches all, should be
approved by all.”
3
40 Shilling Franchise
4
Women Electoral Power
5
King Henry VIII
6
Gun Powder Plot
7
Tudor Dynasty
Protestant Reformation
Power Point
Speaker
Topic
8
Century of Revolution
James I
Puritans
Charles I
9
Petition of Right
10
Long Parliament
11
English Civil War
12
Charles I arrested…executed
13
Commonwealth
14
King Chales II, King James II
Power Point
Speaker
Topic
15
Glorious Revolution
English Bill of Rights
16
Spread of Roman Catholic Church
17
Great Schism 1054
18
Martin Luther and 95 Theses
19
Protestant Reformation
Power Point
Speaker
• Preview topics
• Identify personal strengths
– Tech
– Speaking
• Create teams
– Duos
• Choose topic
• Take notes and identify facts about the topic
– Use list of facts to research and seek 3 websites to
enhance your knowledge
• 5 W’s (and an H): Who, what, where,
when, why, how
• 5 Why’s: Why is this considered a
building block of democracy in
England?
• PERSIAN…any other way to help
you focus and discover information
about your topic
• Power Point:
–Create 1-5 slide Power Point
• Speaker:
–Prepare and speak about topic (12 minutes, repeat)
• Create 1-5 Power Point slides
• Slides should be advertisement slides and
should reflect the key details about your topic
• Slides should be balanced with key phrases
and picture support
• Slides should support the speaker in the
presentation
• Any websites used, should be identified in the
click to add notes section
• Prepare and speak about topic (1-2 minutes)
• The speech should be factual, entertaining,
and captivating
• It should cover the most important and
relevant information within the topic
• You should practice your speech and be able to
speak without note cards. You may use the
Power Point to keep you on target
•
By. Willie Mitchell, Chase Ray, Alex Beaver
Immigration
&
Discrimination:
A History
Come and gain information
about our nation’s history
Coming March 28th and 29th to a Foothill
Library near you!
Presented By Holly Shelton, Sara Jenkins, and
Lindsey Wigham
When:3/28-3/29
Where: FHS library
King,
highest
point
Lords- land owners
Vassals- pledged loyalty to lords
Knights, warriors- provided by vassal, fought for lord
Tudor Dynasty
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
1485-1603Henry VIII and daughter, Elizabeth I
E- knew importance of relationship w/Parliament
Christians protested church practices
Protestants
Protestant reform
King Henry VIII- broke from Roman Catholicformed Church of England protestant
Both died, E, w/out an heir
Stuarts took over (also ruled Scotland)
• Growth of Royal Power (Pgs. 40-41)
• Evolving Traditions of Government (Pgs. 4243)
• English Civil War (Pgs. 44-45)
• Development of Democracy in Great Britain
(44-45)
• Glorious Revolution (Pg. 46)
Growth of Royal Power (Pgs. 40-41)
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
400’s- 800’s:
Feudalism
Monarchy
Nobility
Church
Royal courts
Royal justice
Common law
Jury
Tax collecting
Battles for the Crown
1066: Battle of Hastings
Evolving Traditions of Government
(Pgs. 42-43)
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
1215: Magna Carta
Due process of law
Limited power of monarch
1200’s: Parliament- “parler”
means to talk
“What touches all, should be
approved by all.”
Model Parliament: England’s
legislature
1337-1453: 100 Years War
changed England politically
Power struggle between
parliament and the monarch
“Power of the Purse”
• 1485-1603: Tudor Dynasty
• Religious reform movement
• Protestant Reformationsplit of the church
• 1603: Queen Elizabeth dies
• Stuarts of Scotland take
over
• Century of Revolution
• James I ruled as an absolute
monarch
• Rejected Puritan ideas to
purify the church practices
Evolving Traditions of Government
(Pgs. 42-43)
• 1611 and 1614: James I
dissolved parliament
• James I’s son, Charles I
takes over
• 1628: Needed money
• 1628: Charles I forced to
sign the Petition of Right
– Banished imprisonment
without just cause
– Agreed, got the money,
dissolved parliament the
next year
English Civil War (Pgs. 44-45- Top)
• 1640-1653: The Long
Parliament
• Crown cannot dissolve
Parliament
• Charles sent troops to arrest
officials
• They escaped
• 1642-1649: English Civil
War
• Oliver Cromwell- skilled
general backed by the
Puritan clergy, land owners,
and manufactures
• 1640-1653: The Long
Parliament
• Crown cannot dissolve
Parliament
• Charles sent troops to arrest
officials
• They escaped
• 1642-1649: English Civil
War
• Oliver Cromwell- skilled
general backed by the
Puritan clergy, land owners,
and manufactures
English Civil War (Pgs. 44-45)
• Charles vs Oliver Cromwell
• Cromwell’s troops defeated
the monarch
• 1647: Charles arrested
• Convicted as “a tyrant,
traitor, murderer, and public
enemy.”
• Charles I executed
• Parliament declared
England a republic known
as a Commonwealth
• Puritans “rule of saints”
• Threats lead to military rule
• Catholics were banished
• Puritans imposed the “rule
of saints”
• Restricted certain forms of
entertainment
Glorious Revolution (Pg. 46)
• 1658: Cromwell died
• Many were tired of military
rule and Puritan ways of
purifying the church
• 1660: Parliament restored
• King Charles II reluctantly
accepted Petition of Right
• 1685: James II lacked good
sense and suspended laws at a
whim and flaunted his Catholic
faith
• Protestants feared he would
restore the Roman Catholic
Church
• 1688: Parliament
appointed William and
Mary to lead
• 1688: Glorious
Revolution: bloodless
overthrow
Glorious Revolution (Pg. 46)
• 1689: English Bill of
Rights
– parliaments had power
over monarch
– barred any Catholic from
sitting on the throne
– restated jury trial as
procedure
– abolished high taxes and
cruel or unjust punishment
– habeas corpus (can’t be
held in prison, without
being charged for a crime
• Established limited
monarchy- a constitution
or legislative body
regulates the monarch’s
powers
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Democratic principles from
Dark Ages
– Cultural and economic decay
– Decline of Roman Empire
– Dark versus light
– Though it was though not much accomplished, may have been mis-labeled: Middle Ages
Medieval Times
Spread of Roman Catholic Church- 300-forward
– Influenced art, culture, politics, economy, etc.
– Schism 1054
1517- Martin Luther 95 Theses
– Describes key points of Catholicism and sale of indulgences
Protestant Reformation
– 16th and 17th Centuries
– King Henry VIII
Age of Enlightenment
Age of Reason
Age of Scientific Discovery
Age of Exploration
Renaissance
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