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📖 AMSCO p.375 - p.387
Corvée laborers | People who were required to pay tax by doing annual labor. The labor was often for state projects and public maintenance. |
Settler colony | A form of colonization where the colonizer sends their people to settle into the territory. |
Berlin Conference | A Conference that German chancellor Otto von Bismarck called to set rules for the partition of Africa. |
Boer Wars | A series of wars between Dutch settlers and British in Cape Colony. The Dutch settler wanted slavery while the British did not. |
King Leopold II | the Belgian king who opened up the African interior to and controlled the area known as the Congo Free State. |
East India Company (EIC) | A joint-stock company that established a royal charter in India in order to monopolize trade there. |
Spheres of influence | A country or area in which another country has the power to exclusively trade and manage natural resources without formal authority. |
Taiping Rebellion | (1850-1864) A rebellion by peasants, workers, and miners against the Qing Dynasty. The Qing Dynasty prevailed because of British and French intervention. |
Boxer Rebellion | A revolt in China during 1900 that was aimed at ending foreign influence in the country. |
Dutch East India Company (VOC) | A government-chartered joint-stock company that controlled the spice trade in the East Indies. |
Penal colony | A type of colony used to exile prisoners and completely separate them from the general population. |
Trail of Tears | The forced removal of Native Americans from the Southeast to Oklahoma. Many Native Americans died from malnutrition, exposure, and exhaustion. |
Manifest Destiny | A 19th-century belief that the U.S. had a divine mission to expand its land and spread its institutions. |
Spanish-American War | (1898) A conflict between the United States and Spain in which the U.S. supported the Cubans' fight for independence against Spain. |
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📖 AMSCO p.375 - p.387
Corvée laborers | People who were required to pay tax by doing annual labor. The labor was often for state projects and public maintenance. |
Settler colony | A form of colonization where the colonizer sends their people to settle into the territory. |
Berlin Conference | A Conference that German chancellor Otto von Bismarck called to set rules for the partition of Africa. |
Boer Wars | A series of wars between Dutch settlers and British in Cape Colony. The Dutch settler wanted slavery while the British did not. |
King Leopold II | the Belgian king who opened up the African interior to and controlled the area known as the Congo Free State. |
East India Company (EIC) | A joint-stock company that established a royal charter in India in order to monopolize trade there. |
Spheres of influence | A country or area in which another country has the power to exclusively trade and manage natural resources without formal authority. |
Taiping Rebellion | (1850-1864) A rebellion by peasants, workers, and miners against the Qing Dynasty. The Qing Dynasty prevailed because of British and French intervention. |
Boxer Rebellion | A revolt in China during 1900 that was aimed at ending foreign influence in the country. |
Dutch East India Company (VOC) | A government-chartered joint-stock company that controlled the spice trade in the East Indies. |
Penal colony | A type of colony used to exile prisoners and completely separate them from the general population. |
Trail of Tears | The forced removal of Native Americans from the Southeast to Oklahoma. Many Native Americans died from malnutrition, exposure, and exhaustion. |
Manifest Destiny | A 19th-century belief that the U.S. had a divine mission to expand its land and spread its institutions. |
Spanish-American War | (1898) A conflict between the United States and Spain in which the U.S. supported the Cubans' fight for independence against Spain. |
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