Chapter 23 test review

Key Terms

Population RevolutionCongress of ViennaReform Bill of 1832

ProtoindustrializationLiberalismJames Watt

American Revolution 1776RadicalsFactory System

French Revolution 1789SocialismLuddites

Louis XVINationalismChartist Movement

GuillotineGreek RevolutionFrench Revolution (1848)

RobespierreFrench Revolution (1830)Louis Pasteur

Napoleon BonaparteBelgian Revolution (1832)Benjamin Disraeli

Count CavourBismarckAmerican Civil War

Karl MarxRevisionismFeminist Movements

Mass leisure cultureCharles DarwinAlbert Einstien

RomanticismTriple AllianceTriple Entente

Balkan NationalismUrbanizationEstates General

Reign of TerrorPhases of the French Revolution

Demographic transitionSigmund FreudStorming of Bastille

Declaration of Independence

Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen

Possible Short Answer Questions

Compare and contrast the cause of the American and French Revolutions.

What were the lasting reforms of the French Revolution?

What were new political movements that emerged in the aftermath of the French Revolution?

What changes led to Industrialization?

What changes in social organization did industrialism cause?

How were industrialization and revolution linked?

How did government functions increase in response to the “social question?”

How did science and the arts diverge in the period after 1850?

Questions and some facts based on the multiple choice section of the test

Where were the strongest socialist parties?

Impact of population upheaval on social patterns

By 1900- what proportion of the West enjoyed conditions above the subsistence level?

Basic political philosophy of Karl Marx

Political philosophy of Enlightenment—as it relates to the revolutions

Low birth rates and increased death rates stabilized the population in Europe

Britain’s Australian colonies originated in 1788 as penal settlements

In what year was the US constitution signed?? (based on Enlightenment principles!!)

Science continued the Western trend of traditional rationalism, but art adopted the more

emotional and impressionistic theories of romanticism.

Socialist that proposed the possibility of gradual and peaceful change—revisionist

American exceptionalism suggests that the US developed on its own terms with only

incidental contact with Europe

Population pressure in the 18th century drove many people into the working class

Proletariat

Conservative political strategy after 1850- grant appearance of liberal reform but retain

aristocratic privilege