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Belief that the moon, sun, and planets all revolve around the Earth in perfect circular paths. |
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A new way of thinking about the natural world that launched a change in European thought. It was based on careful observation and a willingness to question accepted beliefs. |
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Belief proposed by Copernicus that stated that Earth and all the other planets revolved around the sun. |
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A logical procedure for gathering and testing ideas. It starts with a problem or question arising from observations. |
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A new intellectual movement that stressed reason and thought and the power of individuals to solve problems. |
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Agreement by which people created a government. The ruler needed total power to keep citizens under control. |
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French word for philosopher. |
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Social gathering wher philosophers, writers, artists, scientists, and other great intellects met to discuss ideas. |
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A style which was characterized by a grand, ornate design. |
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A simple and elegant stule that borrowed ideas and themes from classical Greece and Rome. It was the artistic style of the late 1700s. |
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Enlightened rulers who wanted to be an absolute ruler. |
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Declaration of Independance |
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Document written by Thomas Jefferson that was firmly based on the ideas of John Locke and the enlightenment. Supported natural rights. |
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System where ecah branch of the government checks the actions of the other two branches. |
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Set up by the constitution to divide power between national and state governments. |
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First ten ammendments to the Constitution. |
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Social and political system of France in the late 1770s that divide the people of France into three Estates. |
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The three large social classes the people of France were divided into. |
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An assembly of representatives from all three estates. |
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Group created by the Third Estate in France that passed laws and reforms in the name of the French people. |
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Pledge made to create a new constitution for France. |
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Wave of senseless panic that rolled through France. It was caused by rumors heard by French peasants who then revolted against nobles. |
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New legislative body in France that was created by the National Assembly's new constitution. This body had the power to create laws and to approve or reject declarations of war. |
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Nobles and others of France who fled France after the creation of the Legislative Assembly |
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Those without breeches in France, discovered a way to exert their power over the streets of France. |
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A radical political organization that eventually took control of France. Maximillian Robespierre was one of the most famous of these. |
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A machine used to behead people as punishment for something. |
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Used to refer to Maximillian Robespierre's rule of France when he was constantly using the Guillotine for his purposes. |
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A sudden seizure of power, in French it means a blow to the state |
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French term meaning a vote of the people. |
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Government-run public schools in France. |
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An agreement that was used between Napoleon and Pope Pius VII. |
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