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Period: to
Thomas Hobbes
Church separated from Government -
Period: to
Thomas Locke
Letter on Toleration, 1689
Two Treatises of
Government, 1690
Some Thoughts
Concerning
Education 1693 -
Period: to
Baron de Montesquieu
The persian letters.
1721
On spirit of laws.
1758 -
English bill of rights.
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Period: to
Benjamin Francklin.
People in charge should have rights.
Slavery is morally wrong. -
Period: to
Jean Jackes Rosseau
A discuse on the scienses and arts. 1750
Emile. 1762
The social contrast.1762 -
Period: to
Voltaire.
Essay on the Customs
and Spirit of Nations, 1756
Candide. 1759
Philosophical. -
Period: to
Adam Smith
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Period: to
Cesare Beccaria
People accused for a crime
should have rights.
Speedy trials.
Same crme=Same punishment -
Period: to
Tomas Jefferson
Elections for everyone.
Freedom
All people should have rights. -
Period: to
Don Miguel Gregorio Antonio Ignacio Hidalgo y Costilla y Gallaga Mondarte Villaseñor
Freedom for everyone
And equality. -
Period: to
Mary Wollsonecraft.
Equal treatment for all human beens.
People should not be judge by gender.
Equal oportunities -
Tar and feathering act.
Tar and feathering act, a tradition for punishment from the middle ages was first used in America. -
Seven Years’ War Peace Treaty between Great Britain and France
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Stamp Act passed by British Parliament
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Repeal of Stamp
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Townsend Act, new revenue taxes on North American colonists
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The boston massacre.
The boston massacre it was the culmination of tensions in the American colonies that had been growing since Royal troops first appeared in Massachusetts in October 1768 to enforce the heavy tax burden imposed by the Townshend Acts. -
Riots in Boston met with violence by British troops
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Burning of the Gaspee
Customs ships continued to patrol the sea off the coast of America. They would regularly stop merchant ships to examine their cargo looking for illegal goods, and enforcing British customs and taxation laws. The Gaspee was a British Royal Navy ship assigned to customs duty. -
Comitees of Correspondence.
Special committees of correspondence were formed by the colonial assemblies and various lesser arms of local government. -
Tea act.
The tea act launch the final spark of the revolutionary movement in Boston, Samuel Adams was the leader of the sons of liberty. -
Boston Tea Party
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Declaration of Independence
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Boston Tea Party
The tea party was a revelion against the west india company and the taxes, The group name who started this "party" which actually it was not really a party what the group of the sons of libery and their leader whas Samuel Adams. -
The coercive or Intolerable Acts.
After the French Indian War the British goverment increase the taxes on their colonies, this act lead the Boston Tea Party. -
First Continental Congress
The colonies responded to the coercive acts and to the que bect act too by one vope per colony. -
First Continental Congress
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The Quebec Act.
The Quebec Act was the setting of new procedures on the province of Quebec for example the expancion over indian territory. -
The second continental congress.
The First "Continental Congress" had provided for reconvening at the later time if the de circumstances that were dictated, and the secong continental congress was presented by John Hanckok who replaced the ailing Peyton Randolph. -
Period: to
American Revolution
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"The british are comming"
Paul Revere was an employe in the Boston Committee of Correspondence and in the Massachusetts Committee of safety carring letters and messages. -
Declaration of independence.
The declaration of the independence was written on the 7 of July of the year of 1776 richard Henry Lee brought the following resolution before the Continental Congress of the United Colonies. -
Thomas Paine, "common sense"
It was published anonimously in 1776.
Paine's political pamflet brought the rising revolutionary sentiment into focus. -
The shot heard round the world!
The battle of Lexington and Concord was the first battle that started the revolution by the english, the soldiers were called the minute men, because they used to be prepared and ready for the battle in just minutes. -
American and French representatives sign two treaties in Paris: a Treaty of Amity and Commerce and a Treaty of Alliance.
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Period: to
Simón José Antonio de la Santísima Trinidad Bolívar y Palacios Ponte y Blanco
Freedom for everyone. -
Ratification of Constitution of the United States of America
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National Constituent Assembly and French Declaration of the Rights of Man
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Estates General convened for the first time in 174 years in France 1789 Storming of the Bastille, prison (and armory) in Paris
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Beheading of King Louis XVI
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Slave rebellion in Saint Domingue
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U.S. Bill of Rights ratified by states
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Period: to
French revolution
-
Period: to
Haiti Revolution
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French National Assembly gives citizenship to all free people of color in the colony of Saint Domingue.
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France declares war on Austria
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France declares war on Great Britain
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All slaves on Saint Domingue emancipated by the French revolutionary authorities to join the French army and fight against the British
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Toussaint leads troops against the British
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French colonial forces defeated by Toussaint
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French colonial forces defeated by Toussaint
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Toussaint negotiates peace with the British
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Toussaint negotiates peace with the British
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War ends between Great Britain and France
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Constitution for Haiti
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General Leclerc sent by Napoleon to subdue colony and re-institute slavery
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New declaration of war between Great Britain and France
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French withdraw troops; Haitians declare independence
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Napoleon crowns himself emperor of France
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Jean-Jacques Dessalines crowns himself emperor of Haiti
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British end the slave trade
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Declarations of self-government in most Latin American colonies
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French expelled from Spain
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Napoleon defeated and French empire reduced in Europe to France alone
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French abolish slave trade
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U.S. President Monroe declares doctrine against European interference with the new republics in the Americas, known as the Monroe Doctrine