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Aug 23, 1300
HIstory time line
Allison Hernández Sánchez A01366543
Flor de Luz Rodriguez Albarran A01367359 -
Jan 22, 1561
Francis Bacon
He developed scientific method
He advocated inductive reasoning -
Dec 27, 1571
Johannes Kepler
He discovered that the planets have elliptical orbits around the sun
He worked out laws governing speeds of planetary orbits
He also built on Copernican theory, providing basis for discoveries of future -
Apr 1, 1578
William Harvey blood circulation
Scientific Revolution.
William Harvey
He discovered that the circulation of blood is because the heart acts like a pump for the blood. -
Francis Bacon
Scientific Revolution.
He developed scientific method
He advocated inductive reasoning -
Galileo Galilei
He discovered the moons of Jupiter, sunspots, and mountains on the Earth’s moon
He formulated a law of falling bodies, revolutionizing the study of motion by allowing scientists to analyze and predict the movements of everything from cannonballs to planets -
Boyle's Law was developed.
Scientific Revolution.
Robert Boyle developed the Boyle’s Law (Volume of a gas varies with the pressure exerted on it.) -
Galileo Galilei
He discovered the moons of Jupiter, sunspots, and mountains on the Earth’s moon
He formulated a law of falling bodies, revolutionizing the study of motion by allowing scientists to analyze and predict the movements of everything from cannonballs to planets -
Margaret Cavendish
She wrote several works on scientific matters, including Observations Upon Experimental Philosophy
She criticized idea that humans are masters of nature -
Montesquieu
Writter and political theorist.
created the division of power -
John Locke
Philosopher who´s main idea was that all human were born with 3 basic natural rights. -
Voltaire
French writter who proposed the religion tolerance
"Candide" -
Montesquieu
french writer and political theorist.
created the divition power to protect the natural rights -
The Stamp Act
Passed by the British Parliament in 1765 was the first direct tax imposed on the British colonies in North America. -
Passage of the Stamp
passed by the British Parliament in 1765 was the first direct tax imposed on the British colonies in North America
The goal of the tax on printed material including newspapers, magazines, legal documents, insurance policies and many other types of paper material was to help finance for the British troops in the colonies. -
The boston masacre
The Boston Massacre was an incident between the British soldiers and a crowd of colonists in Boston, Massachusetts
When a group of nine British soldiers opened fire on the crowd, killing five and wounding six men. -
Boston Massacre
The Boston Massacre was an incident between the British soldiers and a crowd of colonists in Boston, Massachusetts
The commander of the watch and his eight soldiers were arrested by the next morning which partly relieved the tensions in the city -
Boston Tea Party
a group of about 70 men boarded on three British ships in the Boston harbor and threw their tea cargo in the sea
known as the Boston Tea Party triggered a chain of events that directly led to the American War of Independence. -
Boston Tea Party
A group of about 70 men boarded on three British ships in the Boston harbor and threw their tea cargo in the sea.
The destruction of the tea cargo was a protest against the Tea Act which was passed by the British Parliament earlier that year and gave the British East India Company monopoly on tea sale in the colonies. -
Passage of the Intolerable Acts
the British Parliament passed a series of laws that came to be known as Intolerable Acts or Coercive Acts.
These closed the Boston harbor for all shipping until the city would pay for the destroyed tea cargo, limited political authority of the colonists, made legal persecution of British officials more difficult and extended the boundaries of the Quebec province to the lands claimed by the American colonists. -
Fall of the Bastille
an angry crowd marched on the Bastille, a medieval fortress in east Paris that was mostly housing political prisoners -
March on Versailles
a large crowd of protesters, mostly women, marched from Paris to the Palace of Versailles, convinced that the royal family and nobility there lived in luxury, oblivious to the hardships of the French people -
Flight to Varennes
members of the Assembly decided to impose limits to the King’s authority. -
Dissolution of the National Assembly
France was proclaimed a constitutional monarchy, while the National Assembly was dissolved and replaced by a new political body named the Legislative Assembly. -
Allison Hernández Sánchez