Ready for the Test CH4

READY FOR THE TEST

RECAP CHAPTER 4


summarize
  1. what happened on July 14th 1789?
  2. Explain briefly who did this and why
  3. What is significent about this event?
Storming of the Bastille. On the right you see the arresting of Bernard de Launay, the governor of the Bastille. Anonymous painting.

1 / 21
next
Slide 1: Slide
GeschiedenisMiddelbare schoolhavoLeerjaar 2

This lesson contains 21 slides, with interactive quizzes and text slides.

time-iconLesson duration is: 50 min

Items in this lesson

READY FOR THE TEST

RECAP CHAPTER 4


summarize
  1. what happened on July 14th 1789?
  2. Explain briefly who did this and why
  3. What is significent about this event?
Storming of the Bastille. On the right you see the arresting of Bernard de Launay, the governor of the Bastille. Anonymous painting.

Slide 1 - Slide

Explain what these images stand for.
Explain why these images were made.
Explain the relationship between those images.

Slide 2 - Slide

The Three Estates
(de 3 standen)
All the people in the country belonged 
to one of the 3 estates.

An estate is a group of people 
you belong to from birth.
An estate is hereditary.

You can not easily 
change into 
another
etstate

Slide 3 - Slide

What are the Three Estates?
A
Groups of people based on wealth
B
Groups of people based on occupation
C
Groups of people based on birth
D
Groups of people based on education

Slide 4 - Quiz

Source A: A cartoon about the Three Estates, published in the 1780s.

Slide 5 - Slide

Slide 6 - Slide

Copy and fill in: social contract - Trias Politica - critical towards clergy, nobility and absolutism - natural rights

Slide 7 - Slide

Slide 8 - Slide

14 July 1789 

Slide 9 - Slide

With the name 'National Assembly' the third estate wanted to say that this was the legitimate gathering of the people of France and that the Estates-General was not.

The Tennis Court Oath. Members of the lower nobility and clergy joined the third estate. Painting by Jacques-Louis David (1791).

Slide 10 - Slide

What was the charge against Louis XVI by the National Convention after his failed escape?
A
Embezzlement
B
Treason
C
Bribery
D
Murder

Slide 11 - Quiz

A failed escape from Paris

In 1791, the French royal family tried to escape from Paris. With loyal troops they wanted to start a counter-revolution. However, the royals were caught in the township of Varennes after being recognised. They seemed to have forgotten that the king’s face was on every coin in France. The National Convention charged Louis XVI with ‘treason’ and classified him as an enemy to the nation. Despite his pleas of innocence, 387 members voted for the death penalty. The king was almost saved, because 334 people voted against his conviction. Eventually Louis XVI was executed on the Place de la Revolution in 1793.





summarize
  1. Why did the king want to escape?
  2. What happened to him when he was caught?
Arrival of the French royal family in Paris after flight and capture at Varennes, 25 June 1791. Anonymous work (1791).


Slide 12 - Slide

20. Put the events in the correct chronological order
Reign of Terror
Directoire 
Napoleon seizes 
power
National Assembly


absolute monarchy
Louis XVI

Slide 13 - Drag question

What was the name given to the movement to end slavery?
A
Abolitionism
B
Nationalism
C
Colonialism
D
Imperialism

Slide 14 - Quiz

What did the Christian church preach about slavery during the Middle Ages?
A
Slavery was acceptable under certain conditions
B
No Christian could own another Christian
C
Only non-Christians could be enslaved
D
All Christians should own slaves

Slide 15 - Quiz

Movement to end slavery
Under the influence of Christianity during the Middle Ages, slavery had slowly disappeared from Europe. The Christian church preached that no Christian could own another Christian, because all souls belonged to God. However, the church was willing to make an exception for slavery in the colonies.
Even though slavery was widely accepted in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, not everybody supported it. The first protests came from Dutch and German Quakers in North America in the late seventeenth century, who believed all humans were created equal and should be treated equally. However, the first real protest in Europe came from England, where in 1772 a judge set a slave free on the grounds that slavery was forbidden in England and that the transaction in which the man was bought was illegal. This in combination with the ideas of the Enlightenment, created a movement of people questioning the morality of slavery and attempting to end it. This was called abolitionism. The abolitionist movement slowly gained more and more support and in the early nineteenth century, slave trade became illegal in most European countries and their colonies. It would take another half century for the Western world to completely abolish slavery.






 







"Am I Not a Man and a Brother?", 1787 medallion designed by Josiah Wedgwood for the British anti-slavery campaign

Slide 16 - Slide

When did most European countries make slave trade illegal?
A
Early 20th century
B
Early 19th century
C
Mid-18th century
D
Late 17th century

Slide 17 - Quiz

30 SECONDS

1. Form groups of 3 students
2. Please write the important words from sections 4.1 and 4.2 on a note

Round 1: Describe
Describe the person or event on the note. Once correctly guessed, the note is taken by the team and another note is described.
After 30 seconds it's up to team two!

Round 2: Describe in one word
The game proceeds as in round 1, only this time the content on the card may only be described with one word.

Round 3: Portray
The game proceeds as in round 1, only this time the content on the card has to be portrayed.

After every round the cards return into the hat.
timer
0:30

Slide 18 - Slide

30 SECONDS

Round 1: Describe
Describe the person or event on the note. Once correctly guessed, 
the note is taken by the team and another note is described.

After 30 seconds it's up to team two!

After every round the cards return into the hat.


 

timer
0:30
Atheist
Enlightenment
Estate society
Human rights
Indirect tax
Rational
Rule of law
Separation of powers
Time of wigs and revolutions
Western
Civil law
Coalition
Conscription
Constitutional monarchy
Coup d’état
Racism
Feeling of superiority

Moderate
Radical
Referendum
Separation of church and state
Tsar
Abolitionism

Slide 19 - Slide

30 SECONDS


Round 2: Describe in one word
The game proceeds as in round 1,
only this time the content on the card may only be described 
with one word.


After every round the cards return into the hat.
 

timer
0:30
Atheist
Enlightenment
Estate society
Human rights
Indirect tax
Rational
Rule of law
Separation of powers
Time of wigs and revolutions
Western
Civil law
Coalition
Conscription
Constitutional monarchy
Coup d’état
Racism
Feeling of superiority

Moderate
Radical
Referendum
Separation of church and state
Tsar
Abolitionism

Slide 20 - Slide

30 SECONDS

Round 3: Portray
The game proceeds as in round 1, only this time the content on the card has to be portrayed.

After every round the cards return into the hat.
timer
0:30

Slide 21 - Slide