1、American HistoryLecturer:Qin Jie第1页第1页AimsvGet to know the general history of USvGet to know the specific and significant events of US historyvGet to know the important historical figures第2页第2页 Beginning Periodsv 1.Early American Historyv 2.The War of Independence第3页第3页Before 1492第4页第4页第5页第5页The Ear
2、liest InhabitantsvAround 20,000 years ago,a group of Asian people arrived in Central and South Americas by way of North America.These people were the ancestors of American Indians.vAround 10,000 years ago,another group of Asian people came to the northern part of North America,and they were the ance
3、stors of the later Eskimos.vWhen Columbus found the new continent,there were about 20 million Indians living in Americas Canada,mid-northern and the southern parts of the U.S.,Mexico.第6页第6页DiscoveryvIn late 15th-century Europe,there was a great demand for spices,textiles and dyes from Asia.vChristop
4、her Columbus,a mariner from Italy believed that he could reach the Far East by sailing from Europe.vIn 1492,Columbus persuaded the queen of Spain to finance his voyage to Asia,but he reached America at last,and he called the native people“Indians.”vThe Spanish established some settlements in todays
5、Florida,New Mexico and California.第7页第7页DiscoveryThe reasons of Europeans coming to America(3Gs):v1.The need for increased trade;v2.The zeal of Spanish priests to convert the native Indians to Christianity;v3.The need of European religious and political dissenters for refuge from persecution in thei
6、r homelands;v4.The thirst for adventure.第8页第8页English SettlementsvThe first successful English colony in America was founded at Jamestown,Virginia in 1607.Of the first 105 colonists,73 died of hunger and disease within seven months of their arrival.vOne group of English Puritans crossed the Atlantic
7、 in the ship Mayflower and settled at Plymouth,Massachusetts in 1620.A much larger Puritan colony was established in the Boston area in 1630.第9页第9页English SettlementsvThe British colonies in North America were also occupied by many non-British national groups:Germans settled in Pennsylvania,Swedes f
8、ounded the colony of Delaware,and African slaves first arrived in Virginia in 1619.vIn 1626 Dutch settlers purchased Manhattan Island from local Indians and built the town of New Amsterdam;in 1664 the settlement was captured by the English and renamed New York.第10页第10页Colonial EravThe U.S.never had
9、a feudal aristocracy.Land was plentiful and labor was scarce;every free man had an opportunity to achieve economic independence.vThe English king appointed many of the colonial governors,but they all had to rule in cooperation with an elected assembly.Voting was restricted to landowning white males.
10、第11页第11页Colonial EravBy 1733 English settlers had occupied 13 colonies along the Atlantic coast.v Connecticut,New Hampshire,New York,New Jersey,Massachusetts,Pennsylvania,Delaware,Virginia,North Carolina,South Carolina,Georgia,Rhode Island,and Maryland.第12页第12页Highlights in the Beginningsv Religious
11、 issue v Aboriginal Indians and Whites第13页第13页E.g.1 Catholic MarylandvThe Third Colony in Americav1.Founder of the Marylandv2.The feudal systemv3.Influence of the feudal system第14页第14页Maryland was founded by the Catholics.vGeorge CalvertvLord Baltimore第15页第15页George Calvert第16页第16页A Document of Mary
12、land第17页第17页Lord BaltimorevCecil Calvert(1606-1675)vGeorge Calverts son and heir.v In 1632,he became the second Baron of Baltimore and the first Lord of Maryland.第18页第18页Maryland第19页第19页 Decrees in MarylandvEach gentleman brought 5 servants was allowed to establish a manor of acres.vEach freeholder
13、was given 100 acres of land plus another 100 acres for his wife,100 acres for a servant,and 50 acres for each of his children.vBut the freeholders could not enjoy the rights and privileges as a gentleman.第20页第20页Policies in Marylandv1.In order to develop the colony,he had to attract as many settlers
14、 as possible.v2.The protestant settlers soon far outnumbered the Catholics.v3.In 1648,he appointed a Protestant governor,and the Maryland Toleration Act was passed and assured the freedom of worship to all who believed in Jesus Christ.第21页第21页E.g.2 Quaker PennsylvaniavThe fourth colonial pattern in
15、Americav1.Founder of the colonyv2.Quakersv3.Quakers Doctrine第22页第22页William Penn第23页第23页Quakers第24页第24页Quakers第25页第25页Quakers第26页第26页American BeginningsvThe term“Quaker”was coined by their enemies because the Quakers were so faithful to God that when they spoke of God,they trembled.vThey are Protest
16、ants,but they hold different religious beliefs from Catholics and Puritans and other Protestant sects.vThey denied both the church and the Bible as the highest authority.第27页第27页 Quakers doctrinev1.People could communicate with God directly because everyone had an inner light and God was in everyone
17、s soul.v2.They believed in God through their faith,not the help of church and priest.v3.Their religious place of worship could be anywhere.v4.All were born equal.All were brothers and sisters.v5.People were not born sinful.第28页第28页HighlightThe American Revolution第29页第29页The American Revolutionv1.The
18、 eve of the American Revolutionv2.George Washingtonv3.Benjamin Franklinv4.War of Independence第30页第30页 The War of Independence The 13 American colonies revolted against their British rulers in 1775.The war began on April 19,when British regulars fired on the Minutemen(militia)of Lexington,Mass.The fi
19、ghting ended with the surrender of the British at Yorktown on Oct.19,1781.Great Britain signed a formal treaty recognizing the independence of the colonies.第31页第31页The backgroundv1.The French and Indian Warv2.The Enlightenmentv3.The British Mercantilist Policy and the Colonist Resistancev4.The First
20、 Continental Congress第32页第32页The War of Independence1.3 wars were fought between the English and French colonies:King Williams War(168997)Queen Annes War(17021713)King Georges War(174448)2.7 years War:The French and Indian War(1756-63)was a decisive war fought between the English on one side and the
21、 French and American Indians on the other in the 1750s.As a result of the War,the French was completely defeated and lost her land in America and were driven out of India.第33页第33页 The War of Independencev1.France ceded to England all her Canadian lands;v2.France ceded to England all her lands east o
22、f the Mississippi River.第34页第34页The War of Independencev The British Laws anger the Colonists After the war with France,the British government took further actions to systematize and fasten its control over the 13 American colonies.Under George the British parliament passed more acts,which angered t
23、he colonists.第35页第35页The War of IndependenceThe Enlightenment1.Definition of the Enlightenment2.John Locke3.John Lockes Viewpoint 4.Influence of the Enlightenment 第36页第36页The War of Independence In the 18th century,along with the development of science,people in Europe began to believe that the univ
24、erse created by God was guided by natural laws,which were left to be discovered and enforced by man.第37页第37页vJohn Locke第38页第38页vJohn Locke(1632 1704),English philosopher,is considered the first of the British Empiricists,equally important to social contract theory.He is widely regarded as one of the
25、 most influential Enlightenment thinkers,classical republicans,and contributors to liberal theory.vLocke,rejecting innate knowledge,believed that mans knowledge was acquired from the experience of five senses,from observation and experiment,and from the reflection by the mind.第39页第39页 John Lockes Vi
26、ewpoints vCivil government was instituted by mutual agreement for the purpose of enforcing natural laws.vThe most important natural law was that no man should take away the life,liberty,or property of another.vThe purpose to establish a government is to protect these natural laws.第40页第40页Influence o
27、f the Enlightenmentv The Enlightenment in Europe provided the colonists with a theoretical and philosophical weapon against the British rule and marked the formation and maturity of the new nation,which was bound to be independent of its mother country.第41页第41页The War of Independence The British Mer
28、cantilist Policy and the Colonies Resistance 1.The Colonists should provide England with raw materials and buying back manufactured goods.2.The British government enforced the Navigation Acts.3.New Measures 1)the Sugar Act(1764)2)Currency Act (1764)3)the Quartering Act(1765)4)the Stamp Act(1765)第42页
29、第42页 The First Continental Congress In Sept.1774,55 representatives from all the colonies except Georgia held a meeting in Philadelphia.第43页第43页The War of IndependencevBattle of Lexington第44页第44页The War of Independencev The Second Continental Congressv 1.After the conflicts at Lexington,the Second C
30、ontinental Congress was called in May 1775.One of the first decisions it made was to establish a regular army,with George Washington as commander-in-chief.v 2.On July 4,1776,the Second Continental Congress adopted the Declaration of Independence.第45页第45页vIndependence Hall Philadelphia第46页第46页The Second Continental Congress第47页第47页AssignmentvMake a detailed study on George Washington,Thomas JeffersonvMake a survey on the Constitution of US,and the Declaration of Independence第48页第48页
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