5.2 whap
Across
- 3. “French sugar and coffee colony” on the western third of the island of St. Domingue, also known as the Hispaniola.
- 6. The 18th century group of French economists that advocated compliance to the “natural order” of social institutions and free trade.
- 9. The “new body” created by French commoners due to inequality in voting (two words; no space in between).
- 10. A former prison that symbolizes the abuses of the (French) monarchy and the corrupt aristocracy.
- 13. The (plural) term for the escaped slaves of the Haitian slave revolt
- 14. The term for the “three sectors of society, or estates” that was called to a meeting by the French governor to address the financial situation (two words; separated by a dash).
- 16. The movement of the “young agitators, all of whom contributed to magazines, pamphlets, and other publications advocating for greater autonomy for the Philippines” (two words; no space in between).
- 17. The name of a “large area” won after considerable military success by those fighting the Spanish during the Bolívar revolutions(two words; not separated by a space).
- 19. Region in which Austria and Russia successfully rolled back Ottoman dominance.
Down
- 1. The writings that popularized revolutionary ideas in Europe.
- 2. The region Cavour led the drive to unite under the only native colony, the House of Savoy (two words; no space)
- 4. The century in which Spain’s “grip on parts of its empire lasted throughout”.
- 5. Name of the movement calling for “Italian resurgence”.
- 7. period during which the (French) government executed thousands of opponents of the revolution, including the king and queen, sprang from the Jacobins.
- 8. People born of Eauropean and Indian parents.
- 11. Colonists who were born in Spain or Portugal
- 12. People born of European ancestry in the Americas.
- 13. Those of African and either European or Indigenous ancestry.
- 15. Belief of “practical politics of reality” held by Count di Cavour.
- 18. The term for individual maori (Polynesian) tribes.