House of Burgesses, Mayflower Compact, Enlightenment Thinkers
Across
- 5. an agreement signed by Pilgrim leaders aboard the Mayflower in 1620 that established a basic form of self-government and rule of law for the Plymouth Colony; it emphasized that authority derived from the consent of the governed.
- 9. An Enlightenment thinker that argued people need a strong ruler because life without government would be chaotic; people give up some freedom in a social contract for safety.
- 10. the first representative legislative assembly in the English colonies, established in Virginia in 1619; it allowed elected delegates (burgesses) to make local laws and set a precedent for self-government in colonial America.
- 12. an intellectual movement of the 17th and 18th centuries emphasizing reason, science, individual rights, and skepticism of traditional authority; it influenced political revolutions and modern democratic ideas.
- 13. A governmental structure that divides authority among branches (typically legislative, executive, judicial) to prevent concentration of power and protect liberty.
Down
- 1. Institutional mechanisms that allow each branch of government to limit the powers of the others, ensuring accountability and preventing abuse.
- 2. Fundamental rights believed to belong to all people by virtue of human nature, often listed as life, liberty, and property (or the pursuit of happiness).
- 3. An Enlightenment thinker that recommended splitting government power into separate branches so each checks the others and no one becomes too powerful.
- 4. An Enlightenment thinker that defended free speech and religious freedom, criticizing rule by privilege and urging governments to protect individual liberties.
- 6. An Enlightenment thinker that said people are born with natural rights (life, liberty, property) and governments must protect those rights; people may replace rulers who fail them.
- 7. an Enlightenment philosopher who argued that people have natural rights and that government is formed to protect those rights; he supported the right to revolt against governments that fail to do so.
- 8. An Enlightenment thinker that believed people are naturally good but corrupted by society; supported the “general will” and direct democracy by the majority.
- 11. A philosophical idea that individuals consent, either explicitly or implicitly, to surrender some freedoms and accept authority in exchange for protection of their remaining rights and social order.