the pilgrims regard their voyage as

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The Pilgrims regard their voyage as A. Spiritual journey B. Physical journey C.Both a physical and spiritual journey

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The Pilgrims regard their voyage as . Spiritual journey B. Physical journey Both a physical and spiritual journey. The first people to migrate to North America were . A. Explorers from Spain B. The Norse by way of Iceland and Greenland C. Ice Age hunter via the B ering land bridge . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

A. Spiritual journey B. Physical journey

C. Both a physical and spiritual journey

Page 2: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

The first people to migrate to North America were

• A. Explorers from Spain • B. The Norse by way of Iceland and Greenland • C. Ice Age hunter via the Bering land bridge

Page 3: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

The greatest legacy of the French and Spanish explorers was

• A. Long-live political institutions • B. Written accounts of the New World • C. Moral and ethical religious convictions • D. Farming inovations

Page 4: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

The Mayflower Compact paved the way for

• A. A national church • B. A constitutional democracy • C. The Salem witch trials

Page 5: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

The Pilgrims first landed in America

A. Cape Cod B. Near the Hudson River C. Near Boston

Page 6: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Rationalist believed that all people

• A. Were sinners in the eyes of God, with no hope of redemption

• B. Were either saved or damned, according to God’s will

• C. Could change the course of human events through prayer

• D. Could think in an ordered manner, thereby improving their lives

Page 7: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

The following man compared God to a clockmaker

• A. Ben Franklin • B. John Locke• C. Sir Isaac Newton

Page 8: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Who said, “We shall be a city upon a hill?

A. John Green B. Martin LutherC. Rev. Brown D. Johnathan Winthrop

Page 9: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

What piece of writing (American)is considered a masterpiece in the Age of Reason

• A. The Declaration• B. Ben Franklin’s autobiography • C. The Bill of Rights

Page 10: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

?

•What does the idea of Manifest Destiny mean?

Page 11: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Protestant Reformation

• Protestant Reformation took place A. 1620B. 1705C. 1517D. 1400

Page 12: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Prayer to the Pacific and other poems

• The cyclical image in the poem is A. When the narrator sees that the rain clouds

have come from China where Grandfather Turtle went

B. She swam in the ocean as a child and now returns as an adult

C. The seagulls have returned after a long journey

Page 13: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Montezuma Castle

The poem puts two unlikely ideas togetherA. A cowboy and an IndianB. A tourist spot and an ancient resident of a

caveC. A cold day in winter and a warm day in spring

Page 14: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Anne Bradstreet- Burning House

• In her poem, Bradstreet mostly criticizes herself for

A. Losing her faith in God’s goodnessB. Failing to react quickly in an emergency C. Valuing material possessions too much

Page 15: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Anne Bradstreet Burning House

Bradstreet emphasizes both the things she has lost and A. The people who escaped in the fire B. The new home that neighbors are building

for her C. Her memories of happy occasions in the

house

Page 16: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

What does Anne Bradstreet find most consoling after the fire?

A. God has prepared a rich home for her in heaven

B. Through the fire, she has atoned for her sinsC. She has emerged unharmed from the fire. D. Her relatives will give her temporary shelter

Page 17: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Protestant Reformation

• When the peasants revolted and raised an army of 300, 000, Luther sided with them and helped them to defeat the local kings.

• True or False?

Page 18: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Protestant Reformation

Due to the Protestant reformation A. Many building were burnedB. Many monarchs became wealthy land

ownersC. Waterways were shut downD. German culture was spread

Page 19: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Protestant Reformation

• The printing press allowed • A. More people access to the Bible • B. Created many different interpretations of

the Bible • C. Created different denominations • D. All of the above

Page 20: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Define the word Theology

Page 21: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Define the word Theocracy

Page 22: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Define the word Zealous

Page 23: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

When did the Protestant Reformation take place

• A. 1604• B. 1066• C. 1517• D. 1100

Page 24: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Why did England want to come to America? Give two reasons.

Page 25: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Who was Amerigo Vespucci?

Page 26: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Roanoake was settled by

• A. Sir Issac Smith • B. Sir Walter Raleigh• C. Sir Calvin Hobbes • D. Sir John Kyle

Page 27: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Who arrived first the Pilgrims of the Puritans?

Page 28: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

By 1642 how many Pilgrims and Puritans had settled here?

• A. 10,000• B. 20,000• C. 50,000• D. 100,000

Page 29: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

What belief did Pilgrims and Puritans hold in common?

Page 30: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Puritans believed the Bible is the literal word of God

•True or False?

Page 31: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

What was an important form of literature for Puritans?

Page 32: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Complete this phrase from John Winthrop‘s famous speech held in 16 Complete this phrase from John Winthrop‘s famous CCCCCCCcsp

Consider that wee shall be as a … 30: “Consider that wee shall be as a …

• Complete this phrase from John Winthrop,• “We shall be seen• A. As a city upon a hill• B. A forest village • C. A metropolis in a city • D. A small village

Page 33: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

The seamen are astonished by the death of the profane seaman an attribute his demise to

• A. The heavy storms • B. The will of God • C. His fondness for rum • D. His carelessness

Page 34: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

The college of Harvard was formed first to train

A. MinistersB. ScientistsC. DoctorsD. Lawyers

Page 35: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

The Pilgrims’ ship first reaches land in America at

• A. Cape Cod • B. Near the Hudson River • C. At Boston

Page 36: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Bradford describes the American Indians whom the Puritans encounter with

• A. Great admiration and praise • B. A combination of pity and fear • C. A sense of guilt for taking their land • D. A mixture of disdain and respect

Page 37: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

At the first Thanksgiving the Puritans are most thankful for

• A. The treaty they have made with the American Indians

• B. The departure of the loathsome sailors • C. Their great store of game and corn • D. The arrival of more people from England

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Mary Rowlandson’s main intention is to

• A. Write a best seller• B. Analyze another culture• C. Arouse hatred toward the Wampanoag• D. Show how her experience revealed God’s

purpose

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The tribe that captures Rowlandson is forced to keep moving because of its

• A. English pursuers • B. Need for Food • C. Treaty with the colonists • D. Religious practices

Page 40: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Rowlandson primarily draws strength to survive from ?

• A. Her desire to return and tell her story to the Puritans

• B. Her belief in God’s ultimate purpose • C. The medicine that a sympathetic woman

gives her • D. Her desire to avenge the death of her child

Page 41: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

An allusion is

• A. Something you can’t see• B. A reference to something from art, music,

religion, science, literature, etc.• C. A comparison of two unlike things• D. An exaggeration

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The head of the Indian tribe that captured Mary is named

• A. King George • B. King Phillip• C. King John • D. King Richard

Page 43: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Puritans viewed the raids by the Indians as a sign from God as a result of their

• A. Being selfish with their land • B. Young people dancing • C. Not reading the Bible every day.• D. Drinking too much beer.

Page 44: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Christians saw the comparison of these narratives as

• A. Allegories about their lives• B. Similes about their lives • C. A hyperbole about their life

Page 45: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

True or False

•The Captivity Narratives were always objective writing

Page 46: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Mary Rowlandson

What was Mary Rowlandson’s main intention in writing her story ?

Who was the head of the Indian tribe that captured Mary?

Puritans viewed the Indian tribe raids as a result of their young people doing what?

Page 47: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

How did the captivity narratives change with time?

Page 48: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

In his sermon, Edwards mainly taps into his audience’s fear of

• A. Their minister’s wrath

• B. Burning forever in a fiery pit • C. Associating with sinners • D. Floods and other natural

disasters

Page 49: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

When Edwards refers to the unconverted persons in this congregation, he chiefly

addresses the

• A . Men and women who do not believe in God

• B. Church visitors • C. People who are against him • D. Members who do not accept Christ as their

Savior

Page 50: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Edwards presents God as a being who

• A. Enjoys human suffering and misery • B. Continually redefines the universe • C. Is often angry and vengeful • D. Easily forgives people

Page 51: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Edwards builds a sense of urgency and peril by suggesting that

• A. Death and damnation may occur at any moment

• B. The church is being persecuted by unholdy forces

• C. Ministers alone can determine who is to be saved

• D. The end of the world is coming soon.

Page 52: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Define Profane

• A. Urgent • B. Irreverent • C. Proud • D. Conversation

Page 53: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Provoked means

• A. To Calm • B. Forced to anger • C. Induce

Page 54: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Appease

• A. Controlled • B. Proud• C. To soften • D. To calm; satisfy

Page 55: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Haughty

• A. Fondness• B. Willing • C. Proud• D. A few

Page 56: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Execratons

• A. Heavy storms • B. Angry words; curses • C. Rocks • D. Big Waves • -

Page 57: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Relent

• A. To soften • B. To discuss• C. To work • D. To leave

Page 58: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Sundry

• A. A lot of something • B. The end of something • C. Few-some • D. An ability to sew

Page 59: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Affliction

•A. Austerity

• B. Solitude • C. Hardship

Page 60: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Bewitching

• A. Enticing • B. Ornate • C. Comprising • D. Fragrant

Page 61: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Decrepit

• A. Ornery • B. Wayward • C. Hungry • D. Run-Down

Page 62: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Entreated

• A. Asked • B. Harangued • D. Trusted

Page 63: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Plunder

• A. Bound Books • B. Ample Provisions • C. Seized goods • D. Retrieved

Page 64: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Savory

• A. Edible • B. Appetizing • C. Tasteless • D. Pungent

Page 65: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Lamentable

• A. Puzzling • B. Unfathomable • C. Ambivalent • D. Distressing

Page 66: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Abhors

• A. Suffering • B. Forgiveness • C. Hates • D. To calm

Page 67: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

Define the word Omnipotent

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Define the word Inconceivable

Page 69: The Pilgrims regard their voyage as

What Puritan minister introduced the small pox vaccine?

• A. Jon Edwards • Cotton Mather • John Simone • Ralph Bradford