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AP

EURO
Second Semester, Unit VII
Vocabulary to Identify
Ch 23
Chemicals
Electricity
Thomas Edison
Joseph Swan
Alexander Graham Bell
Guglielmo Marconi
Internal Combustion Engine
Gottlieb Daimler
Tariffs
Cartels
Depression
La belle poque
Women in workplace
Contagious Diseases Acts
Josephine Butler
Social Democratic Party
August Bebel
Jean Jaurs
Second International
May Day
Marxism
Evolutionary socialism
Revisionism
Eduard Bernstein
General Confederation of
Labor
Anarchism
Lev Aleshker
Mass Society
Population trends
V.A. Huber
Lord Leverhulme
Ebenezer Howard
Housing Act of 1890
Bertha Krupp
Robert Baden-Powell
Mass education
Universal elementary
education
Barbara Bodichon
Literacy & Newspapers
Mass Leisure
Mass Tourism
Team Sports
Reform Acts of 1867 &
1884
William Gladstone
Home rule
Third Republic
Constitution of 1875
King Alfonso XII

Kulkturkampf
William II
Taafe
Alexander III
Nicholas II
Ch 24
Marie Curie
Max Planck
Relativity theory
Einstein
Nietzsche
Berson
Sorel
General strike
Psychoanalysis
Freud
Darwinism
Social Darwinism
Racism
Volkish thought
Anticlericalism
Pope Leo XIII
Modernism
Naturalism
Dostoevsky
Tolstoy
Zola
Symbolism
Impressionism
Pissarro
Monet
Morisot
Post-Impressionism
Czanne
Van gogh
Cubism
Picasso
Abstract Painting
Grieg
Debussy
Political democracy
Suffragists
Millicent Fawcett
Amalie Sieveking
Clara Barton
Florence Nightengale
Emmeline Pankhurst
Bertha von Suttner
Anti-semitism
Pogroms
Zionism
Theodor Herzl
First Zionist Congress

David Lloyd George


National Insurance Act of
1911
Transformism
Giovanni Giolitti
Alfred Dreyfus
Francis Joseph
Sergei Witte
Revolution of 1905
Duma
Meat Inspection Act
Pure Food and Drug Act
Federal Reserve System
New imperialism
Motives of N.I.
Berlin Conference
Suez Canal
Cecil Rhodes
James Cook
Russo Japanese War
Open Door Policy
Matthew Perry
Hawaii
Spanish-American War
Sun Yat-sen
Mutsuhito
Meiji
Kitchener
Indian National Congress
Three Emperors League
Congress of Berlin
Treaty of San Stefano
Triple Alliance of 1882
Triple Entente
Crisis in the Balkans
Second Balkan War
Ch 25
Major Causes
Militarism
Francis Ferdinand
Gavrilo Princip
Black Hand
Mobilization
Blank check
Schlieefen Plan
General Joseph Joffre
Trench Warfare
Battles of Tannenberg
Erich Ludendorff
First Battle of the Marne
no-mans land
Lawrence of Arabia
Lusitania

Unrestricted submarine
warfare
Holtzendorff
Tanks
Total war
Nationalization
Walter Rathenau
Georges Clemenceau
Ministry of Munitions
March Revolution
Rasputin
Provisional government

Soviets
Bolsheviks
V.I. Lenin
April Theses
Army Order No. 1
Kollontai
Zhenotdel
Treaty of Brest-Litovsk
Red v. White Army
Denikin
Leon Trotsky
War Communism

November 11, 1918


Genocide
Armenia
Self-determination
League of Nations
Woodrow Wilson
Treaty of Versailles
Reparations
Paris Peace Conference
Mandates



Essential Questions:
Ch 23: The Mass Society in an Age of Progress, 1871-1894
1. What was the Second Industrial Revolution, and what effects did it have on
European economic and social life?
2. What roles did socialist parties and trade unions play in improving
conditions for the working classes?
3. What is a mass society, and what were its main characteristics?
4. What role were women expected to play in society and family life in the latter
half of the nineteenth century, and how closely did patterns of family life
correspond to this ideal?
5. What general political trends were evident in the nations of western Europe
in the last decades of the nineteenth century, and how did these trends differ
from the policies pursued in Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Russia?
6. What was the relationship among economic, social, and political
developments between 1871 and 1894?
Ch 24: An Age of Modernity, Anxiety, and Imperialism, 1894-1914
1. What developments in science, intellectual affairs, and the arts in the late
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries opened the way to a modern
consciousness
2. What difficulties did women, Jews and working classes face in the late
nine=tenth centuries?
3. What political problems did Great Britain, Italy, France, Austria-Hungary,
Germany, and Russia face between 1894-1914, and how did they solve them?
4. What effects did European imperialism have on Africa and Asia?
5. What issues lay behind the international crises that Europe faced in the late
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries?
6. What is the connection between the new imperialism of the late nine-
teenth century and underlying causes for World War I?
Ch 25: The Beginning of the Twentieth-Century Crisis: War and Revolution
1. What were the long-range and immediate causes of WWI?
2. What did the belligerents expect at the beginning of World War I, and why
did the course of the war turn out to be so different from their expectations?
3. How did WWI affect the belligerents governmental and political institutions,
economic affairs, and social life?

4. What were the causes of the Russian Revolution of 1917, and why did the
Bolsheviks prevail in the civil war and gain control of Russia?
5. What were the objectives of the chief participants at the Paris Peace
Conference of 1919, and how closely did the final settlement reflect these
objectives?
6. What was the relationship between WWI and the Russian Revolution?


Date
1/25
1/26
1/27

Content
No School
2nd Industrial
Revolution, More
Isms
Masses, Masses,
Masses

1/28

National State

1/29

Toward Modern
Consciousness
Politics, New
directions &
Uncertainties
New Imperialism

2/1
2/2-2/3

Agenda
Read
Mini-Lecture, discuss
new movements

HW
Read p. 651-660
Read p. 660-672

Group
breakdowns/discussions
of the Masses
Discussion on New
Nations
Discussion on Freud and
Art
Discuss new movements

Read p. 672-678

Read p. 710-722

2/11-2/12

Peace Settlement
& Review

2/15

NO SCHOOL

Lecture: New
Imperialism,
Discussions on different
areas Who had what?
Discuss increasing
tensions leading to WWI
Lecture on the course of
the war
Discuss causes, course,
and effects of Bolshevik
Revolution
Discuss motives of Allies
and result of Peace
Conference. Review for
test
REVIEW & STUDY

2/16-2/17

Test

Test on Unit 7

2/4-2/5
2/8
2/9-2/10

Intl Rivalry,
causes of WWI
How WWI Was
Fought
Bolshevik
Revolution

Read p. 682-692
Read p. 692-701
Read p. 701-710

Read p. 722-736
Read p. 736-743
Read p. 744-747
Review & Finish
Reading Guide
Possible Google
Hangout. More
info to come
Read p. 750-754

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