Practice Flashcards
What triggered Britain's new taxes on the colonies after 1763?
Track your progress — Sign up free to save your progress and get smart review reminders based on spaced repetition.
All Flashcards in Topic 11.3
Below are all 36 flashcards for this topic. Sign up free to track your progress and get personalized review schedules.
11.3.112 cards
What triggered Britain's new taxes on the colonies after 1763?
Britain's debt from the Seven Years' War (1756–1763); Parliament wanted colonists to help pay for their own defence.
What does "no taxation without representation" mean?
Colonists argued Parliament had no right to tax them since they had no elected members representing them in it.
Name three British tax laws that angered the colonies.
Stamp Act (1765), Townshend Acts (1767), Tea Act (1773).
What happened at the Boston Massacre (1770)?
British soldiers fired into a crowd of protesters, killing five colonists; used as propaganda against British rule.
What idea did John Locke contribute to the independence movement?
Natural rights and the social contract: government rules only with the people's consent and can be overthrown if it violates rights.
What was the impact of Thomas Paine's *Common Sense* (1776)?
Sold over 100,000 copies; shifted public opinion from seeking reform to demanding full independence.
Define Enlightenment.
An 18th-century intellectual movement emphasizing reason, natural rights, and government by consent.
What was Thomas Jefferson's key contribution to independence?
Intellectual contribution: drafted the Declaration of Independence (1776), building on Lockean natural rights.
What was George Washington's key contribution to independence?
Military contribution: commanded the Continental Army, survived Valley Forge (1777–78), won the decisive Battle of Yorktown (1781).
Compare Jefferson's and Washington's contributions.
Jefferson provided the intellectual/written justification for independence; Washington provided the military force that made independence achievable.
How did Samuel Adams and Thomas Paine mobilize popular support?
Adams organised the Sons of Liberty and committees of correspondence; Paine's writing converted ordinary readers to the cause of independence.
What is the debate over Enlightenment ideas vs. British actions as causes of independence?
Some argue ideas (Locke, Paine) were most important; others argue British political/economic overreach (taxes, Intolerable Acts) was the real trigger — strongest essays show the two reinforced each other.
11.3.212 cards
Why did Bolívar and San Martín build professional standing armies instead of relying on militias?
Early volunteer militias were repeatedly defeated by Spain's disciplined troops; professional, trained armies with European veteran officers could hold their own in sustained campaigns.
What is the llanos, and why did it matter to Bolívar's war effort?
The llanos are Venezuela's vast tropical grassland plains; Bolívar recruited its tough cavalrymen (llaneros), led by José Antonio Páez, turning a former royalist stronghold into a decisive patriot fighting force.
Describe San Martín's 1817 Andes campaign.
San Martín led the Army of the Andes across the mountains into Chile, achieving total surprise and defeating royalist forces at the Battle of Chacabuco.
What happened at the Guayaquil meeting of 1822?
Bolívar and San Martín met privately to decide who would complete the liberation of Peru; San Martín chose to withdraw from politics, leaving Bolívar to finish the campaign.
How did Napoleon's 1808 invasion of Spain contribute to the revolutionary wars' outcome?
It forced King Ferdinand VII to abdicate, triggering a legitimacy crisis across the empire and draining Spanish resources into the Peninsular War instead of the Americas.
What was Haiti's contribution to Bolívar's campaign?
In 1816, independent Haiti gave Bolívar refuge, ships, and weapons in exchange for his promise to free enslaved people in the territories he liberated.
Compare Bolívar's centralist vision with the federalist alternative for the new states.
Bolívar wanted a strong, sometimes lifetime president and one unified Gran Colombia, fearing federalism would cause fracture; federalists wanted power shared between regions, appealing to local elites — the clash caused prolonged instability.
What is a viceroyalty, and why did it cause border problems after independence?
A viceroyalty was a large territory ruled on the Spanish king's behalf by a viceroy; when independence came, these old administrative lines became new international borders that rarely matched ethnic or economic reality.
What happened at the Congress of Panama (1826) and why is it significant?
Bolívar's attempt to unite the new American republics into a league of states failed, as most delegates did not even attend — showing how weak regional unity remained even at its most hopeful moment.
What happened to Gran Colombia, and what does it show about Bolívar's political legacy?
Gran Colombia dissolved into Venezuela, Colombia, and Ecuador by 1831 after Bolívar resigned; it shows his centralist state-building project largely failed despite his military success.
Give two reasons new nation states struggled to build a national identity after independence.
Centuries of loyalty to the Spanish king, local towns, or social class (not a nation); and the inheritance of arbitrary colonial borders that did not match ethnic or economic reality.
What is the key historical debate over why the revolutionary wars succeeded?
Whether Spain's own collapse (Napoleon's invasion, the Peninsular War, the 1820 constitutional crisis) explains victory more than the military skill and cooperation of patriot leaders like Bolívar and San Martín.
11.3.312 cards
What were the main economic challenges facing new Latin American states after independence?
War debt from borrowing to fund the fighting, wrecked mines and farms, collapsed trade networks, and a weak tax base that left treasuries empty.
caudillo
A regional military strongman who ruled through personal loyalty and force rather than constitutional authority — common across post-independence Latin America.
Why were unpaid armies dangerous for new governments?
Soldiers who were not paid became loyal instead to ambitious generals (caudillos), turning armies into private political tools and fuelling civil wars.
What happened to Bolivar's Gran Colombia?
It collapsed by 1830 into separate republics (Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, Panama) because regional leaders refused to accept one central authority.
How did independence affect Indigenous peoples?
Many lost communal land protections that had existed (unevenly) under Spanish colonial law, and forced labour continued in some regions despite promises of equal citizenship.
How did independence affect enslaved and free African Americans?
Slavery was abolished only gradually, often decades after independence, and freed people continued to face poverty and racism.
Why are Creoles often described as the main winners of independence?
Independence leaders were mostly Creoles (American-born of Spanish descent) who replaced Spanish-born officials as the new ruling elite, gaining political power for themselves.
Monroe Doctrine
An 1823 US declaration opposing further European colonization or interference in the Americas — largely symbolic since the US lacked the navy to enforce it.
Congress of Panama (1826)
A meeting called by Bolivar to unite the new Latin American republics; US commitment was weak, with delegates arriving late or not at all.
Compare US and British influence on newly independent Latin American states.
The US offered mainly moral/diplomatic support (recognition, Monroe Doctrine) with little military or trade power; Britain's navy and trade dominance had far more real influence in deterring European intervention and shaping the economy.
Why is 'the US secured Latin American independence' a debatable claim?
Supporters point to the Monroe Doctrine and early recognition; critics note the US had no navy to enforce the Doctrine and that Latin American states had already defeated Spain militarily before 1823.
What is the key historical debate about who benefited from independence?
Whether independence was a genuine social liberation for all groups, or mainly a transfer of power from Spanish-born officials to American-born Creole elites.
Topic 11.3 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Independence movements in the Americas (1763–1860)
History (2028+) exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
Want smart review reminders?
Sign up free to track your progress. Our spaced repetition algorithm will tell you exactly which cards to review and when.
Start Free