How did Great Britains position in North America change relative to the other European powers during the first three quarters of the eighteenth century quizlet?

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-British identity: the colonists felt connected to Britain because they had the same culture, it was their home country (fashion, religion)
-American identity: their rights were being violated, the basis of this identity was revolution and patriotism, fighting for what they believed in.
-The colonists' sense of identity and unity as Americans was further developed when they coalesced to fight the British. Many people who lived in the colonies were not English; they were German, Dutch, Swedish, Jewish, Scots-Irish, and French. Some people were a mixture of many different ethnic groups. This "mixed" group of people, which could not be found anywhere else in the world, that united to fight for their rights led to the creation of a separate identity

The Atlantic slave trade, which lasted from the late 16th to early 19th centuries involved European countries such as Britain, Spain and France which all had colonies in the Americas and Africa. The ships were carrying slaves, crops and manufactured goods between West Africa, the Caribbean and American colonies and the colonial powers in Europe. The use of African slaves was very important to growing colonial cash crops, which were exported to Europe. European goods, in turn, were used to buy African slaves, which were then brought west from Africa to the Americas to work on the crops. The middle passage of the triangular trade refers to the transportation of the slaves to America. The Atlantic economy was tied into the idea of mercantilism, which involved European countries to have a lot of colonies that traded only among themselves. Goods that were traded in the Atlantic economy were rum, slaves, sugar, tobacco, gold, spices, fish, lumber and manufactured goods.

Sets with similar terms

How did Britain become the dominant power in North America?

Competition with France Fighting between the British and French colonies in North America was endemic in the first half of the 18th century, but the Treaty of Paris of 1763, which ended the Seven Years' War (known as the French and Indian War in North America), left Britain dominant in Canada.

How did the colonists sense of a collective British identity change during the years before the 1760s?

How and why did the colonists' sense of a collective British identify change during the years before 1764? -American identity: their rights were being violated, the basis of this identity was revolution and patriotism, fighting for what they believed in.

How did the great awakening challenge the religious and social structure of British North America quizlet?

How did the great awakening challenge the religious and social structure of British North America? It was attempting to use religious and social structure for profit. Ministers were claiming to be able to free people from sins if they donated enough money to the church; this caused the church to become very corrupt.

Why did the colonists identify themselves as British through the middle of the eighteenth century quizlet?

9. Why did the colonists identify themselves as British through the mid-eighteenth century?" By the mid-eighteenth century, the British North American colonies were well-established settlements, closely tied into Atlantic and Caribbean trading networks.