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B1 중급 영어 11:27 Educational

Tea, Taxes, and The American Revolution: Crash Course World History #28

CrashCourse · 6,423,893 조회수 · 추가됨 3주 전

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자막 (178 세그먼트)

00:00

Hi, I'm John Green, this is Crash Course World History and today you aren't going to get

00:04

a blow by blow chronology of the American Revolution, and you aren't going to get cool

00:08

biographical details about Thomas Jefferson or George Washington. But you are going to

00:14

get me not wearing any pants.

00:16

Mr. Green, Mr. Green! Did you know that George Washington might have had slave teeth

00:20

implanted into his jaw?

00:21

Yeah, I did, Me from the Past, and while it's fun to focus on metaphorically resonant details,

00:25

what we're concerned with here is why the American Revolution happened and the extent

00:29

to which it was actually revolutionary. Plus, for the first time in Crash Course history,

00:33

I have a legitimate chance of getting through an entire episode without butchering a single

00:38

pronunciation. Unfortunately, next week we will be in France, and je parle français comme un idiot.

00:43

[theme music]

00:51

So, intellectual historians might put the roots of the American Revolution earlier,

00:55

but I'm going to start with the end of the 7 Years War in 1763, which as you will recall

00:59

from last week was: 1. Expensive, and

01:02

2. A victory for the British, including British subjects living in America, who now had more

01:07

land and therefore more money.

01:09

Right, so, in 1765 the British government was like, “Hey, since we went into this

01:13

debt to get you all this new land, we trust that you won't mind if we pass the Stamp Act,

01:18

in which we place a fancy stamp on your documents, newspapers, playing cards, etc., and in return,

01:22

you give us money.”

01:23

Well, it turns out the colonists weren't so keen on this, not so much because the tax

01:27

was high because they had no direct representation in the parliament that had levied the tax.

01:32

And plus, they were cranky about the Crown keeping large numbers of British troops in

01:35

the colonies even after the end of the 7 Years War.

01:38

And then the British government was like, “You are inadequately grateful,” and the

01:41

colonists were like, “Shut up we hate you,” and the British government was like, “As

01:44

long as you live under our roof, you live by our rules,” and so on, but eventually

01:48

the British backed down and repealed the Stamp Act. The repeal inspired a line of commemorative

01:52

teapots, thereby beginning America's storied tradition of worthless collectible ceramics.

01:57

But, in the end, this only emboldened the colonists when the British tried to put new

02:00

taxes on the Americans in the form of the Townshend Acts. These led to further protests

02:04

and boycotts and most importantly, more organization among the colonists.

02:08

The protests escalated: 1770 saw the Boston Massacre, which with its sum total of five

02:13

dead was perhaps the least massacrey massacre of all time, and in 1773, a bunch of colonists

02:18

dumped about a million dollars worth of tea into Boston Harbor, in protest of British

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