Book: Fifty Foods That Changed The Course of History
Author: Bill Price
ISBN: 978-1-77085-427-7
Chapter 32: Gin
Go to Questions
Go to Directory of Fifty Foods That Changed the Course of History
Go to Directory of Articles & Books
Answer Key
1. Gin from the Netherlands is known as Geneva.
2. Dutch Physician Franciscus Sylvius, 1614-1674, invented Gin.
3. Gin arrived to England after the Thirty Years Wars in 1648.
4. King Charles I deposed of his crown in 1649 in the English Civil War.
5. Charles II lived in exile with his sister Mary in the Netherlands.
6. Oliver Cromwell executed King Charles I.
7. Genever is known as Hollands.
8. James II came into power after the death of his brother Charles II in 1685.
9. Declaration of Indulgence was granting much wider religious freedom to Catholics than had previously been.
10. The Immortal Seven were 6 Nobleman and a Bishop.
11. The Bill of Rights Act of 1689 was Parliament rather than the king and queen was ultimate power in Britain.
12. "Mother's Ruin" is also known as "Madame Geneva."
13. The Gin Acts of 1729-1751 has 5 Acts.
Author: Bill Price
ISBN: 978-1-77085-427-7
Chapter 32: Gin
Go to Questions
Go to Directory of Fifty Foods That Changed the Course of History
Go to Directory of Articles & Books
Answer Key
1. Gin from the Netherlands is known as Geneva.
2. Dutch Physician Franciscus Sylvius, 1614-1674, invented Gin.
3. Gin arrived to England after the Thirty Years Wars in 1648.
4. King Charles I deposed of his crown in 1649 in the English Civil War.
5. Charles II lived in exile with his sister Mary in the Netherlands.
6. Oliver Cromwell executed King Charles I.
7. Genever is known as Hollands.
8. James II came into power after the death of his brother Charles II in 1685.
9. Declaration of Indulgence was granting much wider religious freedom to Catholics than had previously been.
10. The Immortal Seven were 6 Nobleman and a Bishop.
11. The Bill of Rights Act of 1689 was Parliament rather than the king and queen was ultimate power in Britain.
12. "Mother's Ruin" is also known as "Madame Geneva."
13. The Gin Acts of 1729-1751 has 5 Acts.
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