Final answer:
The British imposed the Coercive Acts, taxes without representation, and the Quartering Act on the American colonists, all of which contributed to the denying of their personal liberties and fueled the drive towards Revolution.
Step-by-step explanation:
Three restrictions placed by the British on the colonists that helped lead to the American Revolution included the enforcement of the Coercive Acts (also known as the Intolerable Acts), the imposition of taxes without representation such as the Stamp Act and the Sugar Act, and the mandatory quartering of soldiers as stipulated by the Quartering Act.
Each of these acts severely limited the personal liberties of the colonists and violated what they perceived to be their rights as English subjects. The Coercive Acts were a series of punitive measures that effectively shut down self-governance and trade in Massachusetts, the taxes imposed without consent led to widespread protest under the rallying cry no taxation without representation, and the Quartering Act imposed on colonists the burden of providing room and board to British soldiers, which was seen as an encroachment on personal property and autonomy.