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What Is The Role Of Religious Intolerance In Colonial America?

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What Is The Role Of Religious Intolerance In Colonial America?
The United States of America is being praised high as a hot icon in today’s society. However, America wasn’t great in the beginning and it wasn’t what people think of it right now. The original America goes back to the colonial period. Many people in history have attempted to write their views on the history of America, but the most exemplary ones are those who attempted to document the colonial America times. Many have written their views regarding on what they felt about the new continent and have presented a fertile ground for discerning the life of the discovered world. Religious tolerance and intolerance, as well as idealistic and realistic aspects, form a basis of the visions of colonial America.
Religious intolerance was one of the
…show more content…
In response to this alienation, the Indians organized the Pablo revolt that was aimed at restoring their religious entity and modes of worship which had been downtrodden by the Spanish. Hackett argues that eye witnesses to the revolt that was organized to take place simultaneously in all settler places described the incident as a revolt to Christianity (Hackett, p11). Native Americans are said to have remarked that the God of Christianity was dead together with the Santa Maria, considered holy objects of worship as rotten wood and that only their god lived. This was a response to their divine revelation from their god who had come in person and told them to destroy anything of the Christianity. Church bells were broken; churches looted and burned down, priests killed and more than 400 settlers killed. Those who had been given wives in holy matrimony abandoned them and took new wives, they bathed in rivers to wash away the Christian baptism and performed their traditional worship in front of their children so that the practice to be passed down for …show more content…
As the document by Virginia Magazine titled Nathaniel Bacon on Bacon’s Rebellion (Virginia Magazine, p 48) reported, there were several causes of the Bacon Rebellion. Some of the key issues included limited land, reduction of taxes, a corrupt regime and that one could not settle anywhere because the land was under the governor, where land ownership was a thorny issue. It is worthwhile noting that the land was not idle. The Indians occupied the land as it was hard to acquire land without confronting them. The reality was that America was a land of opportunity, but everything had to be won, not taken

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