"Co pare and contrast southern and northern colonies in 1600s to 1700" Essays and Research Papers

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    Northern Ireland

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    Northern Ireland The problems between Protestants and Catholics in Northern Ireland started a long time ago and more political than religious. For centuries the English had tried to gain control of Ireland. Until the sixteenth centrury‚England controlled only a small area of Ireland around Dublin. English rulers‚ including King Henry VIII‚ Queen Elizabeth I and Oliver Cromwell gradually conquered the whole of Ireland. Ireland became a British colony in 1607. The last area to resis the English

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    the history of mankind‚ there has always been a gap between the wealthy and the poor. America made miniscule attempts to end this course of action‚ but it is simply human nature and therefore cannot be changed. From 1700 to 1750‚ the differences in wealth and status in the colonies continued to increase. Once the gap started to widen‚ it was very difficult to alter due to the structure of the political system (or lack thereof). The plague of war created a class of widows and orphans‚ who became

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    rules of the church. The church and the state were together if anyone were to go against the church or were Heretics they would be burned on a stake to show that if anyone went against the rules this would happen to them. The hierarchy in Europe in the 1700’s was made up of the nobility who were tiled privileged and wealthy‚ which they had received from their ancestors. Then came the middle class which consisted of merchants and bankers‚ they were growing in political power and wealth. The majority of

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    Colonies

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    Life was very hard in colonial America in the 17th & 18th centuries. There were 13 colonies all with different purposes. Many colonists came to America to flee religious persecution in England or to find work in the colonies. By 1750 more than one million people were living in the thirteen colonies. It seems that the colonies were finally progressing from disease and feudal warfare with the Native Americans. The colonies also were beginning to show diverse groups of people. Many came to America due to

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    States of America can trace it’s roots back to the English. They were frustrated with over-population‚ poverty‚ or lack of freedom of religion. In the early 1600s‚ England sent groups of settlers to the “New World” to establish permanent colonies. They founded the Virginia Colony and the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Although the two first colonies of America were similar‚ they also had very distinct differences. Virginia was founded by merchants and adventurers looking to profit from the land. Massachusetts

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    colonies

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    Establishing the Colonies Name _____ Motives for settling in the New World: Spread Christianity Find a short cut to Asia Better job opportunities Roanoke Island With the permission of Queen Elizabeth‚ Sir Walter Raleigh raised money to establish a colony‚ and in 1585 a small group of men sailed for the Americas. What did Raleigh find when he returned to the Lost Colony of Roanoke in 1589? The people had vanished and they found the word‚ “Croatian” carved in a tree. Jamestown What

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    Presidency In The 1700s

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    The presidency has changed very much over time from the time from the one which was created in the 1700s. Our first presidents had shaped an influential position by then but congress still was the most important figure of our government then. The president had to be at least the age of 35‚ American born and must have resided in the united states for no less than 14 years. In the constitution it states the president should be paid which cannot be increased or decreased during his term in office.

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    Ireland In The 1700s

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    The 1700s were a definitive historical period for the Irish‚ culturally‚ economically‚ and inter-relationally with the English. Just as noble English landowners ascended to prominence‚ the Irish were beset with insolvency and poverty. Yet this massive disparity in Irish and English power stemmed from a troubling set of circumstances. This dualistic era was predated by social havoc‚ excessive penal oppression‚ and military suppression of the Irish. Thus‚ the English who resided in Ireland were allocated

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    Enlightenment and Religious Revival As colonies grew and developed in the Americas‚ so too did the needs and wants of the people who lived within them. With all the mounting turmoil that was stirring‚ people’s moral compasses spun about wildly‚ contrasting sharply‚ chalk full of uncertainty. Access to knowledge was available to a vast array of people from all walks of life. This was the perfect recipe for a religious reformation‚ or The Great Awakening. Conflicting views and new knowledge from the

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    people around you. Prior to 1700‚ the British North American colonies had conflicting outlooks on the extent of religious freedom in the new world based on the different acts of the British Empire and by the English origin of most of the settlers. New England was mostly comprised of Puritans‚ the Middle Colonies consisted of Quakers‚ and the South was more concerned about using the land to make money and didn’t emphasize on religion. The Southern Mainland colonies considered the Church of England

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