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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 Dbq

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    A.P. U.S. DBQ: Question: Although New England and the Chesapeake region were both settled largely by people of English origin‚ by 1700 the regions had evolved into two distinct societies. Why did this difference in development occur? By the 1700s the two regions‚ New England and Chesapeake varied greatly in spite of being from the same mother country‚ England. Physical and cultural differences separated these two regions distinctively. While religion moulded the daily life in New England‚ Money

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    The 1700 hundreds where a great age of questioning and reasoning. During this age thinkers know as philosophers arose to share their ideas on all parts of human society and human nature in general.Philosophers Believed all humans should be free and unrestrained by government. They believed that all humans were entitled to and responsible for freedom of government‚ religion‚ economy and the rights of their fellow citizens. Philosophers believed that the right the right to form a government and be

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    different society from England emerged in the colonies. Changes in religion‚ economics‚ politics‚ and social structure illustrate this to the Europeans. By 1763‚ although some colonies still maintained established churches‚ other colonies had accomplished a virtual revolution for religious toleration and separation of church and state. Popular dissenter‚ Roger Williams‚ having been banished from Massachusetts‚ bought land from Indians and founded a colony where other dissenters or “trouble-makers”

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    Southern Stereotypes

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    Southern Stereotypes Roaming Grotesque roams in the South whereby grace transformed into violence it becomes realization. In 1955‚ Flannery O’Connor wrote Good Country People‚ where she uses the distorted side of humans to aware the reader of the powerful reality of spirituality. Mostly the characters are used to represent grotesque. A female character in particular that O’Connor uses is Joy Hulga‚ a rather fanatical character who denies Southern stereotypes and is a “virgin ogre” who is

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    "Women ought to have representatives‚ instead of being arbitrarily governed without any direct share allowed them in the deliberations of government." (Wollstonecraft‚ 1792). Women began to consider that the way they had been being treated might have not been fair. Women of the eighteenth century did not wish to have greater power then men. They only wished for equal rights. Young girls could only dream of continuing their schooling and obtaining a higher education. Men‚ who had control over women

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    While each person chosen to live on the colony has to be smart‚ loyal‚ brave‚ compassionate‚ etcetera‚ I believe that each person also has to have unique skill sets that set them apart from the others. For example‚ while they each have the qualities listed above‚ perhaps once could be a leader‚ the other a scientist‚ another an artist‚ and so on. This way‚ the colony has a variety of characters that will lend their talents to the growth of the strongest colony possible. The first of the four people

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    The Thirteen Colonies

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    Thirteen Colonies The thirteen colonies were divided into three regions: the Southern colonies‚ the Middle colonies‚ and the New England colonies. Each region can be characterized based on its geography‚ climate‚ economy and culture. These qualities may also be used to compare and contrast regions. One quality used to characterize the colony regions is its geography and climate. Both the Southern and Middle colonies have fertile soil and long growing seasons‚ while the New England colonies have very

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    Up until the 1700s religious scripture and ideology has ruled how man has thought of the world. The religious base for all facts and information drove what we as humans thought of biology and the human body. In the start of the 1st century at the beginnings of Christianity the religious based information was continued and spread further and stronger. It wasn’t until the time of the Enlightenment around the 1700’s that the ideas were truly questioned and put to test through factual experiments and

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    Many of the British American colonies that eventually formed a part of the USA were populated by European settlers‚ who were persecuted for their religious beliefs back home‚ but they held on passionately to their beliefs. They supported their leaders who dreamed of ‘city on hill’ and had a great faith in the ‘religious experiment’ that could be successfully realized in the wilderness of America. The settlers had a missionary vision of their church even in colonies like Virginia‚ planned as commercial

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