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    To what extent and why did religious toleration increase in the American colonies during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries? Answer with reference to three individuals‚ events‚ or movements in American religion during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. People went to America to search for religious freedom and to escape religious persecution. They came from all of the world and so with it came religious diversity. As a result‚ religious freedom began to replace religious persecution

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    disputes over religion and religious tolerance. In much of the world‚ many feuds have erupted over different religious beliefs. In Northern America‚ however‚ religious tolerance seemed to be a familiar concept to those living in the area. The tolerance did not so far as extend to freedom of religion‚ but there have been more acceptances due to Roger Williams‚ the Anglicans‚ and Jonathan Edwards. Roger Williams was an English Protestant minister from the seventeenth century who urged people to break

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    Eighteenth Century British Colonies In the eighteenth century‚ the British Colonies in North America experienced many changes that helped form the identity of America. The demographic‚ ethnic‚ and social characters of Britain’s colonies were some of the major characteristics to be altered in the 1700s. The demographic character of Colonial America resulted in a swing in the balance of power between the colonies and England. In the beginning of the 1700s‚ a population that was initially less than

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    Political Strategies in America during the Eighteenth Century Introduction The eighteenth century was a period of many changes in both America and Europe. Many wars took place in different battlefields including the entire American continent‚ All Europe and the Atlantic Ocean. Many groups of people awakened and fought for independence in the British Colonies. And European and American philosophers defined the period as of the enlightenment. By the year of 1650 the European population was 103

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    Religious Freedom in the American Colonies Prior to the 1700s The first amendment to the United States Constitution guarantees citizens their right to practice any religion they wish without persecution today‚ but many years ago when this country was made up of only 13 colonies on the east coast‚ that was often times not the case. It’s surprising how many were not tolerant of religions different from their own because the main reason why people fled to America was to escape religious persecution

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    The extent of religious freedom in the British American colonies was at a moderate amount. Although colonies such as Virginia and Massachusetts had little to no religious freedom‚ there were colonies such as Pennsylvania and Rhode Island that had a certain degree of tolerance for other religions. With Virginia being Anglican with its laws‚ Massachusetts having puritans and separatists‚ Rhode Island having Roger Williams and Anne Hutchinson‚ and Pennsylvania having William Penn along with Quakers

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    Taneisha Richards Mrs. Paddack English 101 16 October 2013 Tolerance In everyday language people used the term “tolerance” to signify that attitude of those who put up with ideas or behavior of others which persons do not agree with or of which persons do not approve. In history of thinking‚ the term for tolerance has also acquired a more specific and somewhat of a different meaning‚ indicating a non-obstructive attitude on the part of a state towards the expression of other ideas which includes;

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    against indulgences eventually turned to blows to change religious toleration. As Martin Luther sparked controversy with his Ninety-five Theses‚ things took a different turn as he unknowingly sparked the Protestant Revolution. Previous to Luther‚ people that thought like him were viewed as heretics and often killed. From the Reformation to the French Revolution‚ views on religious tolerance improved. As a political practice‚ religious toleration was allowed to cultivate due three main factors: people

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    educated in fear that knowledge would be harmful for their minds. Writings from two eighteenth-century reformers validate the significance in education for woman. The eighteenth-century documents of Benjamin Rush‚ a physician and educator‚ and Judith Sargent Murray’s‚ a women’s rights activist‚ make evident the importance of female education‚ and defined the influence an educated woman has in everyday life. Colonial women did not have easy lives. As young girls‚

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    Those living in the American colonies in the seventeenth century faced many challenges. These tensions of political‚ social‚ religious and economic natures came from abroad and within. Influences of the political and economic nature from abroad onto the established American colonies shifted the shape and nature of the colonies; whereas‚ the social and religious tensions from abroad tended to create new colonies. The Quakers‚ for instance‚ were a group of English Protestants who left England in

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