Answer:
An early recognition of conscientious objection was granted by William the Silent to the Dutch Mennonites in 1575. They could refuse military service in exchange for a monetary payment.
Answer:
Both Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony were activists for women's right to vote.
Explanation:
-Elizabeth Cady Stanton was an American activist, abolitionist and leading figure in the women's movement. Her Declaration of Sentiments, presented at the first women's rights convention, held in 1848 in Seneca Falls, New York, is often credited as the beginning of organized movements for women's rights and women's suffrage in the United States.
-Susan Brownell Anthony was an American feminist and suffragist. Defender of civil rights, she played an important role in the struggle for women's rights and the right to vote women in the nineteenth century in the United States.
Answer: The Glorious Revolution showed that the people could pursue a change of ruling power.
Explanation/context:
English philosopher John Locke wrote his Second Treatise on Civil Government in the wake of the Glorious Revolution, advocating that the people had the right to change a government if the government was not properly serving the people whom it governed. Leaders in the American colonies became fans of the philosophy of John Locke, and believed they had the right to pursue a change in government and free themselves from control of Great Britain.
The Glorious Revolution in England was led by members of Parliament against King James II, who had tried to assert greater power and control for himself as king, infringing on their rights. The "revolution" was a change in government, mostly without violence. In June of 1688, seven highly-placed Englishmen sent a letter of invitation to William of Orange (who was husband to James II's daughter Mary), inviting him to come to England and be supported by them and the people as king. As king and queen, the new rulers of England became known as William III and Mary II.
The American Revolution, launched with the Declaration of Independence in 1776, was similar in that it was seeking to free America from unfair government imposed on the colonies by the British home government. In the Declaration of Independence, Thomas Jefferson listed "facts to be submitted to a candid world" to demonstrate that the British king had been seeking to establish "an absolute Tyranny over these States."
Answer:
He was an alien from outer space that ate all the Joel's cats and dogs
Explanation:
Answer:
A good claim about the differences between the Narragansett tribe and the Algonquin tribe could be:
"While both the Narragansett and Algonquin tribes were part of the larger Algonquian-speaking Native American cultural group in North America, they exhibited notable distinctions in their social structures, geographic locations, and historical interactions with European settlers. These differences influenced their unique cultural identities and survival strategies in the face of European colonization
Explanation: