Hello. This question is incomplete. The full question is:
"What warrant [right] have we to take that land, which is and hath been of long time possessed [by] others . . . ? "That which is common to all is proper to none. [Native Americans] ruleth over many lands without title or property; for they enclose [fence in] no ground, neither have they cattle to maintain it. . . . And why may not Christians have liberty to go and dwell amongst them in their waste[d] lands and woods (leaving them such places as they have [fertilized] for their corn) . . . ? For God hath given to the sons of men a twofold right to the earth; there is a natural right and a civil [political] right. The first right was natural when men held the earth in common, every man sowing and feeding where he pleased. Then, as men and cattle increased, they appropriated some parcels of ground by enclosing [them as property] . . . And this in time got them a civil right."
Descreva brevemente UM argumento apresentado no trecho.
Answer:
Since Native Americans did not claim their civil rights over the land they inhabit, what counts is the natural right that God gave to all men, so it is justifiable for Christians to own the land together with the natives.
Explanation:
The text shown in the question above was written by John Winthrop, who was part of the English team to be the first settlers of North America and later became governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. In this text, Winthrop takes a position on the colonists' dictate to live in America, even though it is a land that already had inhabitants and "owners.
In that text, Winthrop claims that God gave men the natural direction over the land, where any land owned them all. Men, through their activities, assumed civil rights over pieces of land, where they became owners and could prevent anyone other than them from using it. However, Native Americans have never claimed civil rights to their land, which allows natural law to prevail and makes room for good Christians to own it.
What is a writing system that uses pictures called
Hieroglyphs was a language that used various symbols to make up the language
Explanation:
Answer:
hieroglyphics
Explanation:
it is the use of pictures used as a writing system
In rupert's land fishing and ship building were the main industries. True or false?
Answer:
False.
Explanation:
In Rupert's Land In 1670, the Hudson's Bay Company was given a trade monopoly over the watershed of all rivers and streams flowing into Hudson Bay, known as "Rupert's Land" The region was given completely over to fur trade, and fur trade became the main industry of Rupert's Land.
Hope this helps :)
In what ways can nationalism have both negative and positive effects on a society?
Answer:
Possible case studies (20-1)
Possible case studies (20-2)
French Revolution and Napoleonic era
Canadian nationalism
Québécois nationalism
American nationalism
First Nations and Métis nationalism
Inuit perspectives
French Revolution
Canadian nationalism
Québécois nationalism
First Nations and Métis nationalism
Inuit perspectives
Other contemporary case studies might include the following:
Tamils in Sri Lanka
Tibetan independence
Northern Ireland independence.
How did the development of different languages further divide Europe after the fall of the Roman Empire? Latin was no longer the most important language in Europe after the empire fell. French speakers and German speakers separated Europe into two different parts, with little communication between them. Warrior kings spoke only German, so German-speaking cities became the most powerful. Speaking different languages meant people from different areas could no longer communicate easily with each other.
Answer:
Option: Speaking different languages meant people from different areas could no longer communicate easily with each other.
Explanation:
The Roman Empire began to fall in Europe and its territories captured by Germanic tribes. The Germanic people were a different group of tribes with similar culture and languages who dominated much of Europe. Germanic peoples migrated into France, Spain, Great Britain, and Italy.
As Germanic people join with the Roman population, the Latin language began to change. Different languages evolved from Latin by the 800, which included French, Spanish, and other languages. The development of various languages broke up the unified empire.
Answer:
d
Explanation:
why was the purchase of Louisiana controversial
What do the Spanish,French,And English have in common
Answer:
they are bilingual sometimes
Explanation:
French and Spanish are relatively similar in grammar: both have gendered nouns, masculine and feminine, and accompanying articles and adjectives have to agree in gender and number. The subjunctive is widely used and somewhat complicated, especially in Spanish, and essential in both written and spoken communication.
NEED HELP ASAP!!
define oral tradition in your own words!
Answer: a tradition or a culture that is passed from one generation to other
Explanation:
Answer:
Oral tradition is when language, traditions, customs, cultures, skills, techniques, literatures, art works and forms, ideas, etc. are shared and passed on generations to another generations through the words of mouth.
Key word for oral: "Passed using words of mouth; verbally"
Name an organism and describe abiotic and biotic limiting factors that impact the organism’s survival.
Answer:
Biotic or biological limiting factors are things like food, availability of mates, disease, and predators. Abiotic or physical limiting factors are non-living things such as temperature, wind, climate, sunlight, rainfall, soil composition, natural disasters, and pollution.
Explanation:
How did Smith manage to collect money?
He stole it from his owner.
His owner gave it to him.
He performed many different jobs on his own
time.
Answer: C. He performed many different jobs on his own time.
Explanation: got it correct on edge
Answer:
c is correct
Explanation:
because its correct
Below is a quote from James Madison's Federalist Paper No. 51 (1788):
"If men were angels, no government would be necessary. In framing a government
which is to be administered by men over men, the great difficulty lies in this: you
must first enable the government to control the governed, and in the next place
oblige it to control itself."
James Madison, Federalist Paper No. 51 (1788)
To which fundamental principle is Madison referring?
Federalism
0 Rule of Law
O Separation of power
O Nationalism
HELP ANSWER AS FAST AS YOU CAN PLS
Answer:
seperation of power
Explanation:
Answer:
Answer is Federalism
Explanation:
Which of the following occurred during the Gilded Age literacy increased, educational opportunities expanded, the government was scarred by political corruption
Answer:
The Gilded Age” is the term used to describe the tumultuous years between the Civil War and During this era, America became more prosperous and saw corrupt industrialists, bankers and politicians enjoyed extraordinary wealth This enormous railroad expansion resulted in rail companies
What was Hernan Cortes searching for?
Answer:
In 1518, Herman Cortes set off to explore Mexico.
Explanation:
He strategically aligned others and he eventually overthrew the powerful and vast Aztec Empire in Mexico.
The Articles of Confederation included all of the following weaknesses EXCEPT…
A.The lack of an executive or president
B.The inability to tax states
C.The power to regulate commerce
D.The provision for unanimous consent to amend the Articles of Confederation.
Answer:
b
Explanation:
your answer is b yall
The weakness of the articles of federation included all apart from the power to regulate commerce.
The federal government in the confederation era did not have the power to regulate commerce.
The article did not give the congress the power to regulate trade. They were unable to offer regulations on trade between other countries and even the states in the United States.
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Which is true of education for colonial African Americans?
A. Free African Americans, Native Americans, and poor whites were often taught together in the same schools.
B. Some free and enslaved African Americans were taught by church groups and missionaries.
C. After slave codes outlawed teaching slaves to read, African American slaves were too afraid to learn to read.
D. Before slave codes outlawed teaching slaves to read, most African American slaves were taught their letters and numbers.
Answer:
c
Explanation:
I am just smart plz vote me Brainlesst answer
Which element can a composer use to lengthen the duration of a tone?
A.
clef
B.
grand staff
C.
dotted note
D.
ledger lines
Answer:
C. dotted note
Explanation:
Hope that helps!
Answer: C
Explanation:
Who is the first king of Nepal?
answer:
Prithvi Narayan Shah
explanation:
Prithvi Narayan Shah was the first ruler of "unified" Nepal.
hope this helped :) pls give me brainliest <3
Using complete sentences, explain how the Sequoyah Constitutional Convention influenced Oklahoma statehood.
PLZZ HELP
Answer:
An Indian-led attempt to secure separate statehood for Indian Territory, the Sequoyah Convention convened on August 21, 1905, in the Hinton Theater in Muskogee, Creek Nation. At the instigation of Cherokee citizen James A. Norman, in early July 1905 W. C. Rogers, principal chief of the Cherokee Nation, and Green McCurtain, chief of the Choctaw Nation, called the convention to draft a constitution for a proposed state and to select a name and capital city. Delegates were chosen in mass meetings held across Indian Territory. In late July an amended call included the names of Creek Chief Pleasant Porter and Seminole Chief John F. Brown. Chickasaw Governor Douglas Johnston opposed the movement. Consequently, William H. Murray, future Oklahoma governor and intermarried Chickasaw, represented the Chickasaws before and during the convention.
Explanation:
Answer:
Responses may vary but should include some or all of the following information: The Sequoyah Constitutional Convention influenced Oklahoma statehood in many ways. First and foremost, those who helped compose the Sequoyah Constitution also helped draft the Oklahoma Constitution. This included William Murray, who would be the president of the Oklahoma Constitutional Convention, and Charles Haskell, who would become the first governor of Oklahoma. Their experiences at the Sequoyah Convention would help them draft the Oklahoma Constitution. Many of the measures of the Sequoyah Constitution would appear in the Oklahoma Constitution as well. Among these measures were the bill of rights and a system of government separated into branches. In the Sequoyah Constitution, 31 rights were included in the bill of rights; the Oklahoma Constitution would add two more to that total. The government outlined in the Sequoyah Constitution also included a system of checks and balances for the branches of government as a limit on government power. This institutional distrust of the power of government would be a feature in the Oklahoma Constitution as well.
Explanation:
I hope this helps!
3. The American colonists used the slogan,"No taxation without representation," to
express their belief in the need for
A. Parliamentary supremacy
B.economic independence
C.the consent of the governed
D.mercantilist policies
Jim Crow laws were laws that-
A- separated the sexes
B- denied citizenship
C-taxed voters
D-separated the races
Answer:
The answer is D.
Explanation:
I looked it up, you should try that because it is about 75% faster.
What is one main principle of capitalism?
A. Businesses are able to participate in free trade.
B. The government maintains control of industry.
C. Individuals do not take part in economic decisions.
D. Most factories and businesses are publicly owned.
Capitalism is often thought of as an economic system in which individual actors own and control property according to their own interests, and market prices are decided by demand and supply.
So, for the following question, Option A is the correct answer.
The other options are incorrect as:
Option B is incorrect as the government controlling industry is not a way to motivate organizations to make a profit.
Option C is incorrect as individuals not taking part in economic decisions is not a way to motivate someone to make a profit.
Option D is incorrect as publicly owned factories and businesses are not the principles of capitalism.
Thus, Option A is the correct principle of capitalism.
For more information about the principle of capitalism refer to the link:
https://brainly.com/question/18096177
To win the war, all the Colonists had to do was capture Boston.
True
False
Answer:
false
Explanation:
the war had to do the colonist
2. What arguments against women's suffrage do you see in these cartoons?
Answer:
there is no cartoon???
Explanation:
Under the Northwest Ordinance of 1787, a territory could apply for statehood when it had ___________settlers and a written state _________.
Answer: 60,000 settlers
Explanation:
When territory was just being settled, congress would appoint a governor, a secretary, and 3 judges. Step 2:Once the territory had 5,000 free adult male settlers, it could elect a legislature. Step 3:When the free population reached 60,000, the territory could ask to become a state.
1
2
3
In what ways did Mayans use "real-world application" of math?
Answer:
they created the number 0?
Explanation:
answer fast please and thank you
Answer:
is this based off of a story?
HURRY IM DOING IT ON EDGE
Which of the following statements is false?
a.
Mary Austin Holly inspired many Spanish to move to Texas.
b.
Mary Austin Holly told of great adventures in Texas.
c.
Mary Austin Holly described the beautiful and grand Texas landscape.
d.
Mary Austin Holly inspired many Americans to move to Texas
Answer:
A
Explanation:
It wasn't just based on the Spanish
Answer:
just helping the other guy get branliest
Explanation:
PLEASE ANSWER, I’ll give brainliest:) What are some of the reasons exploration was so important ?
The first industry to industrialize during the industrial revolution was the
?*
Textile Industry Car Industry
Cosmetic industry
Shoe Industry
9 Determine Central ldeas: How did Muslim Arabs change the cultural and religious landscape of early Africa?
In little more than a century, the religious landscape of sub-Saharan Africa has changed dramatically. As of 1900, both Muslims and Christians were relatively small minorities in the region. The vast majority of people practiced traditional African religions, while adherents of Christianity and Islam combined made up less than a quarter of the population, according to historical estimates from the World Religion Database.
Since then, however, the number of Muslims living between the Sahara Desert and the Cape of Good Hope has increased more than 20-fold, rising from an estimated 11 million in 1900 to approximately 234 million in 2010. The number of Christians has grown even faster, soaring almost 70-fold from about 7 million to 470 million. Sub-Saharan Africa now is home to about one-in-five of all the Christians in the world (21%) and more than one-in-seven of the world’s Muslims (15%).1
While sub-Saharan Africa has almost twice as many Christians as Muslims, on the African continent as a whole the two faiths are roughly balanced, with 400 million to 500 million followers each. Since northern Africa is heavily Muslim and southern Africa is heavily Christian, the great meeting place is in the middle, a 4,000-mile swath from Somalia in the east to Senegal in the west.
To some outside observers, this is a volatile religious fault line—the site, for example, of al-Qaeda’s first major terrorist strike, the bombing of the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998, and more recently of ethnic and sectarian bloodshed in Nigeria, where hundreds of Muslims and Christians have been killed.
To others, religion is not so much a source of conflict as a source of hope in sub- Saharan Africa, where religious leaders and movements are a major force in civil society and a key provider of relief and development for the needy, particularly given the widespread reality of failed states and collapsing government services.
But how do sub-Saharan Africans themselves view the role of religion in their lives and societies? To address this question, the Pew Research Center’s Forum on Religion & Public Life, with generous funding from The Pew Charitable Trusts and the John Templeton Foundation, conducted a major public opinion survey involving more than 25,000 face-to-face interviews in more than 60 languages or dialects in 19 countries, representing 75% of the total population of sub-Saharan Africa. (View a PDF map of the 19 countries surveyed.)
Our survey asked people to describe their religious beliefs and practices. We sought to gauge their knowledge of, and attitudes toward, other faiths. We tried to assess their degree of political and economic satisfaction; their concerns about crime, corruption and extremism; their positions on issues such as abortion and polygamy; and their views of democracy, religious law and the place of women in society.
The resulting report offers a detailed and in some ways surprising portrait of religion and society in a wide variety of countries, some heavily Muslim, some heavily Christian and some mixed. Africans have long been seen as devout and morally conservative, and the survey largely confirms this. But insofar as the conventional wisdom has been that Africans are lacking in tolerance for people of other faiths, it may need rethinking.
The report also may pose some apparent paradoxes, at least to Western readers. The survey findings suggest that many Africans are deeply committed to Islam or Christianity and yet continue to practice elements of traditional African religions. Many support democracy and say it is a good thing that people from other religions are able to practice their faith freely. At the same time, they also favor making the Bible or sharia law the official law of the land. And while both Muslims and Christians recognize positive attributes in one another, tensions lie close to the surface.
It is our hope that the survey will contribute to a better understanding of the role religion plays in the private and public lives of the approximately 820 million people living in sub-Saharan Africa. This report is part of a larger effort – the Pew-Templeton Global Religious Futures Project – that aims to increase people’s knowledge of religion around the world.
PLS BRAINLIEST
Were the Mogollon people one single tribe or were they divided into different groups?
Answer:
Explanation:
They were divided into various devolpemntal periods.