Of Plymouth Plantation is significant because it chronicles facts about the establishment of the Pilgrim Church in England, the group who left for Holland and eventually the trip on the Mayflower to the New World on November 11, 1620, and the early days of colonial America. Bradford was governor of the colony for 33 years. Among many things he writes about, maybe the most famous is the first Thanksgiving.
It is also significant because it is the most lucidly reliable account of those early days in American history. One of the lessons about the Puritans in reference to their common beliefs or personalities is that they came to the New World seeking religious freedom. Bradford's work draws on many Biblical parallels. They wanted to "purify" (hence the name "Puritans") the Church of England, believing that the Protestant Reformation did not go far enough in attempting this. It also seems that their fervor for this purification in the new community in the new world eventually declined; it was said that Bradford wrote some of this text with a nostalgia, implying that their focus on their role as religious crusaders/founders of a new world gave way to expansion and maybe more focus on other aspects of life.
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Answer:
In Puritan New England, law and religion were closely tied, as religious law heavily influenced legal practices and governing. Explanation: According to the Puritans, God is above any other power, even above the legal power emanating from the government, based on some, in Calvin's predestination theory.
Explanation:
There was 10 children at the party. 3 of them was 5, 4 of them was 10, and 3 of them was 7. At the party there was cookies. Each age had a different amout of cookies the five year olds have 10 all together the 10 year olds had 11 cookies all together and the 7 year olds had 8 cookies all together. How much cookies did they eat in all??
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