Council of Trent was held in northern Italy in the town of Trento held between 1545 and 1563. It was the 19th ecumenical council of the Catholic Church.
Council of Trent addressed music in one sentence in all official documents, dealt as Holy Mass, towards the end of a 22nd session of the council.
They shall ban all kind of music from churches, in which, whether by the organ, or in the singing, there is mashed up of anything lascivious or impure, all secular actions, vain and therefore non religious or irrelevant talk, all walking about loud noise, that so the house of God may be seen to be called, a true house of prayer.
Answer:
Federalist Papers to help people to understand the US Constitution.
Explanation:
There are 85 essays in Federalist Papers which were printed in New York newspapers while New York State was deciding whether or not to support the U.S. Constitution. These are a series of eighty-five letters written to newspapers in 1787-1788 by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay, urging ratification of the Constitution Other newspapers outside New York also published the essays as other states were deciding to ratify the Constitution. In 1788, the papers were published together in a book called The Federalist. As of today, the people still read the Federalist Papers to help them understand the Constitution.
Hamilton, who wrote about two-thirds of the essays has addressed the objections of opponents, who feared a tyrannical central government that would supersede states’ rights and encroach on individual liberties. All strong nationalists, the essayists argued that, most important, the proposed system would preserve the Union, now in danger of breaking apart, and empower the federal government to act firmly and coherently in the national interest. Conflicting economic and political interests would be reconciled through a representative Congress, whose legislation would be subject to presidential veto and judicial review.
Answer:
The sinking of the Lusitania