I believe that the Renaissance revived passion for antiquity.
The era of Renaissance came immediately after the Middle Ages, which are also known as the Dark Ages, because there isn't a lot of knowledge coming from that era. This is why Renaissance (translated as 'rebirth') wanted to change everything, to focus on knowledge, art, and beauty. Obviously, the way to go was to go back to the Classical era, the era of ancient Greece and Rome, because most art comes from those eras in the first place.
<span>Various tactics included non violent attempts such as large scale farming, having slaves, and Western education. The Cherokees attempted legal action as a means of resistance but were defeated as the state of Georgia didn't recognize their sovereign status. President Jackson refused to give in to the tribes and ultimately removed 40,000 Indians from the land East of the Mississippi river.</span>
Answer:
it has influenced us because medicine is now used for curing illness
Answer:
i do not understand the question being made here
Explanation:
The colonial period in Virginia began in 1607 with the landing of the first English settlers<span> at </span>Jamestown<span> and ended in 1776 with the establishment of the Commonwealth of Virginia. Although a thriving </span>Indian society<span> had existed for thousands of years before the English arrived, war with the European settlers and the introduction of new diseases for which the Indians had no resistance spelled disaster for it. The English colonists, meanwhile, just barely survived, suffering through </span>summer droughts<span> and winter starvation. Salvation came to the colony in the form of smoking tobacco, or what </span>King James I<span> called a "vile and stinking custom," when </span>John Rolfe<span> cultivated a variety of tobacco that sold well in England. In 1619, a </span>General Assembly<span> convened, bringing limited self-government to America. That same year brought the first </span>slaves<span> to Virginia. For most of the 1600s, white </span>indentured servants<span> worked the colony's tobacco fields, but by 1705 the Virginia colony had become a slave society. Nearly all power was in the hands of white male landowners, who ran the government and, by law, belonged to the</span>Church of England<span>. </span>Women<span> who married and worked at home were considered "good wives"; those who refused such "proper" roles were considered troublesome. And while Virginia's ruling men did not encourage women to be independent, they nevertheless fought for their own independence, taking full part in the </span>American Revolution<span> (1775–1783).</span><span> MORE...</span>