Answer:
Some colonists joined the British for personal gain or military advantage. However most joined out of "sheer loyalty to the crown" meaning they still believed themselves loyal British citizens
Explanation:
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Desiderius Erasmus (1466 – 1536) was a Dutch Christian humanist and a main figure of northern Renaissance. He was very critical with some practices and abuses perpetrated by the Catholic Church, but he never supported the principles of Luther's Reformation. He highlighted the need for a reform but he continued recognizing the Pope and other religious authorities, in opposition to protestantism with rejects the legitimacy of church leaders and focuses principally on faith. Therefore his reformist approach was denominated Via Media.
Erasmus opposed the abussive practice generalized in the Catholic Church of selling indulgences. Basically people were spending money in paying for the removal of their sins and to guarantee that they would go to heaven after death. Like many other Christian scholars Erasmus critized this practice and stated that the power of grating pardon is only in the hands of God.
There were 2 groups of countries the Axis Powers and The Allies, but I would say Germany and The United States were the 2 main countries
The line that describes the purpose of this excerpt of the prologue is:
It states the conflict that occurs at the end of the play.
Explanation:
The play is about the war that Henry the 6th has to fight to keep his kingdom and his reckless campaigns in the French territories he believed he had natural claim on like previous kings.
This play was in a way symbolic of the waning influence of the dynasty that Henry VI was from and the war would prove to be the nail in the coffin.
This prologue sets up the major pieces of the conflict very well here only by setting up the war and the eventual losses of the person faced.
A good few there's the good ole' compass and maps, the astrolabe(to determine the altitude of the sun and other heavenly bodies), the crossstaff (also for measuring the altitude of celestial bodies), and the sextant (which is the innovated replacement of the astrolabe)