The Puritans were protestants that were trying to reform the Protestant religion in England. They were trying to kick out the Catholic influence from the England. So they practically had their own new movement, Puritanism, that was know for it's intensity for the religious experience that it fostered. So all in all, the Puritans were Anglicans.
Filial Piety was an idea in Confucian philosophy where elders were meant to be respected the most.
It is something that is still held to majority of Asian society in which the children of the family would respect the elders the most, for instance, the grandchild and the grandmother would have the grandmother respected the most and so on throughout the family tree.
Hope this helps!
True, they trade for items that they don’t have or have access to. They also do redundancy trading in case of crop failure. Trading also increases the bonds between two tribes.
Hope you learned something new!! ^v^
Answer:
1( Britain and France
2( Germany and the Soviet Union
3( . The Soviet occupation of eastern Poland in September and the “Winter War” against Finland in December led President Franklin Roosevelt to condemn the Soviet Union publicly as a “dictatorship as absolute as any other dictatorship in the world,” and to impose a “moral embargo” on the export of certain products to the Soviets. Nevertheless, in spite of intense pressure to sever relations with the Soviet Union, Roosevelt never lost sight of the fact that Nazi Germany, not the Soviet Union, posed the greatest threat to world peace. In order to defeat that threat, Roosevelt confided that he “would hold hands with the devil” if necessary.
4( The Eastern Front, where troops from Germany, Austria-Hungary, Turkey, Russia, and the Balkans fought, was larger than the Western Front.
Explanation:
I hope this helped:)
<span>Napoleon's agreement with the Catholic Church did all of the following.. Make those who had purchased church land his supporters. Recognized Catholicism as the majority religion of France. Restore same stability to France</span>