The correct answer to this open question is the following.
One of the things that dramatically changed was the conception of spirituality that Native Mesoamerican and Southamerican had regarding God or religion.
One of the first things Spaniard frays did was to evangelize Native Indians into Catholicism. For this to happen, Spaniards face strong opposition from Natives who truly believed in their many gods and deities. It really was a struggle for Spaniards to change their mentality. They even had to destroy Native Indian's temples but had to build churches in the same place to make Indians attend religious ceremonies and religious teachings.
Paradoxically, one thing that stayed the same before and after colonization for native peoples was their love for mother nature. Indians still believed in their deities and in the love and respect they had for mother nature. Even in modern-day Mexico and Peru, there are plenty of people that believe in taking care of nature and use herbs and plant formulas as medicines. Homeopathy is very important in Mexico. And in both countries, Indigenous ceremonies are still performed in most of the towns.
MY BOYYY JAMES MADISON DAWGGG
It took a long time for the colonys to dicide
Answer: Carried by fleas from rodents to humans, bubonic plague cannot pass from human to human. A doctor swathed in protective gear checks a patient in Manchuria during the 1910-11 outbreak of pneumatic plague, the last before the discovery of sulpha drugs in 1933. Human lungs are the most terrifying tools of the plague.
The British wanted to take control of India and combine the tow countries in order to become bigger and stronger. The British wanted to increase the population of English speakers. They were interested in India because of the trading posts they had set up at Bombay.