Buddhist kings, Javanese kings, Vietnamese emperors, and Islamic sultans were included in the ties between religion and kingship in Southeast Asia. All of these religions that came to Southeast Asia from outside were directly attached with the court and its ruler. They became an important part of the political power’s constellations, which had appeared in the mid-17th century.
"<span>Constantine's decision to cease the </span>persecution of Christians in the Roman Empire<span> was a turning point for </span>Early Christianity<span>, sometimes referred to as the Triumph of the Church, the </span>Peace of the Church<span> or the </span>Constantinian shift<span>. In 313, Constantine and </span>Licinius<span> issued the </span>Edict of Milan<span> decriminalizing Christian worship. The emperor became a great patron of the Church and set a precedent for the position of the Christian emperor within the Church and the notion of </span>orthodoxy<span>, </span>Christendom<span>, </span>ecumenical councils<span> and the </span>state church of the Roman Empire declared by edict in 380<span>. He is revered as a </span>saint<span> and </span>is apostolic<span> in the </span>Eastern Orthodox Church<span> and </span>Oriental Orthodox Church<span> for his example as a "Christian monarch."</span>
Many of the early settlers in Australia would most likely have been "<span>C) forced into jobs involving physical labor," since in fact the British settled this area as a penal colony. </span>
Answer:
because I think peace would make the world much a better place.