Answer:
I would say the best answer to the question: Aside from religious motivations, many free cities in the Holy Roman Empire found Lutheranism appealing because:___, would be, A: Town councils and guild masters could use reforms as a way to oppose local aristocrats and bishops.
Explanation:
It must be remembered that at the time Lutheranism began to spread in earnest, and take hold of many free city-states from the Holy Roman Empire, there was a generalized disagreeableness towards the Catholic Church not merely on religious grounds, but most importantly, on grounds of divided interests. This means, a lot of wealth, land, power, and social rank, had been derived exclusively towards Catholic bishops, monasteries and Catholic nobles, but most importantly towards the Pope. It also meant that cities were still tied to whatever decisions and considerations a bishop of a city might make, on different topics of city life. However, when Lutheranism spread, and most importantly, replaced Catholicism as the leading faith system, many town councils and guild masters, especially in the realms of what today is Germany, saw the opportunity ot be able to oppose Catholic aristocrats and bishops and institute their authority instead.
The Comstock Lode
The Comstock Lode is similar to the California Gold Rush, because of the golden discoveries they found (gold, of course). The Comstock Lode happened in Montana, Colorado, and Arizona, and all of this chunks of gold made this nation (United Sates) one of the most wealthiest! The gold and silver's value was 1 billion 2.5 million dollars in gold and silver, that's a lot of gold and silver, ain't it? This is one of the oldest mineral strikes, also called "The Granddaddy of them all."
(I made a paragraph of my own, but my source is: www.truewestmagazine.com/ten-events-that-shaped-the-west/
In 1967, the Northern government attempted to build a Sudanese nation state on a cornerstone of Northern Arab Muslim identity, deliberately ignoring the religious and ethnic diversity of Sudan and led the country into civil war.
Answer:James Habersham, and William Piercy believed that Christianity and slavery were compatible.
Both Habersham and Piercy believed David Margate's teachings to African American Christians was aligned with the prevailing view that slaves should endure their lot in life and not challenge slavery.
They claimed that Margate's experiences in England "make him think too highly of himself " and that his inflated pride as a black person "seems so great, that he can't bear to think of any of his own color being slaves."
Explanation:
What was alarming to Habersham and Piercy was the fact that Margate served as an example of how one could fare if they attempted to escape slavery, as "he has confessed that he was only a runaway slave himself."
Because of this fact he is not in support of slavery and he wanted slavery to be rebuked...