Answer:
COMMON SENSE was an instant best-seller. Published in January 1776 in Philadelphia, nearly 120,000 copies were in circulation by April. Paine's brilliant arguments were straightforward. He argued for two main points: (1) independence from England and (2) the creation of a democratic republic.
Paine avoided flowery prose. He wrote in the language of the people, often quoting the Bible in his arguments. Most people in America had a working knowledge of the Bible, so his arguments rang true. Paine was not religious, but he knew his readers were. King George was "the Pharaoh of England" and "the Royal Brute of Great Britain." He touched a nerve in the American countryside.
To gather a large population of the people they were against efficiently to concentration camps, usually to clear ghettos without liquidation.
Answer:
less people beliving in christianity after the failure of the crusades
Explanation:
the vikings wanted to keep iceland to themselves, it was lush, fertile and inhabitable. they named the island iceland to keep others away from it and uninterested, and found greenland, an icy frozen tundra-like island. they named it greenland, luring others to the wrong island where no crops grew, cleverly hiding their own secret farmable island