1. <u>Roger Williams</u> founded <u>Rhode Island colony</u> in 1636 on land purchased from the Narragansett Indians. 2. <u>Captain John Mason</u>, Governor of Portsmouth, in Hampshire, England, was also the <u>proprietor of the New Hampshire territory</u>. 3. <u>Peter Stuyvesant</u> was the last <u>Dutch Governor that surrenders New Amsterdam</u>, the capital of New Netherland, to an English naval squadron under Colonel Richard Nicolls. 4. The Duke of York in 1664, gave part of his new possessions between the Hudson and the Delaware Rivers to <u>Sir George Carteret</u>. The other section of these possessions were sold to <u>Lord Berkeley of Stratton</u>, who was a close friend of the Duke. Therefore, <u>Carteret and Berkeley</u> became the<u> two English Proprietors of New Jersey</u>. 5. <u>William Penn</u> was granted the <u>province of Pennsylvania</u> by King Charles II in 1681, and later received the <u>lands of Delaware</u> from the Duke of York. 6. <u>The Puritans </u>purchased a land from an English settler named William Blaxton, and began the settlement in the<u> area that would become Boston, to escape religious persecution</u>. 7. A core group of <u>Quakers seeking religious freedom founded Philadelphia</u>, on lands William Penn purchased from the local chieftains of the Delaware nation . 8. <u>St. Augustine, fort city,</u> was founded on September 8, 1565, by Florida's first governor, <u>Pedro Menéndez de Avilés</u>.
Answer: Obviously, Luther was considered to be heretic and was summoned to defend his theses.
Explanation: Luther, "the little monk" from Germany threatened the profitable system of indulgences and the Roman Catholic Church had to respond.
Luther was subsequently called to debate high-ranking Catholic theologians, such as Cardinal Cajetan in Augsburg (1518) and Johann Eck in Leipzig (1519) and surprised everyone with his refusal to change his views.
On the contrary, Luther even expanded his critique of the church in Rome with three major pieces in 1520. In these important documents, Luther publicly questioned the infallibility and authority of the Pope, critiqued central Roman Catholic doctrines, and he defended the priesthood of all believers. Of course, the Pope was not amused. In his papal bull, Exsurge Domine, he declared that Luther was a “wild boar that had invaded the Lord’s vineyard,” and called Luther to recant his views. Not intimidated at the slightest, Luther burned the bull and was subsequently excommunicated.
Yes and that the sun revolved around it
I believe the answer is D.to get financial backing for the revolution