Answer:
En 1527, Enrique intentó anular su matrimonio con Catalina de Aragón para casarse con Ana Bolena. ... Henry comenzó así la agitación religiosa y política de la Reforma inglesa. El Papa tenía poder sobre todos los estados católicos romanos y sus habitantes, pero Inglaterra ahora era independiente de su autoridad.
or
In 1527, Enrique tried to annul his marriage with Catherine of Aragon to marry Ana Bolena. ... Henry thus began the religious and political upheaval of the English Reformation. The Pope had power over all the Roman Catholic states and their inhabitants, but England was now independent of his authority.
Explanation:
Look on quizlet man. Trust me.
More than anything, the Spanish were seeking wealth.
Christopher Columbus himself thought that he had reached India: he wanted the wealth from the trade with Indians.
In the beginning, the Spanish hoped for Gold and Silver, later also for other products that could be made cheaper in the New World.
In short: the Spanish were not interested in Mexico but in what the ships could bring from Mexico (again, mostly gold).
Some, very few Spaniards, who settled in the New World were too unhappy in Europe and hoped for a better life.
Answer:
Folkways
Explanation:
Folkways is a form of social norms, that relates to the ways of living, reasoning, and behaving of people, without intentional structure, which are generally expected or accepted. Though it is not important in terms of morality, it is assumed that those behaviors should be in tandem with the conventional social norms. It is often peculiar to a given group.
Hence, the correct answer is FOLKWAYS is the patterns of repetitive behavior which becomes habitual and conventional part of living.
I'm actually ending this unit of Napoleon in class tomorrow.
Basically Napoleon was a dictator of France who loved to carry out conquests. During the beginning of his reign he had man victories, heck in the battle of Austerlitz he was able to beat an even large Austrian and Russian army with only the french army. I'm not sure how many people were in the armies. This battle ended in a peace treaty by Austria, Treaty of Pressburg. So you can say that the Europeans thought of him as a god, for the first handful of battles. However later on he was just a shell of his glorious past. He became too selfish and ignorant in his victories, and pursued to fight England and Prussia, at the battle of waterloo. Two of the major citis that posed a threat to his conquests.
To answer your question, Europeans would have though of him differently during his first years of his ruling, and his last years of his ruling because of the victories and losses he had in battles to try to take over all of Europe. He was a crazy dictator.