Before the Black Death hit Europe, almost all things, especially elements of daily life, were under the influence of the church. In medieval times, even boiling an egg took “the time to say a prayer”. But the most important thing was that the church had always told people right from wrong. Since the afterlife was judged more important than the actual lifetime, it was considered essential to be given the last rites and to confess sins before dieing to be sure of salvation.
When the plague arrived, people believed it to be a punishment of God. Therefore, they often turned to the Church for help. But since the priests and bishops could not actually offer a cure or even an explanation, the Catholic Church lost a lot of its influence and for many people, their view of the world changed drastically.
This information came from https://deathblack.wordpress.com/category/church/
Answer:
Under Suleiman, the Ottoman Empire reached its height in terms of territorial size, economic power, and cultural flourishing.
This is an opinion based question. The way to handle this is too look at the things they did such as the passing of the tea and stamp acts. Then consider if it was fair.
Personally I don’t think it was fair because the colonists didn’t have representation in England in parliament.