The most impactful changes to Native American populations done by the colonial settlement was:
1 - the disease - smallpox and influenza killed almost 90% American Native population 2. extermination policies - by hunting them, the population was in decline3. Territory - the colonists took their land4. forced relocation policies - the colonits forced them to stay in some special place, no leaving, starving them5. coexistence reasoning - the differences between colonist and Native believes
Charles Martel's victory at the Battle of Tours was significant because if he had lost and if <span>the Muslims had won, western Europe might have become part of the Muslim Empire.</span>
Answer:
The Preamble of the U.S. Constitution—the document’s famous first fifty-two words— introduces everything that is to follow in the Constitution’s seven articles and twenty-seven amendments. It proclaims who is adopting this Constitution: “We the People of the United States.” It describes why it is being adopted—the purposes behind the enactment of America’s charter of government. And it describes what is being adopted: “this Constitution”—a single authoritative written text to serve as fundamental law of the land. Written constitutionalism was a distinctively American innovation, and one that the framing generation considered the new nation’s greatest contribution to the science of government.
Answer: that the church and the state should be completely separated
Roger William’s strong was that the church and the state should be completely separated. His other advocates includes religious freedom and fair dealings with American Indians. Puritan leaders expelled him from the Massachusetts Bay Colony for the spread of these ideas which they claim "new and dangerous".
Answer: False
Explanation:
During the Constitutional Convention, several ideas were thrown around for what the Constitution should look like including the Virginia plan. The Virginia plan called for several things in the Constitution today such as the Bicameral legislature that the U.S. currently has.
It also however, called for Congress to be able to veto state laws. This was rejected by the Convention as most delegates believed that states should be able to be independent of the Federal government.