Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales gained their own legislatures because c) The British Parliament had grown too large to be efficient. This was also due to the fact that these three places are countries but part of Great Britain (Scotland and Wales) and the United Kingdom (all three countries) and it would only be fair for them to have some say for their own countries specific issues. This process is called devolution.
Answer:
The First Great Awakening (sometimes Great Awakening) or the Evangelical Revival was a series of Christian revivals that swept Britain and its Thirteen Colonies between the 1730s and 1740s. The revival movement permanently affected Protestantism as adherents strove to renew individual piety and religious devotion.
Explanation:
A. 41 percent
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Explanation:
Here's what you do
First go to edit profile by clicking on your picture on the main page of brainly
Then click at the very bottom profile pic. It will say edit
Next there will be two options delate and chnage picture.
And I think you know what to do from there! Hope this helped
Answer:
In response to the actions of the Patriot Colonist, the British Parliament responded by enacting the Boston Port Act, the Massachusetts Government Act, the Administration of Justice Act, the Quartering Act. The laws were retaliatory and intentionally designed to inflict undesirous conditions upon Massachusetts.
The Patriot Colonists, otherwise known or referred to as <em>American Whigs</em>, were colonies who rejected British Rule. They were thirteen of them. Their actions involved the destruction of 342 chests of tea in Boston, Massachusetts because the British Parliament had enacted the Tea Act, automatically conferring a monopoly status on British East India Company (BEIC) which sold tea in the colonies. The Tea Act prevented BEIC from sinking into bankruptcy. This may have been tolerated if there was nothing else, but the Act also added a small tax, an action which vexed the colonists and triggered what their action which became labelled by historians as the Boston Tea Party.
The "punishment" on Massachusetts backfired. It attracted the sympathy of other colonies and even the support of The Congress who pledged to support Massachusetts in case of attack from the Britons.
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