Ideas on the appropriate limits of the monarch's power changed in the 17th century to a small extent.
<h3>What were ideas of a monarch's power in the 17th century?</h3>
In the 17th century, Europe had very powerful monarchs who basically ruled by decree. They limits to their power was debated but not much was done to limit it.
This wasn't the case in England however because the powers of a monarch was limited thanks to a Civil War and then the Glorious Revolution. The limits can therefore be said to have changed to a small extent.
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Woodstock was a famous music festival that took place between August 15-18 in 1969 northwest of New York City. It attracted an audience of more than 400,000 people and it is regarded as a pivotal moment in music history and for the counterculture generation.
Many faced discrimination.
The correct answer is - A war between the colonies and Britain.
After the Declaration of Independence and what it actually meant and encouraged the people in the colonies to do, the expected reaction from the British Empire was that it will try to use military force in order to keep the colonies under its control. And the expectations were true, as the British did launched a military campaign against the rebelling colonies, but the Americans were prepared for this and managed to withstand their ground and gained their desired independence, and that was a major blow for the British, especially from economic perspective.