1) We have learned that the celts are the ones traced back to the beginning of Halloween (2000 years ago).
2) The celts celebrated this day because it marked the end of summer and harvest the beginning of a dark long and cold winter, the time of year that was often associated with human death.
3) The celts believed that the ghosts of the dead returned to earth.
4) example #1 they built Huge sacred bonfires, #2 they sacrificed animals and crops to the Celtic deities, 3# they wore costumes typically consisting of animal heads and skins and attempted to tell each other's fortune.
5) The Roman Empire had conquered the majority of the Celtic territory.
6) The religion of christianity had spread into the Celtic lands where it had started to blend in with supplanted the older Celtic rites.
7) The church made it this day to honor the dead at peace.
8) It is widely believed today that the church was attempting to replace the Celtic festival of the dead with a related church-sanctioned holiday.
9) The all saints day was also called (All-hallows) and (All-hallowmas)
10) I cannot see #10 but if you would like comment it under this and I'd be glad to answer it thanks!
the answers is C because the Egyptians think when people die there is a afterlife where you continue living so they put everything important in there like money the Egyptians though if they didn't get buried properly then they would die and don't get to live a cool afterlife
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
In the mid-1700s, the "American society" compared to British society in terms of the rights and freedoms ordinary people enjoyed in that American colonists aspired to have the liberty, equality, and opportunities of a free nation, without the heavy taxation imposed bu the English crow.
Yes, Americans could have land and property, but the British monarchy exerted too much pressure and taxations with acts such as the Navigation Acts, the Stamp Act, or the Tea Act, among many others. The colonists' desire for liberty grew higher because they had to pay taxes but had no representation in the British Parliament.