ANSWER!
Enlightenment philosophy and Great Awakening Christianity were very different, but both influenced the American colonies and American Revolution and both frame our thinking today. The Enlightenment — so named by its own practitioners, who didn’t lack self-esteem — is best thought of as a continuation of the Renaissance we read about in Chapter 2, with a strong emphasis on the Scientific Revolution, reason, and progress. Its practitioners adhered to the scientific method of testing hypotheses through rigorous, repeatable experimentation. Ancient Greeks, inventors of the first organized sporting events (the Olympics), also promoted hard-nosed, constructive debate and organized competition in law, politics, philosophy, and science.
Answer: The mountains, which served as natural barriers and boundaries, dictated the political character of Greece. From early times the Greeks lived in independent communities isolated from one another by the landscape. Later these communities were organized into poleis or city-states. The mountains prevented large-scale farming and impelled the Greeks to look beyond their borders to new lands where fertile soil was more abundant.
Leaders--they with commissioners for NE created a treaty and therefore the sagamores are spokespersons or leaders of the tribes.
Sagamores of the tribes were meeting with NE leadership to create a treaty. Only leadership would be recognized for the treaty process. The sagamores were either leaders of the tribes or acting as diplomats to complete the treaty process.
Answer:
Corpus Juris Civilis
Explanation:
The Corpus Juris Civilis, drawn up under the strict supervision of king justinian, was a milestone of Roman case law. Corpus Juris Civilis is indeed a magnificent artifact to something like a remarkable period of legislative system.
This scheme aims at clarifying and upgrading the older roman rules, removing contradictions and speeding up legal procedures, gathering royal decrees including expert advice on all sorts of matters, including penalties for particular marital offences and succession.