Because they believed that since the earth was God’s crown jewel of creation, it should also be the center of the universe. Of course they were wrong, and this is a wonderful example of man following after his own will (it says explicitly in the Bible that the earth is not the center of the universe). Hope that answers your question!
Answer:
Feudalism in Japan and Europe.
Explanation:
Japan and Europe did not have any connection but both developed comparable class systems. In Japan we see samurai and in Europe Knights. Feudalism established in Europe by 800 CE. In Japan, it appeared in the 1100s in the Heian period. The nobles were at the top than by warriors, with serfs below. They followed codes of honour, loyal and brave, with being reserved and quiet. Samurai were seen as a private guard for the nobles in Japan, Knights as a protector of the nobility class.
The difference between the feudal between the two was the ownership of the land. Knights gained land as payment for their military service. In Japan, samurai did not own any land, they only served their lords and in armies protecting from invaders.
The Supreme Court said that the Federal government did not have the capacity to punish civil rights violators.
Tikki Tikki Tembo is a story about a boy with a long name who falls down a well. “It is a sort of origin myth about why Chinese names are so short today.”
The Stamp Act (1765) - Tax on stamps in the colonies, meaning you had to pay a tax every time you wanted to mail something
Quartering Act (1765) - Forced Americans to feed and house British soldiers when needed
Townsend Acts (1767) - Series of various taxes imposed on colonies
Boston Massacre (1770) - Angry mob of colonists harass British soldiers in Boston, soldiers get mad and fire into the crowd. Five people are killed.
Tea Act (1773) - Gave the British East India Company a monopoly on tea in the colonies, allowing the company to raise prices as high as they wanted.
Intolerable Acts (1774) - A series of acts in response to the Boston Tea Party that included closing Boston's port, allowing British soldiers to be tried in England rather than America, and a new and improved Quartering Act.