The cultures of Mesopotamia had a polytheistic belief system, which means that the people believed in multiple gods instead of just one. They also believed in demons created by the gods, which could be good or evil. Mesopotamian gods were seen as benevolent, ordered, and nuturing by early Mesopotamians. They thought that the gods influenced much of what happened to them in their lives. The people of Mesopotamia worshiped these other worldly beings to keep the beings happy, because if one of these powerful beings was angered then the people of Mesopotamia would, in some way, be punished for that unhappiness. They believed that when something bad happened, whether a natural disaster or not, it was because the correlating god was angry at them, so they did their best to keep the gods happy.
The answer is D. <span>defending British soldiers on trial after the Boston Massacre.
Paul Revere warned the birth were coming.
Thomas Jefferson wrote the </span><span>Declaration of Independence.
</span>Breed's Hill <span>lead troops at Bunker Hill.</span>
Answer:
As towns grew wealthier, town dwellers began to resent the lord's feudal rights and his demands for taxes. They felt they no longer needed the lord's protection—or his interference. ... Power gradually shifted from feudal lords to the rising class of merchants and craftspeople.
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