We have to remember that there was a big difference between the treaties themselves and the paper documents that European-Americans used to record those treaties. For many Native Americans, a treaty was an oral agreement between governments. It was methodically memorized and often sealed with an exchange of gifts. In the eastern part of North America, wampum belts (which were shells strung together to create images) served as official records of these treaties, and were draped over a speaker's body when the treaty was being recited later on, much as Europeans might read aloud the text of a written agreement between two European countries.
For Natives, the oral agreement, along with these wampum belts, WERE the treaty, and the paper document they signed was just some odd European habit that they often simply tolerated. Many of the Native leaders who signed these treaties could not read what they were signing, and even if they could they did not recognize the documents as being the official record of what was agreed on.
The introduction of this essay could be considered the first paragraphs:
.....The Mystery of Loch Ness By Kayden Mitchell Of all the mysteries in the world, none has been as popular as that of the Loch Ness Monster. Perhaps the biggest mystery is whether it is convincing evidence or a simple desire to believe that keeps the myth alive. Loch Ness is a lake in Scotland. The loch, or lake, is known for sightings of a mysterious monster. Most who see this monster, known as Nessie, describe something with a long neck and several humps above the water. Sometimes the "monster" is moving in these sightings, and sometimes it is still. Many have suggested that Nessie might be a plesiosaur (plea-see-a-soar), an aquatic dinosaur that was trapped in the loch after the last ice age. ...
For this, we need to consider what is an introduction to a text, and how is different from the body (the main text composed of the body paragraphs) the conclusions. In the introduction as you can see in the image I provide, the introduction gives us the general idea what the essay will be about, posing the main ideas and also the opinion or the idea which will guide the entire text. Usually, introductions limit to be descriptions and presentations of the ideas that later in the body will be the subject of arguments or defending a position regarding a particular subject.
Answer: Marshall Plan, formally European Recovery Program, (April 1948–December 1951), U.S.-sponsored program designed to rehabilitate the economies of 17 western and southern European countries in order to create stable conditions in which democratic institutions could survive.
Explanation:
Answer:
Winthrop wants Massachusetts Bay to stand out as an example to the rest of the colonial frontier and even to the world
Explanation:
the pilgrims had a very strict view of christianity, and they didnt want to even let in those who would tarnish their reputation. they would form their society around strong religious beliefs and ideologies, and they would go so far as to enforce laws based around their beliefs
Answer:
Jude
Explanation:
“Jude, a servant of Jesus Christ and brother of James, To those who are called, beloved in God the Father and kept for Jesus Christ: May mercy, peace, and love be multiplied to you” (Jude 1–2).