Answer:
It was introduced by Spanish colonists.
- Officers received grants in the form of American Indians ⇒ Native Americans were often granted to Spanish officials for use in their land. Spanish regulation stated that when a Spanish official was granted land, any Native living on the land had to work for the Spanish official.
- Conversion to Christianity was an important part of the system ⇒ The Spanish were deep Catholics and insisted on the conversion of the Natives in their territories.
It was introduced by English colonists.
- Tobacco plantation owners paid for the voyages of laborers coming from Europe. ⇒ Before plantation owners started relying on enslaved labor, they used indentured servants and paid for their voyages to America where the laborers would then work off these expenses by working on the plantation.
- Indentured servants were an important part of the system. ⇒ Indentured servants were very useful for labor in the early settlements started by the English.
<span>The Federalist Papers were a significant influence in the drafting and ratification of the Constitution, primarily due to the fact that the editors and publishers of the papers held significant influence among reputable politicians and the majority of colonial citizens.</span>
Developments in European culture fuelled by the Renaissance.
- Changes in the Christian religion fuelled by German Martin Luther.
- The race begins between Christian Europeans to find new trade routes to China for silk and Indonesia for spices as the Muslim Ottomans block the Mediterranean sea to all Christian shipping.English and other European Explorers.
500 years ago the English started exploring the world in sailing ships. (This was the first step to England creating a world wide empire.) The catalyst to explore at this time was the blockade of the Mediterranean sea in 1448 by the Islamic Ottoman (Turks) thus closing access to the only known trade route to the east (India and China.)
Answer:
Brainiest
Explanation:
The Red Scare was hysteria over the perceived threat posed by Communists in the U.S. during the Cold War between the Soviet Union and the United States, which intensified in the late 1940s and early 1950s.
The laws make a successful community, without laws and a correctional system chaos would be everyday.