The renaissance was a history period lasted during fifteen and sixteen centuries A.C that represents a middle point between middle and modern ages. Leonardo DaVinci, was a scientist who lived between 1452 and 1519. Leonardo was considered a genius advanced for his age and always fight against the church ideas who considered the man never would had the need to search the truch and was only necessary the belief on a superior being, while DaVinci believed the human being has the ability to find the truth and change the world for good.
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revolutionary movement (or revolutionary social movement) is a specific type of social movement dedicated to carrying out a revolution. Charles Tilly defines it as "a social movement advancing exclusive competing claims to control of the state, or some segment of it".[1] Jeff Goodwin and James M. Jasper define it more simply (and consistently with other works[2][need quotation to verify]) as "a social movement that seeks, as minimum, to overthrow the government or state".[3]
A social movement may want to make various reforms and to gain some control of the state, but as long as they do not aim for an exclusive control, its members are not revolutionary.[4] Social movements may become more radical and revolutionary, or vice versa - revolutionary movements can scale down their demands and agree to share powers with others, becoming a run-of-the-mill political party.[4]
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Although there are no options attached, we can say the following.
The Netherlands was more democratic than most 17th-century European nations in that in those years, the Netherlands was formed by seven provinces under one confederation. People from each providence elected their rulers and the provinces were independentist but decently related to the other provinces.
In 1588, these providences accepted to form the Republic of United Netherlands, and this decision made the nation stronger, making the Netherlands a superpower in Europe, in a time when European monarchies and absolutist kings dominated many lands in the continent and abroad.