Hi. You did not submit the pamphlet this question refers to, which makes it difficult for this question to be answered. However, I will try to help you as best I can.
As the National Congress is a political authority, made up of people who must be committed to the truth and accurate reporting of facts, Americans are likely to see a pamphlet published by Congress as a reliable source of information. The pamphlet can be considered credible if it is a political matter that has been drafted by a reputable and appropriate political group such as the national congress.
After 600 families resettled there as a colony of Lavinium in 1151 BC, that’s when after thirty years Lavinium was found. Later Ascanius’s descendants ruled the Latins for another five hundred years.
Answer:
In the Middle Ages, the Church provided for the religious aspects of people's lives – baptism of babies, marriages, confession, the last rites for the dying and burying the dead.
But the Church did much more than this:
Monasteries and nunneries looked after the old and sick, provided somewhere for travellers to stay, gave alms to the poor and sometimes looked after people's money for them.
Monks could often read and write when many other people could not, so they copied books and documents and taught children.
Monasteries often had libraries.
Church festivals and saints' days were 'holy days', when people didn't have to work.
The Church put on processions and 'miracle plays'.
The Church played a big part in government:
Explanation:
Basically the church did a lot during the Middle Ages and that made people want to be Christians.
Answer: The first wedding/Marriage was in 2350 B.C.
The first recorded evidence of marriage ceremonies was united when one woman and one man dated from about 2350 B.C., in Mesopotamia. Over the next several hundred years, marriage evolved into a widespread institution embraced by the ancient Hebrews, Greeks, and Romans.
Galileo
Instead, Galileo disproved the Ptolemaic theory, sanctioned for centuries by the Church, which held the Earth to be the central and principal object in the universe, about which all celestial objects orbited.