The answer you are looking for is d and b
The Puritans had the idea that the English Reformation retained too much Catholic influence, Puritans wanted the Church of England to further separate from the Catholic religion and follow stronger beliefs. Separatists believed that the Church of England was too much like the Roman Catholic Church; but Separatists wanted nothing with the Church of England. Puritans and Separatists believed the Church of England needed reform, however the Separatists did not want to stay with the church till it changed.
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In the 1630s, The english puritans in Massachusetts bay colony created a self-government that went far beyond what existed in England. Some historians argue that it was a religious government, or theocracy. some others clam it to be it was a democracy.
<em>P.S </em><em>Tell me if this is wrong....</em>
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Before the American Civil War in 1854, and until the end of the period known as Reconstruction, it was possible to distinguish a radical faction in the Republican Party of the United States, integrated by slavery and secessionism eradication encouragers, opposed by a Conservative faction led by President Abraham Lincoln, and integrated by the anti-abolitionist and the anti-reconstruction Democratic Party.
The Radical Republicans sought to punish and destroy the political power of former slave owners, to establish civil rights for former slaves and the full implementation of emancipation, giving freed US slaves the right to vote. In contrast, the Moderate Republicans' goals promoted a modest position in order to bring the South back into the American Union as quickly as possible.
<span>nobles, clergy, merchants, monarchs, artisans, and knights</span>