no anglicans first too similar like puritains so puritans start new branch so puritains protestent
Yes they are both extreemly gulable idiots.
Yes, protestant are all those religions which came into existence protesting the Catholic Church, of which Anglican, or the Church of England, was one of the first.
It depends which Anglicans and Puritans you mean! Anglicans were members of the Church of England, and the Puritan movement sought to bring about a more 'pure' (i.e. more thoroughly reformed) church. Some of them remained within the Church of England, but others began new non-conformist groups, either out of choice or because they were ejected.
A volatile and sometimes violent mix of Catholics, Anglicans and Puritans.
The Cavaliers were mostly Anglicans, with a few Catholics; the Roundheads were puritans.
Pilgrims are people who journey to a sacred place for religious reasons. Usually "the Pilgrims" refers to Puritans who left England and came to American to get away from the Anglicans and practice their nonconformist religion (as it was seen by the Anglicans). Both the Anglicans and the Pilgrims were protestants, they just disagreed with each other. The Jesuits, on the other hand, were a religious Order in the Catholic Church. They were definitely not the same thing.
Eleutheran Adventurers were Puritans, while the governors were Anglicans. This would cause a major conflict between the two groups.
The pilgrims WERE puritans! -Icestar of IceClan
The pilgrims WERE puritans! -Icestar of IceClan
Jesuits ARE a Catholic Religious Order founded by St. Ignatius Loyola in the sixteenth century to bring Catholicism to the pagans and protestants and to educate Catholic youth. The Puritans were a nonconformist protestant religious movement that separated from the Anglicans, whom they believed were not "protestant" enough.
In the 1700s, Massachusetts was predominantly Puritan, but there were also smaller communities of Quakers, Baptists, and Anglicans. The Puritans had a strong influence on laws and governance in the colony during this time.
Post Reformation, they became known as the 'Separatists.'AnswerThe Puritans, Quakers, Baptists, and Methodists all left the Anglican Church to form their own churches in the first century or two of its existence.
In the colony of Georgia, there was no specific religion. All religions were welcome, even wanted. The only exception were Roman Catholics, which were not welcomed due to the religious wars fought in England.
Because they are