The falling of the stars
A preacher during the Great Awakening (a time period in the early 1700s) who wrote a sermon called"sinners in the hands of an angry god". Jonathan Edwards is a former British Olympic, Commonwealth and European champion triple jumper.
England
A+ The second estate in France in the 1700s.
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A religious revival
There are over a dozen different main events that took place in the US from the 1700s to the 1900s. Some of these things happening were the constitutional convention, the civil war, the second great awakening, and the temperance movement.
THEY ARE BOTH MOVEMENTS AND BOTH WERE IN THE 1700S.
The American revolution and the France revolution. Napoleaon.
American Revolution war and french and Indian war
Encouraging greater religious enthusiasm and political independence.
The 1700s saw major scientific discoveries such as the thermometer, flush toilet and cotton gin. What was more significant than this was the advent and acceptance of scientific reasoning instead of relying on religion to explain the world. This resulted in further exploration about the laws of science.
The name typically utilized for the religious revival that swept through the American Colonies beginning in the 1730s is "The Great Awakening". As the first of several such religious movements, the Awakening in the 1730s is typically known as "the First".
There are SO many things/events that happened in the 1700s. The French and Indian War happened, and lots of other things I don't know or care about. Kay? Dummy....Lol JK
The founding of Yale College and Congregational churches in the 1700's shaped Connecticut. These events led to taxation and conservatism.
The intellectual products of religious skepticism in the late 1700s included works such as Voltaire's "Candide", David Hume's critiques of religion, and the spread of deism. One aspect that was not a direct product of religious skepticism in the late 1700s was the establishment of strict state religions.
Georgia was not a state in the 1500s. It was not even called Georgia until the 1700s.