mcdonalds, kfc and Burger King
Probably every religion in the world. There is at least one person in the US who practices a religion (EX: Some are Christian, some are Jewish, some are Atheist [although it is technically not a religion seeing how its definition is having no religion])
There are several religions that have followers in Europe and the Americas, including Christianity, Islam, Judaism, B'hai, and several others.
They blended their languages, cultures, and religions to create something new.
They blended their languages, cultures, and religions to create something new.
The Plymouth Pilgrims went to the Americas because where they came from ,all had to believe in a certain religion.The Pilgrims did not believe or want to believe in this certain religion.This is why the Pilgrims moved,so that they could believe in they're own religions
The Spanish conquest of the Americas led to the introduction of new foods, languages, religions, and customs to the region. It also resulted in the decline of indigenous populations, the establishment of a hierarchical social structure, and the implementation of Spanish colonial governance and economic systems. This fusion of Spanish and indigenous cultures shaped the cultural landscape of the Americas.
There are still to this day plenty of polytheistic (multiple god) religions, though not nearly as wide spread as monotheistic religions in many areas, such as Christianity, Judaism, and Muslim. Examples of religions practicing currently would be Hinduism, Mahayana Buddhism, Confucianism, Taoism and Shintoism in the East, and also contemporary tribal religions in Africa and the Americas. These religions are widely practiced throughout the world and remain very popular in their ancestral areas. Many ancient religions also polytheistic (EG greece, rome, etc.)
In the 1600s, the main religions in Europe included Christianity (Catholicism and Protestantism), Islam in the Ottoman Empire and parts of North Africa, Hinduism and Buddhism in India, and various indigenous religions in Africa and the Americas. Each region had its own dominant religion, with various sects and denominations within each.
During the Iron Age, many different religions were practiced around the world. Some examples include ancient Greek and Roman polytheistic religions, Norse mythology in Scandinavia, Celtic polytheism in Western Europe, Hinduism in the Indian subcontinent, and various indigenous belief systems in the Americas, Africa, and Asia.
In some religions more than one God exists, in others one. There is a label for people who DON'T believe in god, (atheists). Americas motto is "In God We Trust". Obviously, God exists.
European trade and conquest took Christianity to Africa and the Americas. Christianity also spread to Asia, but with rather less success as it met other advanced religions that were more difficult to supplant.
The main religions in the 1900s globally included Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, and Buddhism. Christianity and Islam were the largest religions in terms of followers, with Christianity being predominant in the Americas and Europe, while Islam was prevalent in the Middle East, Africa, and Asia. Hinduism was the dominant religion in India, while Buddhism was widely practiced in East and Southeast Asia.
The Bering Strait theory is the theory on how the first humans made it into the Americas. According to that theory, Native Americans descended from an Asian population who crossed the Bering Strait, the area between modern day Asian Russia and Alaska, by a land bridge of ice. These Asians then spread across the rest of the Americas. The Bering Strait theory is viewed as offensive to many Natives, as many of their religions frequently state that they have always been in the Americas. It conflicts with their religious beliefs in the same way the theory of evolution conflicts with Abrahamic religions. In addition, they fear that people would see them as non-Natives because of this. However, judging by that logic, Europeans would not be native to Europe, when they are.