During the enlightenment governments and churches tried to stop spread enlightenment ideas
It affected the way people viewed their political rights and their governments.
The Enlightenment, also known as the Age of Enlightenment and the Age of Reason, during the mid-18th to late-18th century.
The answer to this question heavily depends on what society we are talking about. In modern history, since the enlightenment, it is widely believed that governments derive their power from the people whom they govern. This has not always been the case, however, when history shows us that many governments thought they derived their authority to govern from divine right or heritage, or both.
They didn't
The Republicans gain control of Southern state governments during reconstruction by federal forces. This happen from the railroad schemes in the South.
the will of the people
the will of the people
no, they do not!
People believed that the government existed as the result of an agreement between the people and their leaders.
It made them understand there each own individual freedom
People believed that the government existed as the result of an agreement between the people and their leaders.
the church age would have not started. the enlightenment was a period of time in which churches became popular because people began having spiritual revelations on a massive scale. the church age is the time period from the enlightenment to the present in which the churches that appeared as a result thrive. if not for the enlightenment the presence of these churches would have been fewer and less people would know about some of the popular religions of today. with the development of technology as it is today the enlightenment would have simply happened at a later time.
Citizens in several countries launched revolutions that replaced monarchies with governments based on enlightenment ideals.
The Enlightenment influenced Japanese thinking during the Meiji Restoration.
Churches
The ideas of secularism and individualism that emerged during the Enlightenment led to the promotion of government systems that separated church and state, prioritized individual rights and freedoms, and emphasized the importance of reason and critical thinking in shaping policies. These ideas influenced the development of modern democracies and led to the establishment of constitutional governments that protect the rights of citizens regardless of their beliefs.
For the same reason there are no governments dedicated to Benedict Arnold.