In the eighteenth century, people captured moments through paintings, drawings, and written accounts. Paintings and drawings were popular for recording significant events, notable individuals, and everyday scenes, while written accounts in letters, diaries, and journals provided a way to document personal experiences and observations. Photography had not yet been invented, so visual and textual representations were the primary means of capturing moments.
The eighteenth century colonists were frustrated with the government. The did not understand why they weren't permitted representation in front of the government.
The Sans Culottes
There was one for both, but when most people say 'eighteenth century' they mean AD.
people in the 18th century had manly dignified names, so probably no one had nicknames
During the eighteenth century, the French people were split up into three groups; the clergy, noblemen, and peasents, but during the medieval times of France, there were two social groups of people, the smart and the dumb.
it was made to capture a moment in time quickly and exactly.
Casta paintings depict the Bourbon ideal of racial blurring. They depicted mixed-race people in idealized terms and colonial social life. The paintings with race mixture emerged in the eighteenth century.
Journalists in the eighteenth century regarded their job as informing the public about important events, ensuring freedom of the press, and advocating for political and social reform. They saw themselves as watchdogs of government and as defenders of the people's right to information.
The dance was considered too bad mannered for refined people
The main reason that the population of the British North American colonies rapidly increased during the eighteenth century was that the volume of slave trade increased a great deal. The number of black people in the colonies increased by 10 to 35+ times from the beginning of the eighteenth century until mid-century.
The role of the Church has always been to bring God to people, and people to God. If you want a more specific answer, you would have to specify which Church you are talking about, and in what country.
In eighteenth century France, people's complaints were that the monarch, clergy, and nobles held almost all the power. Meanwhile, the most productive members of society held very little power.