c. greater gaps in wealth and status between rich and poor
The seventeenth and eighteenth centuries were marked by significant historical figures and cultural movements. Notable individuals included philosophers like René Descartes and John Locke, scientists like Isaac Newton and Galileo Galilei, and writers such as William Shakespeare and Voltaire. This period also saw the rise of Enlightenment thinkers who influenced modern political and social thought, alongside significant events like the English Civil War, the American Revolution, and the French Revolution. Additionally, this era was characterized by colonial expansion and the beginnings of the Industrial Revolution.
Lumbering
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.
Nuala Zahedieh has written: 'London and the colonial consumer in the late seventeenth century'
In the early eighteenth century, colonial assemblies had the power over taxation and spending. However, these as well as any other acts could be superseded by the Royal Governor. The Royal Governor, in turn, was also subordinate to the British government.
The attack on Jarl Ulfric Stormcloak by the Empire.
Selling land to reduce their volume of production
Increased wealth of the eighteenth century colonial elite
The tone of American colonial literature was one of hope, fear, and intimidation.
Colonial American were what people be lived in America colonial style. They ruled by the mean British and fed up with the King. Formed America.
Virgina
The major factors that influenced the development and impact of eighteenth-century colonial trade routes were advancements in navigation technology, the rise of mercantilism, the demand for goods in Europe, the exploitation of natural resources in colonies, and the competition between European powers for control of trade routes.