The movement that began in the 1730s and 1740s as a reaction to the decline of religious zeal among the colonial population is known as the First Great Awakening. This religious revival emphasized personal faith, emotional engagement, and a direct relationship with God, challenging established churches and promoting evangelicalism. Key figures included Jonathan Edwards and George Whitefield, who inspired widespread religious enthusiasm and led to the formation of new denominations. The movement significantly shaped American religious and cultural life, fostering a sense of shared identity among the colonies.
Conceptualism was a reaction to what movement?
The colonial reaction to the sugar act was smuggling sugar and molasses.
The Deoband movement was a response to British colonial rule in India and aimed to revitalize Islamic thought and practices. It was also a reaction against the perceived decline of Islamic education and morality. Additionally, the movement sought to counter the influence of Western ideas and culture on Muslims in India.
Conceptualism
to react to players movement and the movement of the ball
The Swadeshi Movement with its Hindu religious flavour fomented aggressive reaction from the other community. A red pamphlet of a highly inflammatory nature was circulated among the Muslim masses of Eastern Bengal and Assam urging them etc
The Swadeshi Movement with its Hindu religious flavour fomented aggressive reaction from the other community. A red pamphlet of a highly inflammatory nature was circulated among the Muslim masses of Eastern Bengal and Assam urging them etc
A reaction
Transcendentalism was a philosophical and religious movement developed in the Eastern part of the United States. The followers of this movement believed that society corrupt the purity of the individual and it was essentially a reaction against rationalism and promoted the individualism.
Boston tea party
You mean the colonial government in Mexico? They tried to suppress it by any means available. In fact their reaction was so violent than many sectors of the population began to support the 'insurgents'.