During this period, many Southeast Asian kingdoms experienced increased centralization of power, often under strong monarchs. The rise of colonial powers like the Portuguese, Dutch, and British also influenced the political landscape, leading to the establishment of colonial administrations and control over trade routes. These changes brought about shifts in political alliances, economic structures, and social hierarchies within the region.
Louis XVI was a better and more enlightened ruler than most people think. His political achievements are: issuing the Edict of Fontainebleau in 1781 that granted equal rights and freedom of religion to Protestants and Jews, starting very necessary financial reforms, reinstating the Parliaments, and making public the Crown's financial statements. In his foreign policy he actively supported the US colonies' struggle for independence, signing the Treaty of Alliance between the US colonies and France in 1778.
Your question is a little vague. In terms of Britain itself: It consists of England, Scotland, Wales and either southern or northern Ireland, I forget. In terms of the wider globe: Britain does not own any countries. The British Empire used to cover a third of the globe but now it is almost entirely dead. Britain still retains ties with Australia and Canada since they were discovered by European settlers in the sixteenth century onwards and a large proportion of it's population and history was formed by the British. I believe there are also some small areas of land across the globe that still belong to the British crown such as Gibraltar and the Falkland Islands.
The Huguenots were members of the Protestant Reformed Church of France (or French Calvinists) from the sixteenth to the eighteenth centuries.
No, Siam was not a Portuguese colony. The southeast Asian country was the precursor to the modern Thailand. It never was the direct colony of any of the colonial empires between the sixteenth and the twentieth centuries.
It is used to describe the cultural achievements of the fourteenth through the sixteenth centuries, those achievements rest on the economic and political develpoment of earler centuries. It translates into "renewal of life, vigor or intesrest"
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In the sixteenth. Centuries
It comes out around November sixteenth or November eighteenth of 2011
Non-voting peasants
C. to increase economic oppurtunity was the main motivating factor for European maritime expansion in the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries
C. to increase economic oppurtunity was the main motivating factor for European maritime expansion in the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries
Baroque.
C. to increase economic oppurtunity was the main motivating factor for European maritime expansion in the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries
Eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth, fifteenth, sixteenth, seventeenth, eighteenth, nineteenth, twentieth.