The prutains were told to tattle on the pilgrims
Pilgrims WERE Puritans so this question has no value. Colonies didn't spy on each other.
They probably didn't call each other pilgrims - I believe the name for them wasn't invented yet. They probably called each other friend, by their name, or by their state in their little groups. Mkaddict12: They were referred to as the Separatists, and the name Pilgrim was invented years later.
Often times people conducting independent research on Pilgrims and their journey to America in 1620 label them as Puritans. The Pilgrims were NOT Puritans, but belonged to an English group of humble background known as Separatists. These Separatists desired separation from the Church of England that closely resembled Catholicism. Puritans, on the other hand, were a group of radical reformists who emerged early in the 17th century, with goals to reform, or simply put purify the Church of England. The two groups maintained belief structures entirely independent from each other, moved to the new world at different times, and were led by different people, but yet are often mistaken for each other.The Mayflower arrived at what is now Provincetown, at the tip of Cape Cod, Massachusetts, on November 11, 1620. They remained on the ship the following day, as it was a Sunday, for prayer and worship. They assembled a small boat and actually set foot on land on November 13th. In the boat, they made three expeditions over the next few weeks exploring the coastline. Having selected a site for their settlement, they sailed the Mayflower across to an abandoned Native American settlement called Patuxet, now Plymouth. The Mayflower dropped anchor there on December 16th. That is where the legendary Plymouth Rock can be found. [Source: Of Plymouth Plantation by William Bradford, Chapter X.]Cape Cod is, obviously, nowhere near the area that is nowknown as Virginia. However, in the late 16th century, a large section of the Atlantic coastline, from Cape Fear to the Gulf of St Lawrence, was claimed by the British and all of it was called "Virginia". Various colonizing companies were granted royal charters to settle the territory. In 1612, the third charter of The Virginia Company of London granted control over lands between 34 degrees north and 41 degrees north, which included most of Long Island. The Virginia Company of Plymouth [England] was granted a charter for the lands between 38 degrees north and 45 degrees north. Both companies could grant land patents to colonists who settled between 38 and 41 degrees north. There were several individuals in the Pilgrims' congregation who wanted nothing at all to do with the Virginia Company of London; that is apparently why, although they had not made their objective clear when they set out, the captain of the Mayflower was directed to land north of 41 degrees latitude. That placed the Pilgrims away from the control of the Virginia Company of London and also away from the Dutch, who had competing claims over New Netherland. While the Pilgrims were at sea, the colonizing companies were re-organized (again) and, by the time they actually landed at Cape Cod, the place was no longer under the charter of any company with "Virginia" in its name.
one man from each family and it was the pilgrims .--. yesh yesh it was ^0^
they traded with each other
Pilgrims WERE Puritans so this question has no value. Colonies didn't spy on each other.
The purtains were told to tattle on the pilgrims
The prutains were told to tattle on the pilgrims
The Puritans watched each other for signs of sinful behavior?
They both came to America largely to worship without interference from the King of England, but that is about where it ends as they didn't even get along religiously with each other.
Pilgrims are people who journey to a sacred place for religious reasons. Usually "the Pilgrims" refers to Puritans who left England and came to American to get away from the Anglicans and practice their nonconformist religion (as it was seen by the Anglicans). Both the Anglicans and the Pilgrims were protestants, they just disagreed with each other. The Jesuits, on the other hand, were a religious Order in the Catholic Church. They were definitely not the same thing.
The Puritans and Quakers both held onto their religions very strongly and wanted to follow God in their own ways. They also both came to be because they didn't want to conform to the Church of England. So, even though the Quakers and Puritans were very different and persecuted each other for their beliefs, they were alike in some ways. Sincerely, Kirsten, an eighth grader:)
They gave each other blow jobs.
Why not? The puritans were all very strict Christians and I'm sure they talked to each other.
they have a bad relationship. They always fight, and they always tattle on each other. They always give each other some mary to, jkjk, lol
The Puritans were a religious Protestant Christian group of pilgrims in the 1600s who fled the "over-tolerance" of the Netherlands to come to a land where they could freely impose a theocracy over their subjects. However, "pilgrim" is a term that just means a "religious person who travels in search of a special religious place" and there are numerous pilgrims in various religions whose beliefs differ quite profoundly with the Puritans as well as each other (such as Catholic pilgrims to Santiago de Compostela or Muslim pilgrims to Mecca).
In England of that time, the question of what was acceptable religious practice was not merely one of Catholic versus Protestant, because there were many kinds of Protestants, and they were as widely separated from each other in practice and belief as they were from the Catholics. The Pilgrims were Puritans, who were very different from the Church of England, and so they were as much subject to persecution as the Catholics.