How did Puritans in New England interpret the threat of Indian attacks and the ongoing cultural conflict in the late seventeenth century?

a.Trade became increasingly global, with goods moving to markets around the world.Chapter 4:1.George Whitefield's style of preaching wasa.entertaining.2.What was an effect of the Enlightenment in the colonies?a.Colonists became more accepting of religious diversity.3.What did Jonathan Edwards and Theodorus Frelinghuysen believe to be missing fromreligion in British North America in the early eighteenth century?a.Emotion4.What was significant about colonial dissenters in the eighteenth century?a.The poor, women, and African Americans opposed British authority.5.What war that began in 1689 put an end to the hope that Puritan New England couldreturn to a time of religious and cultural harmony?a.King William's War6.What is the historical significance of New Yorker Lewis Morris?a.He beat a man supported by Governor Cosby in a local election.

7.Although divorce was rare in the colonies in the first half of the eighteenth century, whatkind of person was most likely to be granted one?a.A wealthy husband with a barren wife8.In addition to the power of appointment or approval of colonial officials, the power toveto colonial legislation, and foreign policy, what other power did the British Crown andParliament have over the colonies?a.To tax colonists9.How did Puritans in New England interpret the threat of Indian attacks and the ongoingcultural conflict in the late seventeenth century?a.They believed that these conflicts were the work of the devil.10.What was an important consequence of the wealth derived from tobacco in the earlyeighteenth-century south?a.More whites owned their land.11.Who often led bread riots in eighteenth-century citiesa.Women12.What caused the infamous Salem Witch Trials in 1692?a.Class conflict, political tensions, fear of Indian raids, and a local debate about churchleadership13.Underfeme covert, adopted in the British colonies in the late seventeenth century, thestatus of wives was likened to the status of what group?a.Children14.In general, why did traditional ministers and colonial leaders fear the impact of the GreatAwakening?a.They feared the repercussions of the democratic nature of the movement.15.What was the overall effect of both voluntary and forced immigration into the colonies inthe first half of the eighteenth century?a.Diversity increased.16.What caused most of the conflicts between Europeans and Indians as well as conflictsbetween different groups of white settlers in the first half of the eighteenth century?a.Land17.How did the soaring population of the eighteenth century affect most men and womenacross the colonies?a.There was less land to settle and farm.18.In the early eighteenth century, what characterized the child-rearing years for mostmothers in rural areas?a.Farm labor and housekeeping tasks alongside child rearing19.Which of the following economic systems characterized farming communities in the lateseventeenth and early eighteenth centuries?a.Systems of exchange of goods and services20.How did changing marriage patterns influence accusations of witchcraft in seventeenth-century New England?a.With fewer men available as potential mates, young women began to resent olderwomen, whom they accused of witchcraft

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  • How did Puritan influence in New England change from the 1600s to the 1700s?

    How did Puritan influence in New England change from the 1600s to the 1700s? Puritan influence declined as religious tolerance increased.

    In what way did the Puritans practices in New England contradict or go against their reasons for leaving England?

    In what way did the Puritans' practices in New England contradict, or go against, their reasons for leaving England? They left England to practice their own religion, but they were very strict and did not accept different religions in New England.

    What characterized colonists approaches to Indians religions and cultural practices in the middle of the eighteenth century in Pennsylvania?

    What characterized colonists' approaches to Indians' religions and cultural practices in the middle of the 18th century in Pennsylvania? Religion did not become a sharp impediment to economic cooperation in Pennsylvania in the 1740s and 1750s.

    How did changing marriage patterns influence accusations of witchcraft in seventeenth century New England?

    How did changing marriage patterns influence accusations of witchcraft in seventeenth-century New England? With fewer men available as potential mates, young women began to resent older women, whom they accused of witchcraft.