Tuesday, August 20, 2019
Essay --
Melyssa Arner  Scott Robinson  Western Civilization II  18 February 2014  1. Analyze and evaluate the life of Martin Luther and his influence on the Reformation.  Before bringing about the Reformation, Martin Luther started out his life in Saxony.He was raised  by a strict father who wished for his son to become a lawyer. Instead of achieving this, Martin Luther,  due to a promise to St. Anne, became a man of the cloth. Those above Lutherââ¬â¢s station later enrolled him  into the faculty of the university in Wittenburg.  It would be at Wittenburg that Luther would change the way of the church, later to be called the  Reformation. Luther believed that faith was a way of salvation, which became known as the ââ¬Å"justification  by faithâ⬠. Martin Luther also began to question the clergy of the church, who made the public pay for  indulgences in order for their souls to be freed. Due to his beliefs being ignored, Luther created his  ââ¬Å"Ninety-five Thesesâ⬠. Through these theses, Lutherââ¬â¢s beliefs spread throughout the lands of Germany.  His ideals about the church passed onto the German people and his acts would later influence the  happenings of the Reformation.  2. List and discuss the various religious wars in Europe in the 1500s and 1600s  concluding with the Thirty Years War.  King Philip II of Spain was a strong supporter of Catholicism. He controlled not only Spain, but  also the Netherlands, Southern Italy, and Burgundy. His wife, Mary, was the queen of England. The two  of them worked to bring England back to Catholicism but many people were against this. When Mary  passed, Elizabeth took the throne and Protestantism was more accepted.Angry with this, Philip sent an  armada of ships to attack in 1588. The English ships were sent to defend and Spain was forced...              ....  The Native Americans were not the only ones to be effected by colonization in the New World.  The inhabitants of Africa had their world changed when Europe decided to venture to the New World.  While the Native Americans were pushed from their land, the Africans were taken away from theirs. The  Europeans needed another set of hands to perform labor and the Africans played this part. Even though  Africans could be linguists and guides for the white people, they were mostly used for housework and as  farm hands. Africans were forced into slavery and owned by the Europeans. Similar to the Native  Americans, the Africans were forced to convert to Christianity. Their religious views were not allowed in  the New World. The Africans were not only forced to convert to Christianity but also their way of life.  Africans had to dress and speak like the Europeans in order to survive.                        
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