Strangely enough it never affected the English Catholics' patriotic feelings. Persecution of Catholics for purely religious reasons were rare; and although for a period all citizens were officially required to regularly attend Church of England church services the enforcement of this law was a local matter and Catholics were usually left pretty much alone. The distrust of Catholics' loyalty to the British Crown led however to a law that would only be repealed in the 19th century, banning Catholics from holding any local or central administrative office.
The Gunpowder Plot of 1605 was an attempt by disaffected Catholics to blow up the British House of Lords. When the treason was discovered, anti-Catholic legislation was passed that prevented Catholics from practicing law and medicine and also gave the state permission to search their land for weapons. They also had to take communion at least once a year in an Anglican church or face heavy fines.
To escape religious persecution in England.
The Parties Concerned
In the 1600s and 1700s, Delaware was predominantly Christian, with Quakerism, Anglicanism, and Presbyterianism being some of the main religious groups in the region. There was also a significant presence of Lutherans and Catholics in Delaware during this time.
By the end of the 1600s, indentured servants were being given 25 acres of land, and their freedom. The first blacks that came to America in the 1610s were treated as indentured servants, and slavery was not decided on the basis.
the main combatants of the colonial wars were England and Spain...
1600s
No they did not they thought that the laws were unfair like the taxation without representation.
the 1600s
they were old
25 to 30
chicken nuggets
25 to 30