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PlzZ.....I mean what happend between these times beside the Magna Carta and the Bill of Rights??Thanks for all elaborations!!!!

2007-01-30 12:01:10 · 12 answers · asked by None 3 in Politics & Government Government

12 answers

1200 A.D. King John (1200-1216 A.D.)
1201 A.D. Fourth Crusade
1212 A.D. Children's Crusade
1215 A.D. Magna Carta
1215 A.D. Fourth Lateran Council forbids priests to participate in trial by ordeal
Henry II (1216-1272 A.D.)
1233 A.D. Inquisition established
1274 A.D. Aquinas, Summa Theologica


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1300 A.D. 1336 A.D. Outbreak of Hundred Years' War between France and England
1348 A.D. Outbreak of Black Death
Chaucer


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1400 A.D. 1429 A.D. Siege of Orleans
Joan of Arc (1412-1431 A.D.)
1453 A.D. End of Hundred Years' War
Fall of Constantinople to Turks
1455-85 A.D. Wars of the Roses
1492 A.D. Columbus arrives in West Indies


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1509 A.D. Henry VIII King of England [A Man for All Seasons]
1517 A.D. Luther, 95 Theses
Calvin
1534 A.D. Church of England breaks from Rome
Act of Supremacy
1535 A.D. Queen Mary ("Bloody Mary")
1558 A.D. Elizabeth I Queen of England
1588 A.D. Defeat of Spanish Armada by Britain


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1600 A.D. 1603 A.D. James I King of England; asserts divine right of kings
1628 A.D. Petition of Right
1629-40 A.D. Charles I rules without Parliament
1649 A.D. Trial of Charles I for treason; Charles beheaded
1649-1660 A.D. Interregnum; rule of Oliver Cromwell
1651 A.D. Hobbes, Leviathan
1660 A.D. Restoration of Charles II
1670 A.D. Bushell's Case
1688 A.D. Glorious Revolution; James II deposed
1689 A.D. Reign of William & Mary; English Bill of Rights
1690 A.D. Locke, Second Treatise of Government
1692 A.D. Salem Witch Trials


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1700 A.D. 1702 A.D. Queen Anne (1702-14)
1714 A.D. George I (1714-1727)
1727 A.D. George II (1727-1760)
1760 A.D. George III (1760-1820)
1776 A.D. American Revolution
1787 A.D. U.S. Constitution
1789 A.D. French Revolution; U.S. Bill of Rights

2007-01-30 12:11:48 · answer #1 · answered by ♥!BabyDoLL!♥ 5 · 0 0

If you need to learn about the Magna Carta (1215), you need to study English history, not U.S. And the amendments to the U.S. Constitution known as the Bill of Rights were ratified in 1789 (well after 1688). I'm having a little trouble understanding your question.

2007-01-30 12:13:05 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Well, I think the first problem is that the magna Carta was not American, but a british document. And to try and sum up all that happened in british goverment, the non-existant american government, and the evolution of democracy in general during 4 1/2 centuries would take far longer than anyone here would care to read.

2007-01-30 12:14:11 · answer #3 · answered by Brett B 2 · 0 0

Ummm, there wasnt a US Government back then. The Pilgrims signed the Mayflower Compact and a few articles of Governance between the Virgina and Plymouth Colonies. But the United States was not even an idea even as late as 1688.

2007-01-30 12:08:53 · answer #4 · answered by Baghdad Pete ! 4 · 0 0

The number one thing that happened was the establishment of the first English Parliament. It was established in 1263 by my ancestor, Simon de Montfort. The Magna Carta was written by his father and a group of Barons a generation earlier. The Magna Carta and the English Parliament are the basis for our Bill of Rights, our Constitution and our Congress. A frieze of my ancestor recides over one of the doors of our Capitol Rotunda, because of this. Thank you, Constance Montfort

2007-02-03 11:16:12 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

nicely, i do no longer understand if i will cheer you up, however the respond is which you are the government. government isn't something greater effective than the desire of each and every of the human beings for the straight forward stable - a minimum of in a democracy that's. while you're balloting responsibly, staying counseled and doing all your superb to grant civic enter whilst obtainable or mandatory, you're perpetuating stable government. confident, we pay a ton of taxes. i've got been via your experience two times in the final couple of years and that i won't have the ability to assert it made me greater effective than satisfied the two. yet in the top, if we want a wealthy usa, with stable infrastructure, sound militia and fatherland protection, disaster preparedness, low crime costs, no person homeless or without healthcare and education for our babies and shield our elderly, taxes are mandatory. The application costs are yet another tale. those human beings are only grasping. i'm waiting to objective photograph voltaic and geothermal. it would value a lot, yet a minimum of my family contributors heavily isn't so vunerable to the whims of the moguls on the means employer.

2016-11-23 14:59:58 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Christopher Columbus landed in the Bahamas in 1492. Uhmm I never heard of any explorers during that time seeing or saying anything about a U.S. government. Unless you mean Native American government lol.

2007-01-30 12:08:44 · answer #7 · answered by pee pee 2 · 0 0

Not a whole lot. The U.S. Government didnt exist then. Or is that your point?

2007-01-30 12:05:34 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Chief patawa would have been President sometime in that time frame.

2007-01-30 12:06:33 · answer #9 · answered by robert m 7 · 0 0

W O W ! ! ! ! !

NO WAY..............

2007-01-30 12:05:58 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

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