Lecture ch 3
New England
Lecture 3
I. Puritanism
a. English Reformation
b. Religious beliefs
c. Immigration
I. Puritan Colonies
I. Resistance to Colonial Authority
Puritanism
Lecture 3
I. Puritanism
a. English Reformation
b. Religious beliefs
c. Immigration
I. Puritan Colonies
I. Resistance to Colonial Authority
English Reformation
Lecture 3
I. Puritanism
a. English Reformation
b. Religious beliefs
c. Immigration
I. Puritan Colonies
I. Resistance to Colonial Authority
Religious Beliefs
Colonial Laws
• If any man or woman shall lye with any beast… they shall be surely put to death. And the beast shall be slain and buried and not eaten
• No one shall cross a river on the Sabbath but authorized clergymen.
• No one shall travel, cook victuals, make beds, sweep houses, cut hair, or shave on the Sabbath Day.
• No one shall kiss his or her children on the Sabbath or feasting days.
William Blackstone on Women (1765)
By marriage, the husband and wife are one person in law: that
is, the very being or legal existence of the woman is
suspended during marriage, or at least is incorporated and
consolidated into that of the husband: under whose wing,
protection, and cover she performs everything.
Lecture 3
I. Puritanism
a. English Reformation
b. Religious beliefs
c. Immigration
I. Puritan Colonies
I. Resistance to Colonial Authority
Immigration
Lecture 3
I. Puritanism
I. Puritan Colonies
a. Settlement of Plymouth
b. Political development of Plymouth
c. Settlement of Massachusetts Bay
d. Political development of Mass Bay
I. Resistance to Colonial Authority
Puritan Colonies
Lecture 3
I. Puritanism
I. Puritan Colonies
a. Settlement of Plymouth
b. Political development of Plymouth
c. Settlement of Massachusetts Bay
d. Political development of Mass Bay
I. Resistance to Colonial Authority
Settle Plymouth
Lecture 3
I. Puritanism
I. Puritan Colonies
a. Settlement of Plymouth
b. Political development of Plymouth
c. Settlement of Massachusetts Bay
d. Political development of Mass Bay
I. Resistance to Colonial Authority
Political Plymouth
“To enact, constitute, and frame, such just and equal Laws,
Ordinances, Acts, Constitutions and Offices, from time to time, as shall be
thought most meet and convenient for the General
good of the Colony; unto which we promise all due submission
and obedience.”
Lecture 3
I. Puritanism
I. Puritan Colonies
a. Settlement of Plymouth
b. Political development of Plymouth
c. Settlement of Massachusetts Bay
d. Political development of Mass Bay
I. Resistance to Colonial Authority
Settle Mass Bay
We shall be a city upon a hill -
a shining example of what a truly
godly community could be.
Lecture 3
I. Puritanism
I. Puritan Colonies
a. Settlement of Plymouth
b. Political development of Plymouth
c. Settlement of Massachusetts Bay
d. Political development of Mass Bay
I. Resistance to Colonial Authority
Political Mass Bay
Lecture 3
I. Puritanism
I. Puritan Colonies
I. Resistance to Colonial Authority
a. Roger Williams
b. Anne Hutchinson
c. Glorious Revolution
d. Metacom’s War
Resistance to Authority
PROTEST
Lecture 3
I. Puritanism
I. Puritan Colonies
I. Resistance to Colonial Authority
a. Roger Williams
b. Anne Hutchinson
c. Glorious Revolution
d. Metacom’s War
Roger Williams
Lecture 3
I. Puritanism
I. Puritan Colonies
I. Resistance to Colonial Authority
a. Roger Williams
b. Anne Hutchinson
c. Glorious Revolution
d. Metacom’s War
Anne Hutchinson
Lecture 3
I. Puritanism
I. Puritan Colonies
I. Resistance to Colonial Authority
a. Roger Williams
b. Anne Hutchinson
c. Glorious Revolution
d. Metacom’s War
Glorious Revolution
Two
Treat
ises
on
Gov’t
Lecture 3
I. Puritanism
I. Puritan Colonies
I. Resistance to Colonial Authority
a. Roger Williams
b. Anne Hutchinson
c. Glorious Revolution
d. Metacom’s War
King philip
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