Answer:
French, Dutch, and English explorers all began to make inroads into the Americas during the late 1500's spilling into the early 1600's. The Spanish lost their stronghold in North America as the French, Dutch and British began exploring and then colonizing the North east regions.Spanish colonized the Hispaniola, West Indies, Peru, Caribbean, Mexico regions influenced by Catholicism with the intent of Conquest, Wealth, Gold. The French colonized the Mississippi, Louisiana, Canada, Great Lake regions, also influenced by Catholicism and with the intent of Trading of fur. The Dutch were influenced by Protestant to colonize the New Amsterdam (New York), colony of New Netherlands with the economic intent to also trade The English colonized Georgia, Cana, New Mexico, Jamestown, Lymouth, Carolinas, Roakne regions influenced by Protestant with the many economic intents.
Explanation:
This isn't an explanation but i am not too confident with this answer, this is my first AP class and i am still learning, i hope this helps someone, thank you:)
Guido of Arrezo is a Benedectine monk from Italy and an Italian music theorist of the Medieval Era. While at Arrezo he develops new techniques and method in teaching music such as staff notation and the use of six note pattern aid "ut–re–mi–fa–so–la" which also means do–re–mi–fa–so–la).
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Although there are no options attached, we can say the following.
What Morgan argued about the role of plantation owners in shaping patriotic rhetoric was that after Bacon's rebellion, landlords stop using indentured servitude, although in some cases it was cheaper than to buy black slaves.
So with this change, plantation owners started to form the patriotic rhetoric that exalted their work and actions were for the benefit of colonial America. They tried to maintain relatively social stability, for instance, in the Jamestown, Virginia, colony, that benefited their production and exportation of cash crops to Europe.
Edmund Sears Morgan (1916-2013) was an American professor and historian who worked at the universities of Chicago, Brown, and Yale, and specialized in the history of the American colonies.