"September brings a hint of autumn’s promise! Happy September @TRY3STEPS.COM
Dear Reader, If you use TRY3STEPS a lot, this message is for you. This incredible nonprofit organization helps the world with answers. We love you, we share answers. Your love helps us thrive. The more we give, the more we have! Thank you for inspiring us. (Secure PayPal)

*Everything counts! No minimum transaction limit!
Stay Updated with the World! Subscribe Now:: YouTube.com/c/Try3Steps
Say Hello to Try3Steps Group! Join Now:: GoogleGroup@Try3Steps

Search Another Question

Showing posts with label Catholic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Catholic. Show all posts

Sep 10, 2019

[Answer] 2. HISTORY: Which of the following is a French national heroine and Roman Catholic Saint thanks to her defiant stance against the English in the Hundred Years' War?

Step 1 : Introduction to the question "2. HISTORY: Which of the following is a French national heroine and Roman Catholic Saint thanks to her defiant stance against the English in the Hundred Years' War?"



...1. Boudica 2. Joan of Arc 3. Lady Godiva 4. Lady Gaga Joan of Arc is said to have been a 15th century peasant girl who rose up against the English in a messed up and chaotic France, and who has somehow managed to capture the imagination of historians and folklorists ever since her death at the stake at the hand of the English who captured her. Her adherence to Roman Catholicism has gained her Saint status and she has remained a popular cult figure and symbol of resistance, a theme for which she is acknowledged in a wide range of art forms. Significant references appear in Shakespeare (English literature), Tchaikovsky (Russian music), Mark Twain (American literature), Robert Bresson (French film) and Bertolt Brecht (German theatre). Boudica/Boadicea is thought to have been a (Celtic) British Queen who fought against the Romans, and is a national hero to some. Lady Godiva was an Anglo-Saxon queen who, according to legend, rode naked through the streets of Coventry, to oppose taxes imposed by her husband. The deal was that nobody would see her, but one bloke peeked. His name was Thomas, thus the term "Peeping Tom". I have no idea who Lady Gaga is, what she does, or why people care.

May 23, 2019

[Ans] Who was America's only Catholic president?

Step 1 : Introduction to the question "Who was America's only Catholic president?"



The U.S. Constitution famously prohibits any religious test or requirement for public office. Still, almost all of the nation’s presidents have been Christians and many have been Episcopalians or Presbyterians, with most of the rest belonging to other prominent Protestant denominations. Although Roman Catholicism has long been the nation’s largest religious denomination, John F. Kennedy remains the only Catholic president. And since Kennedy’s assassination in 1963, only one other Catholic, John Kerry, has been a presidential nominee on a major party ticket.

[Answer] Who was America's only Catholic president?

Step 1 : Introduction to the question "Who was America's only Catholic president?"



...The U.S. Constitution famously prohibits any religious test or requirement for public office. Still, almost all of the nation’s presidents have been Christians and many have been Episcopalians or Presbyterians, with most of the rest belonging to other prominent Protestant denominations. Although Roman Catholicism has long been the nation’s largest religious denomination, John F. Kennedy remains the only Catholic president. And since Kennedy’s assassination in 1963, only one other Catholic, John Kerry, has been a presidential nominee on a major party ticket.

Oct 11, 2018

[Answer] Which warrior queen, at the time much admired by the Catholic Church, expelled the remaining Jews and Muslims from her country?

Step 1 : Introduction to the question "Which warrior queen, at the time much admired by the Catholic Church, expelled the remaining Jews and Muslims from her country?"



...Isabella, Queen of Castile in her own right, married King Ferdinand of Aragon. While best known for funding Columbus's expeditions to the New World, the darker side to her reign saw her beginning the Inquisition in 1478 to persecute those not of the Catholic faith. In 1492, Isabella and Ferdinand expelled all the Jews and Muslims in Spain who refused to convert to Catholicism. For their work, Pope Alexander VI named Isabella and Ferdinand "The Catholic Monarchs". Her youngest child, Catherine of Aragon, went on to marry Henry VIII and continued to remain firm in her mother's faith after Henry broke from the Catholic Church. Juana la Loca was Isabella and Ferdinand's daughter who became Queen of Castile after her mother's death. Mary I of England was Isabella's granddaughter through Catherine of Aragon and Henry VIII. She was a dedicated Catholic, but her persecutions of Protestants earned her the nickname "Bloody Mary". Maria of Spain was the great-granddaughter of Isabella and was Queen of Spain with her husband Maximilian II, Holy Roman Emperor.