puritans had the belief in religion & laws while romanticism was a form of art valuing the beauty of nature with imagination
Puritans are calvanists.
The difference between British and American romanticism is that British romanticism was mover diverse. American romanticism centered around only America, and American situations.
The main religious difference between the separatists and ordinary Puritans revolved around their view of the Church of England. The ordinary Puritans wanted to strive to reform the Church of England from within while the separatists wanted to separate from it.
The biggest difference between the Separatists and the Puritans is that the Puritans believed they could live out the congregational way in their local churches without abandoning the larger Church of England.
intellectual believe in a power of reason science to further human progress
communism was focus on achieving practical political change
Romanticism is like beauty and nature, and dark Romanticism is like feeling like you want to kill your lover.
The main religious difference between the separatists and ordinary Puritans revolved around their view of the Church of England. The ordinary Puritans wanted to strive to reform the Church of England from within while the separatists wanted to separate from it.
Puritans were very minimalist and always wore black. Romantics were extravagant and colourful. Romantics liked art and poetry whereas puritans opposed it.
Seperatists wanted just that, to separate from the church of England. Puritans want to clean up the corruption found within.
Seperatists wanted just that, to separate from the church of England. Puritans want to clean up the corruption found within.
In the context of Colonial America, although also true in any other context, the difference between Puritan and Catholic Christians can be summarized as follows: As Protestants, the Puritans emphasized the individual's faith-experience and the Christian Bible as essential for Christians. By contrast, Catholics emphasized as essential Church traditions, the celebration of the 'sacraments,' and the hierarchy of Church leaders.