the belief in the importance of an individual’s
achievements and dignity
Individualism
a community devoted to prayer and service to fellow
Christians
Monastery
Common Law
a body of rulings made by judges or
very old traditional laws that become part of a nation’s
legal system
Individualism
the belief in the importance of an individual’s
achievements and dignity
a written legal agreement signed in 1215 that
limited the English monarch’s power
Magna Carta
the group of people, such as priests, who perform the
sacred functions of a church.
Clergy
Monastary
a community devoted to prayer and service to fellow
Christians
Humanities
collectively, areas of study that focus on human
life and culture, such as history, literature, and ethics
a governing body created by King Edward I
that included some commoners, Church officials, and nobles
Model Parliament
a body of rulings made by judges or
very old traditional laws that become part of a nation’s
legal system
Common Law
Clergy
the group of people, such as priests, who perform the
sacred functions of a church.
Model Parliament
a governing body created by King Edward I
that included some commoners, Church officials, and nobles
collectively, areas of study that focus on human
life and culture, such as history, literature, and ethics
Humanities
a written grant of rights and privileges by a
ruler or government to a community, class of people, or
organization
Charter
Heretic
a person who holds beliefs that are contrary to
a set of religious teachings
Humanism
a philosophy that tries to balance religious faith
with an emphasis on individual dignity and an interest in nature
and human society
a philosophy that tries to balance religious faith
with an emphasis on individual dignity and an interest in nature
and human society
Humanism
a person who holds beliefs that are contrary to
a set of religious teachings
Heretic
Charter
a written grant of rights and privileges by a
ruler or government to a community, class of people, or
organization
Magna Carta
a written legal agreement signed in 1215 that
limited the English monarch’s power