204k views
1 vote
How did the house of burgesses distinguish the english colony of virginia from the spanish and french colonies in the americas?

User Karle
by
6.7k points

2 Answers

3 votes

Actually the House was composed of elected people from colonies; the folks of Virginia would vote for their representatives who dominated the House. And they were voted by the local inhabitants and I don't think the spanish and french had anything but a royal governer and a bureacracy

User Adrita Sharma
by
7.3k points
4 votes

Answer:

The House of Burgesses distinguishes the English colony of Virginia from the Spanish and French colonies in the Americas, because the English kings who ruled the 13 original colonies reserved the right to decide the fate of their colonies as well, but not alone. The colonists drew upon their claims to traditional English rights and insisted on raising their own representative assemblies. Such was the case with the Virginia House of Burgesses, the first popularly elected legislature in the New World.

Step-by-step explanation:

Although many differences separated Spain and France from England, perhaps the factor that contributed most to distinct paths of colonization was the form of their government.

Spain and France had absolute monarchies, but Britain had a limited monarchy. In New France and New Spain, all authority flowed from the Crown to the settlers, with no input from below.

User Robsn
by
7.0k points