Final answer:
The statement regarding the Trustee system being advised by a royal governor in Savannah is false; Georgia was managed by trustees from England and did not have a royal governor until after 1752.
Step-by-step explanation:
The statement 'The Trustee system was advised by a royal governor who lived in Savannah' presented in Exercise 5.4.2 is false. The Trustee system in Georgia was established with individuals from England who were appointed to manage the colony. From its founding in 1732 until 1752, Georgia operated under a charter granted to James Oglethorpe and the other trustees. There was no royal governor in Georgia until after 1752, when the trustees surrendered their charter to King George II, and the colony became a royal colony with its own royal governor.