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Why did the religious group known as pilgrims agree to partner with the plymouth company and travel to the massachusetts settlement?

O they were passionate capitalists seeking new markets for their goods.
O pilgrims were interested in gaining citizenship in someplace other than england and the plymouth company offered them the best option.
O they received passage to land where they could establish a religious community in exchange for establishing a trading post and exporting resources back to england.
O pilgrims disliked the puritans and wanted to escape their oversight as quickly as possible.

User Olemarius
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Final answer:

The Pilgrims partnered with the Plymouth Company primarily for religious freedom, aiming to establish a community based on their beliefs. They intended to maintain their English identity and practice their faith without interference, with trade and resources exportation being a secondary objective.

"The correct option is approximately option C"

Step-by-step explanation:

Why did the Pilgrims Partner with the Plymouth Company?

The group known as the Pilgrims partnered with the Plymouth Company to travel to the Massachusetts settlement for religious freedom and to establish a community based on their Separatist beliefs. Contrary to arriving in New Netherlands as they intended, the Pilgrims aboard the Mayflower were blown off course and landed in what is now known as Plymouth, Massachusetts. There, they drafted the Mayflower Compact, emphasizing self-government and community cooperation.

The Pilgrims were Separatists who had previously migrated to the Dutch Republic to escape the Church of England, which they felt had not sufficiently broken away from Catholic practices. However, fearing the loss of their English identity and potential conflict with Spain, they sought a new home where they could maintain their English heritage and live according to their strict religious beliefs.

After negotiations, the Pilgrims obtained a charter from the Virginia Company with the approval of the English Crown. Their migration was not driven by economic motives, like Jamestown's founding, but by religious aspirations—to practice their faith without interference and to propagate and advance their understanding of Christianity. Trading and resources were secondary to their primary goal of establishing a religious community. The later arrival of Pilgrims helped deepen the religious and social structure of what would become the New England colonies.

User MDMower
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