Answer:
The Chinese rejected all other religions and only practiced Buddhism. O By 500 CE, Buddhism was one of the most popular religions in China. O Buddhist monuments were banned in many cities along the Silk Road.
Explanation:
Answer:
The correct answer is ✨B✨
Explanation:
I just did the question
John Quincy Adams was able to steal the presidency away from Andrew Jackson because of the secret deal he made known as the
Answer: the corrupt bargain
who is adolf hitler
Answer:
Adolf Hitler was the chansller from the 1930s and 40s
Explanation:
Adolf Hitler was the leader of the Nazis aka the nationalist socialist german workers' party. They were responible for the deaths of over six million jews
Which statement best supports the idea that the Mughal Empire promoted religious tolerance?
O The Empire united Sikhs, Hindus, and Muslims in one culture.
O The Empire tolerated Sikhs, Hindus, and Muslims and their freedoms.
O The Empire united Sikhs, Hindus, and Muslims in one religion.
O The Empire encouraged Sikhs, Hindus and Muslims to be diverse.
Answer:
A The empire united Sikhs, Hindus, and Muslims in one culture.
Answer:
The Mughal Empire did not tolerate other religions. They converted people to Islam forcefully.
The Empire united Sikhs, Hindus, and Muslims in one religion.
They didn't exactly unite people, but this would be your best choice.
1. At stake is nothing less than the future of Greece, a country of islands and which lie just outside of the reach of the greatest empire of the known world: persian empire 2. Persia was the world's golden city of its day. 3. Who was Themistocles? 4. The city-states had no sense of a national 5. Describe 3 interesting facts about the Greek Trireme: 6. Themistocles lured the Persian fleet into the Straits of 7. Who won the battle of Salamis? 8. By 1300 BC, a people speaking an early form of the Greek language had inhabited large portions of mainland Greece. They were known as the Minoans Phoencians Mycenaeans Romans 9. According to myth, it was from this city that the Mycenaeans were lead by a king named whose epic struggles were written down by the 8th century BC poet, in two of history's most famous tales: The Illiad and the Odyssey. 10. According to the Greeks, Homer was a 11. The Mycenaeans were the first to build the Corbelled bal
Answer:
1. At stake is nothing less than the future of Greece, a country of islands and which lie just outside of the reach of the greatest empire of the known world: the Persian Empire.
2. Persia was the world's golden city of its day.
3. Who was Themistocles?
Themistocles was a renowned Athenian politician and naval strategist who created the Athenian sea power. He saved Greece from the Persian empire by ensuring victory at the battle of Salamis in 480 BCE.
4. The city-states had no sense of a national government.
5. Describe 3 interesting facts about the Greek Trireme:
a. It was a long ship with three prominent banks of oars.
b. It featured a battering ram with a bronze tip.
c. It could be described as a guided missile that used its battering ram to do damage to enemy ships.
6. Themistocles lured the Persian fleet into the Straits of Salamis.
7. Who won the battle of Salamis? The Greeks led by Themistocles won the battle.
8. By 1300 BC, a people speaking an early form of the Greek language had inhabited large portions of mainland Greece. They were known as the Minoans Phoenicians Mycenaeans Romans.
9. According to myth, it was from this city that the Mycenaeans were led by a king named Odysseus whose epic struggles were written down by Homer, the 8th century BC poet, in two of history's most famous tales: The Iliad and the Odyssey.
10. According to the Greeks, Homer was a Greek king.
11. The Mycenaeans were the first to build the Corbelled bal
Explanation:
Greek was an ancient naval power. With its Triremes, it was able to deal a deadly blow to the Persians. Odysseus was the legendary Greek king of Ithaca and hero of Homer's epic poem, named Odyssey. Legendary stories had it that after the battle of Salamis, King Odysseus wandered for 10 years before reaching his palace.
Following World War Il, the countries of Eastern Europe were all
A. British colonies
B. communist countries
C. part of China
D. independent nations
How did Rubens alter the future of Baroque art? HURRY
Answer:
Answers will vary. He combined Flemish and Baroque styles, making his painting synonymous with Flemish Baroque.
Hope this helped! :)
How is a state and a colony different? Explain.
Answer:
A colony is ruled by a foreign body, usually a governor appointed by a king or company (most of the British colonies started out as private corporations). A state is a nation which may or may not be part of a larger body of states (a confederacy), but retains its independence.
Which tribe formed a national council, and set up a trading post and a post office?
Explanation:
Seminole, and Creek had only begun to repair the damage done by intratribal factionalism before and during Indian Removal (1830–39), and to fashion a hospitable existence in Indian Territory, when the war came upon them and revived old disagreements. Indeed, it can be argued that no group in the nation suffered more in the Civil War than the Indians of Oklahoma.
In the two decades after removal the Five Tribes formed active economies and adapted to life in Indian Territory. The Chickasaw and Choctaw practiced cotton plantation agriculture, and the Cherokee, Creek, and Seminole engaged in subsistence farming, ranching, and cattle raising. Market connections with New Orleans gave the tribes a Southern orientation. Each had an established government, distinct boundaries to their land, and a United States government representative (an agency) by which the obligations of the removal treaties were met. While the pre–Civil War era was not a "golden age" for the tribes, the trauma of dislocation had healed, and the region seemed destined to enjoy more prosperous times.
A key social institution among the Five Tribes, one that was also crucial in the sectional division of the United States, was the extent of slave holding. Of Indian Territory's approximately one hundred thousand inhabitants, 14 percent were African American slaves. That aspect of tribal culture, as much as any other, explains the willingness of many Indians to side with the Confederate States of America. The Cherokee Confederate general Stand Watie owned nearly one hundred slaves, making him, in the context of the times, an immensely wealthy man.
Little of the debate over slavery's expansion affected the tribes in Indian Territory. However, Indian slaveholders were apprehensive about the Republican victory in 1860 and the party's ultimate designs for "the peculiar institution." Many Indian Territory residents were upset by Secretary of State William H. Seward's remarks when he urged the U.S. government to extinguish tribal land titles and open the West to settlement.
Another condition catastrophically affecting the tribes was continued dissension between mixed-bloods and full bloods over the legacy of removal. Nowhere was this division more apparent than among the Cherokee. Because the mixed-bloods had signed a removal treaty at New Echota in 1835, they were despised by the full bloods, led by Chief John Ross. A leadership contest developed between the factions, pitting Stand Watie, for the mixed-bloods, against Ross. Until 1860, however, Ross and the full bloods had succeeded in holding political control of the tribe, and a working, if not amicable, accommodation between the two parties had been achieved.
The Confederate government, formed by early February 1861, had plans for the West. Jefferson Davis and his councilors saw the need to protect the Mississippi River, use the western Confederacy as a "breadbasket," and eventually establish Indian Territory as a springboard for expansion. Later in 1861 Davis appointed Albert Pike, a noted Arkansas attorney who enjoyed a good reputation with the Five Tribes, as Commissioner of Indian Affairs. Prior to Pike's arrival, other commissioners had gone north to Indian Territory from Texas to enlist the tribes in the southern cause. They found the Choctaw and Chickasaw enthusiastic for the Confederacy, and strong sentiment for the new nation also appeared among the Creek and Seminole. In early 1861 Col. Douglas H. Cooper recruited the Choctaw and Chickasaw into mounted rifle units, which later fought in Arkansas and Missouri. Albert Pike also recruited military units, and after Stand Watie received a colonel's commission in the Confederate army on July 12, 1861, he raised a band of three hundred for service.
The Cherokee, however, held back from formal alliance. John Ross doubted the wisdom of secession and favored neutrality. Had the tribes listened to Ross, they would have weathered the war and enjoyed good relations with the victor. However, tribal divisions among the mixed-blood and full-blood factions, as well as the fact of slaveholding, worked against a policy of neutrality.
Unfortunately for the Union and the Cherokee, the U.S. government did little to engender Indian support. Seeing Confederate activity in Arkansas and Texas, Lt. Col. William H. Emory, commanding
9. Most Americans probably spend
a) the same amount today as in 1980.
b) more money today than they did in 1970 and 1980.
c) less amount than in 1970.
d) less money than in 1980 but more than in 1970.
suppose you’re writing an essay arguing that we should provide a better support system for our military veterans. Which sentence would best be able to pathos into your argument.
Answer:
b
Explanation:
Answer:
C
Explanation:
You saw how difficult it was for your brother to return to civil life.
During the their invasion of the United States in the War of 1812, British forces suffered a loss of
public opinion by _________.
How did the war of 1812 affect public opinion in the United States?
A. Feelings of nationalism declined because the war destroyed farmlands across the country. American military leaders became unpopular for leading the country into a costly war.
Answer:
Mark queens of hearts as brainliest please i don't need answer from Wiki Thank you ❤
Explanation:
The War of 1812 was a conflict fought between the United States and its allies, and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and its allies. It began when the United States declared war in June 1812 and ended in a stalemate when a peace treaty agreed to earlier was ratified by the United States in February 1815. While the war ended in a draw, both sides were happy with the outcome as the war ended, although indigenous nations are generally seen among historians as the real losers. Historians in Britain often see it as a minor theatre of the Napoleonic Wars while historians in North America see it as a war in its own right. From the outbreak of war with Napoleonic France in 1803, Britain had enforced a naval blockade to choke off neutral trade to France, which the United States contested as illegal under international law. To man the blockade, Britain pressed merchant sailors into the Royal Navy, including Americans. American sentiment grew increasingly hostile toward Britain due to incidents such as the 1807 Chesapeake–Leopard affair. The British were similarly outraged by the 1811 Little Belt affair, in which eleven British sailors died.[10] Britain supplied arms to Native Americans, who raided European-American settlers on the American frontier, hindering the expansion of the United States and provoking resentment.[11] Although the debate on whether the desire to annex some or all of British North America (Canada) contributed to the American decision to go to war, the reasoning for invasion was mainly strategical.[12] President James Madison signed into law the declaration of war after heavy pressure from the War Hawks in the United States Congress.[1
How many republicans were on the super
committee to decide the election results of
1876?
A)7
B)8
Answer:
7?
edit; ITS 8
Explanation:
If its wrong i will redo my studying.
edit: I see what I did wrong, as you count how many people were there in the election day, then count as many republicans!