Answer:
The haitian revolution had many international repercussions. It ended Napoleon's attempt to create a French empire in the Western hemisphere and arguably caused France to decide to sell its North American holdings to United States thus enabling the expansion of slavery into that territory.
The Mexican revolution sparked the Constitution of 1917 which provided for separation of church and state, government ownership of the subsoil, holding of land by communal groups, the right of labor to organize and strike and many other aspirations. It also destroyed the old government an army of the dictator Porfirio Diaz and eventually changed the country's economic and social system.
There are some facts about both of them, you'll need to put the paragraph together the way you would like. I hope that helps.
How did William Penn influence self-government in America?
A. He weakened it by giving political power to English officials.
B.
He weakened it by insisting that settlers pay for Indian land.
C. He strengthened it by having a constitution and general assembly.
D. He strengthened it by giving the right to vote to all men and women.
What was Paul Revere trying to prevent the British from doing? A stealing the colonists' ammunition and supplies B passing the Tea Acts с shutting down Boston Harbor D attacking the colonists' church
Answer:
Paul Revere was trying to prevent the British from stealing the colonists' ammunition and supplies.
Explanation:
This was right before Concord and Lexington, where they had guns, so I used that as a hint.
Which ruler fired Bismarck and built Germany's military even larger?
Answer:
In the 1860s, Otto von Bismarck, then Minister President of Prussia, provoked three short, decisive wars against Denmark, Austria, and France, aligning the smaller German states behind Prussia in its defeat of France. In 1871 he unified Germany into a nation-state, forming the German Empire
Expedition date of marco polo
Select the correct answer.
Is the following statement true or false?
The Tariff of 1816 was created to protect US manufacturing.
O true
false
Answer:
true
Explanation:
bible stuff. !help plz!
Answer:
1. Temptation
2. Prayer
3. Growth
4. The flesh
5. God's Desire
6. Christian Faith
7. The devil
8. The world
9. Fellowship
10. Maturity
11. Service
12. Bible
Explanation:
help please!!!!!!!!!
Answer:
B
Explanation:
Why is learning about a scholar like Thales still valuable, even though some of his ideas were later proved to be incorrect
Answer: Thales is said to have `discovered' Ursa Minor, studied electricity, developed geometry, contributed to the practical application of mathematics later developed by Euclid, developed a crude telescope, `discovered' the seasons and set the solstice,
Explanation:
TEXTUAL ANALYSIS
1. The final crew of the Hunley volunteered for
service knowing that two crews had already died.
Why?
Answer:
The final crew was especially brave. They volunteered for service knowing that two crews had already died. RECRUITMENT. After the second crew of the Hunley ...
French writer who believed in freedom of speech, religious tolerance, and the separation of church and
state.
Answer:
Voltaire François-Marie Arouet
Who was Thaddeus Edmonson and why did he go to court
Answer:
Edmonson v. Leesville Concrete Co:
Thaddeus Edmonson was AFAM construction worker that was injured on the job, so he sues Leesville company.
Leesville lawyer strikes 2 AFAM jurors peremptorily (no cause listed), and supreme court holds removal of jurors because of their race is prohibited in both criminal and civil cases.
Had no good reason to strike them and cannot strike them based on race!!!
Explanation:
The new deal revived individuals’ interest in government
Answer:
The new deal was something FDR made for Americans suffering from the affects of the great depression. The New deal eventually ended the great depression.
Explanation:
Please Give Brainliest.
Drag each tile to the correct location on the diagram.
Match each characteristic to Sojourner Truth, Harriet Tubman, or both.
1.a former enslaved
person
2.worked mainly
as an antislavery
lecturer
3.helped many
enslaved people
escape to the North
Answer:
Sojourner Truth: Worked mainly as a antislavery lecturer
Both: A former Enslaved person
Harriet Tubman: Helped many enslaved people escape to the north.
Explanation:
Answer:
Sojourner Truth: Worked mainly as a antislavery lecturer
Both: A former Enslaved person
Harriet Tubman: Helped many enslaved people escape to the north.
Explanation:
Give credit to the other guy, don't hate me for copying, this is just for people who don't use their eyes to look for his answer. Btw, other guy who made first answer, thanks a lot for the answer! I scored 5/5
Question 1 D.
All of the following contributed to the passage of the Eighteenth Amendment legislating Prohibition in 1919 EXCEPT
The available options are:
a) the continued efforts of the Anti-Saloon League
b) the fervor of the First World War Lending patriotism to the cause of prohibition
c) the Progressive belief in social reform
d) the cumulative impact of state prohibition laws
e) the high death toll from alcohol-related automobile accidents
Answer:
the high death toll from alcohol-related automobile accidents
Explanation:
Considering the available options, it is option E "the high death toll from alcohol-related automobile accidents" that has no direct influence on the passage of the Eighteenth Amendment legislating Prohibition in 1919.
All other options have contributed to the passage of the 18th amendment in the United States
Where did the power of a government come from?
Answer:
governments are instituted among men. governments power comes from the consent of that people that it governs.
Explanation:
Which of the following cultures influenced the creation of Rome ?
Answer:
Roman culture was greatly influenced by two of Rome's neighbors, the Etruscans and the Greeks. The Romans borrowed many ideas and skills from these two groups, beginning with the Etruscans. The Etruscans had dominated Etruria, a land just north of Rome. They built some city-states and conquered others.
Hope it helps
Please mark me as the brainliest
Thank you
Answer:
Explanation:
Much of Greek culture in the Eastern Mediterranean with its highly refined literature and learning was brought to Rome in the aftermath of military victories. When Roman aristocrats encountered Greeks in southern Italy and in the East in the 3rd century, they learned to speak and write in Greek.
Which of Diocletian's economic changes helped bring short-term order to Rome?
* He started a new coin system and expanded trade.
He abolished coins and implemented a barter system.
He minted more coins and allowed free markets.
He standardized coins and established fixed prices.
Answer:
He standardized coins and established fixed prices.
Explanation:
Answer:
The answer is (D).
Explanation:
He standardized coins and established fixed prices.
If I'm wrong I'm sorry
if I'm right thank you and(brainliest plz)
Christianity believes that Judaism is false and all Jewish ideals should be ignored.
True or False
Answer:
I would say false. But I am not 100% sure.
There it’s like basically 3 questions and it has one more page
Answer:
1) When her mother offered her food, it was the first time she wasn't hungry. That was a new thing for her. She also never imagined she would be free. So, to see that man tell them after crossing the river, they will no longer have to hide.
2) They started ro say to each other that they were proud of each other and at the end the Mother says, "Almost there" which means its leaning towards the end of the journey.
3) That in the end there is always a way out. To never give up.
4) The theme chart: The one reason from this chart that is already given is from chapter 9, so you have to do the rest on your own since you read all the chapters.
Hope this Helps!:D
where do civilizations emerge around the world?
Answer:
Civilizations emerge everywhere except Antarctica
Explanation:
ancient people are called ____ because they believed in many gods?
How did the Lowell factory change the way women worked in Massachusetts?
Answer:
Beginning in 1823, with the opening of Lowell's first factory, large numbers of young women moved to the growing city. In the mills, female workers faced long hours of toil and often grueling working conditions. Yet many female textile workers saved money and gained a measure of economic independence. The Lowell mills were the first hint of the industrial revolution to come in the United States, and with their success came two different views of the factories. For many of the mill girls, employment brought a sense of freedom.
I hope this helped you out!~ <3
-Dream
Answer: In 1834, when their bosses decided to cut their wages, the mill girls had enough: They organized and fought back. The mill girls "turned out"—in other words, went on strike—to protest. They marched to several mills to encourage others to join them, gathered at an outdoor rally and signed a petition saying, "We will not go back into the mills to work unless our wages are continued."
No one had ever seen anything like this. But if the mill girls were exuberant, managers and owners were horrified. "An amizonian [sic] display," one fumed. "A spirit of evil omen has prevailed." And they determined to crack down on the mill girls.
A showdown came and the bosses won. Management had enough power and resources to crush the strike. Within a week, the mills were operating nearly at full capacity. A second strike in 1836—also sparked by wage cuts—was better organized and made a bigger dent in the mills' operation. But in the end, the results were the same.
Those were hard defeats, but the mill girls refused to give up. In the 1840s, they shifted to a different strategy: political action. They organized the Lowell Female Labor Reform Association to press for reducing the workday to 10 hours. Women couldn't vote in Massachusetts or anywhere else in the country, but that didn't stop the mill girls. They organized huge petition campaigns—2,000 signers on an 1845 petition and more than double that on a petition the following year—asking the Massachusetts state legislature to cap the work day in the mills at 10 hours.
They didn't stop there. They organized chapters in other mill towns in Massachusetts and New Hampshire. They published "Factory Tracts" to expose the wretched conditions in the mills. They testified before a state legislative committee.
What's more, they campaigned against a state representative who was one of their strongest opponents and handily defeated him.
So what did the Lowell mill girls really win? In the short term, not much. That's how it often is with the first pioneers in social justice movements. Both of their strikes were crushed. And the only victory they won in their 10-hour workday campaign was pretty hollow. In 1847, New Hampshire became the first state to pass a 10-hour workday law—but it wasn't enforceable.
That was in the short term. But in the long term, the Lowell mill girls started something that transformed this country. No one told them how to do it. But they showed that working women didn't have to put up with injustice in the workplace. They got fed up, joined together, supported each other and fought for what they knew was right.
One of the mill girls put it this way: "They have at last learnt the lesson which a bitter experience teaches, not to those who style themselves their 'natural protectors' are they to look for the needful help, but to the strong and resolute of their own sex."
Today, millions of women in unions who teach our kids, fight our fires, build our homes and nurse us back to health owe a debt to the Lowell mill girls. They taught America a powerful lesson about ordinary women doing extraordinary things.
Extra
Foner, Philip S. (editor), The Factory Girls. University of Illinois Press, 1977. Howe, Daniel Walker, What Hath God Wrought: The Transformation of America, 1815-1845.Oxford University Press, 2009. Eisler, Benita, The Lowell Offering: Writings by New England Mill Women, 1840-1845. J.B. Lippincott, 1977. Dublin, Thomas, "The Lowell Mills and the Countryside: The Social Origins of Women Factory Workers, 1830-1850," in Weible, Robert; Ford, Oliver; and Marion, Paul (editors), Essays from the Lowell Conference on Industrial History, 1980 and 1981. Lowell Conference on Industrial History, 1981.
If plebeians couldn't pay their debt they will lose the following
Their land and their freedom
Their right to vote
Their land and their wives
Answer:
their land and their wives
Answer:
their land and their wives
Explanation:
Name four German colonies.
Answer:
China
Jiaozhou Bay concession (Deutsch-Kiautschou) (1898–1914)
Chefoo (1901–1918)
Tsingtao (1891–1914):
Answer:
The six principal colonies of German Africa, along with native kingdoms and polities, were the legal precedents for the modern states of Burundi, Cameroon, Namibia, Rwanda, Tanzania and Togo.
Explanation:
Why do you think the Korean War is called the forgotten war?
Answer:
because of the lack of public attention
Explanation:
because there was no public attention or wasn't spoken about it seems to just be 'forgotten' as opposed to the public attention on WWII with is really publiciesed
In 3-4 sentences, describe what you think Harriet Tubman's experience freeing enslaved people might have been like. What feelings might she have felt? What situations might she have found herself in?
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
I think Harriet Tubman's experience freeing enslaved people was so satisfactory to her and all the people that helped her in the Underground railroad.
She was a supporter of liberty and always wanted to help black slaves from the south to be free. That is why she escaped from slavery and later help many of them to get to the North before the beginning of the American Civil War.
I think her feelings might have been of liberation, a sense of purpose, and fulfilling a great accomplishment in life through helping a large number of people to be free.
The underground railroad was not an easy task, Quite the opposite. It had major risks in all senses.
The thing here is that she was already free, living in Pennsylvania when she decided to help her black "brothers and sisters." This action has inspired many people around the world in their fight for freedom, rights, and equality.
Tell me about your day today
Answer:
My day has been great, until i scored a 79% on my math test. My day has been shlt to sum everything up. How was your day?
Explanation:
Which statement would have been supported by Alfred T. Mahan?
It is our responsibility to spread Christianity to backwards people
The Navy should only protect our own ports.
The U.S. has no desire to control overseas possessions
The U.S. will need a powerful Navy and naval bases.
PLEASE ANSWER
Answer:
The U.S. will need a powerful Navy and naval bases.
Explanation:
The sentence that he would support is that The U.S. will need a powerful Navy and naval bases.
Alfred T mahan was a naval officer as well as historian. He was a great supporter of imperialism.
According to him sea power is very crucial to America as it would protect their shipping and Grant them access to world market. He stressed that sea power was important to America's greatness.
Answer:
A. the ships . . . will be like land birds
you're welcome :)
About how many Jews died in the Holocaust/Final Solution?
What is Article VI of the U.S. Constitution?
Answer:
Article Four of the United States Constitution outlines the relationship between the various states, as well as the relationship between each state and the United States federal government
Answer:
Article Five of the United States Constitution describes the process whereby the Constitution, the nation's frame of government, may be altered. Under Article V, the process to alter the Constitution consists of proposing an amendment or amendments, and subsequent ratification. >.<