It is to refuse to comply with certain laws or pay taxes along with refusing to pay fines.
Answer:
a. He asserted how his tribe had rejected Christianity from the beginning.
Explanation:
Josephe was a Spanish speaking Mexiacan who made some declarations about the treatment of his people by the Spanish.
The Mexicans were forcefully made to accept Christianity and burnt the relics and statues of the different religions they served. This led to a revolt known as the battle of Pueblo and the moves of forceful religion was aborted.
Answer:
The conflict between US and the Philippine that lasted from February 4, 1899 to July 2, 1902 is known as Philippine-American War. Although the Filipino nationalities called it struggle for independence, but US government referred to it as a rebellion.
Both American and Filipino soldiers committed atrocities towards each other, they considered Filipino as dogs and killed men, women and children. Several reports informs us that after entering a village the soldiers used to plunder church, houses and use to rob the villagers. They even fired upon those who waved flag for signalling truce. In many cases the Americans retaliated death of their soldiers by burning the town and killing all the natives.
Answer:
He refused to support Henry VIII as head of the church of england
Explanation:
Explanation:
Human society is continuously shaped by social, political, and technological developments. Some societies reject these developments and others embrace them. Normally, the rejection or acceptance is silent and smooth. At times, however, the process is violent and leads to conflict or revolution. According to Samuel Huntington, “a revolution is a rapid, fundamental, and violent domestic change in the dominant values and myths of a society, in its institutions, social structure, leadership, and government activity and policies.”[1] The Russian revolutions of 1905 and 1917 were marred by ardent violence and political maneuvering. This article will analyze both revolutions, illustrating that the revolution of 1905 was both a precursor and cause of the 1917 revolution, while having its own precursors and causes.
Aided by brutal defeats and unprecedented loss of life in two wars, the Russian revolutions of 1905 and 1917 were the collective backlash of the masses against the corrupt, incompetent, and uncaring autocracy of the Tsarist Regime which was unable and unwilling to change with the times. Moreover, the revolutions hardly yielded the type of productive and egalitarian change that masses called for. Thus, these revolutions serve as a cautionary tale for both governments and revolutionaries.