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snow_lady [41]
3 years ago
5

Help me i need this test done!!!!!!!!!!!

History
1 answer:
Anna35 [415]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

Maybe the answer is B)

Explanation:

YES ITS OPTION B)

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A dictator in ancient Rome gained total authority by the Senate in times
Kobotan [32]

Answer:

True, the Senate could vote absolute power to a dictator.

Explanation:

Dictator.

Dictator, in the Roman Republic, a temporary magistrate with extraordinary powers, nominated by a consul on the recommendation of the Senate and confirmed by the Comitia Curiata (a popular assembly).

Dictators were then named for lesser functions such as the holding of elections in certain cases.

The Senate could vote to grant absolute power to one man, called a dictator, for a temporary period. During the first 300 years of the Republic, dictators were often called on when Rome faced an invasion or some internal danger.

7 0
4 years ago
What was life like for poor people in rome? how did the roman empire try to keep poor people loyal? (3 points?
Lelechka [254]
They lived in apartments and most people in rome were poor. They lived in one room apartments because the didnt have money to buy better. Rome hosted Gladiator shows and passed out bread and drink to people which the poor flocked too. 
5 0
3 years ago
Need help ASAP
MrMuchimi

Answer:

1. cotton gin

2. steam engine

3. spinning wheel

4. electrical telegraph

Explanation:

1. Increased production of cotton

2. uses heat to create steam to create force pushing a piston to do work

3. spins yarn into thread making production faster

4. sends pulses of electric charges to send important information to others like a text-messaging system.

Hope it helped ;)

7 0
3 years ago
Three examples of cultural diffusion
Levart [38]

Answer:

An example of cultural diffusion with negative effects would be the spread of diseases, like AIDS , Bubonic Plague and Smallpox. Christianity started in Israel and has spread all over the world. An example of forced diffusion is the Afghans forcing the Nuristanis to convert to Islam.

Explanation:

4 0
3 years ago
What does the declaration say about law and fairness
devlian [24]

One of the first principles articulated in the Declaration of Independence is that of equality. The Declaration asserts that “we hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal.” The rule of equality is tied to the creation of mankind by God. This proposition is not the incantation of a religious establishment. It is a legal fact acknowledged to be “self-evident.” The Declaration is a legal instrument. It is intended for a legal object. It speaks of equality in a legal sense. The Declaration asserts that mankind is created and that as far as the law is concerned, mankind is created equally human by God.9

There are at least two consequences of this proposition. The first is that all human beings are endowed with the right to enjoy equal legal rights, legal opportunity and legal protection.10 The second consequence of the rule of legal equality is that it neither mandates nor permits the civil government to ensure equal social position, economic well-being or political power. The Declaration’s recognition that “all men are created equal” does not mean that the civil government must treat each person the same on the basis of what they do or on the basis of their conduct. Social and economic achievement is a function of behavior or conduct. It is a function of individual labor and enterprise. Political power is a function of political involvement and knowledge of the political system. As long as the law guarantees the right of an individual to participate on an equal basis with other individuals in achieving the desired social position, economic condition or political strength, then differences in outcome or result do not contravene the rule of legal equality.

In essence, the rule of legal equality requires that the law be no respecter of persons. A law is a respecter of persons if it treats persons differently because of their immutable status or belief. The law is not a respecter of persons, however, if it treats persons differently on the basis of their acts or conduct.11 The law looks to what a person does, not who they are. Those who deny the rule of equality or its origins in the law of God, or who argue that equality is subject to changing cultural or social conditions, or who twist the meaning of equality to require government mandated quotas, do so in contravention of the principle of equality.

President Abraham Lincoln, referring to the Declaration of Independence, affirmed that the United States was “conceived in liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that ‘all men are created equal’.”12 Lincoln realized that the rule of equality applied to all men and nations without regard to the age in which they lived, their location on the globe, or the circumstances of history which surrounded them. He spoke of this rule in a speech at Springfield in 1857. He said that through the Declaration, the framers,

meant to set up a standard maxim for free society, which should be familiar to all, and revered by all; constantly looked to, constantly labored for, and even though never perfectly attained, constantly approximated, and thereby constantly spreading and deepening its influence and augmenting the happiness and value of life to all people of all colors everywhere.13

Unfortunately, in many contexts including religious liberty litigation (as will be explored shortly) the principle of equality has been constantly ignored and labored against. The notion of rights conditioned upon status and religious belief has been much more preferred. It is quite common, therefore, that contrary to the rule of equality, litigants seek to diminish the rights of others because of the other’s belief, or expand their own rights because of their own beliefs.


4 0
4 years ago
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