Your answers A, B and D.
He rises in the French army after the beginning of the Revolution,
He helps put down a royalist uprising in Paris.
He takes command of a new French army in Italy.
He was forced to live on the island of Elba.
Answer:
BOTH
Explanation:
thx for the free points lol.
The Congressional power is known as the Supremacy clause.
In Article 6 Clause 2 of the United States Constitution, it states that federal laws are the supreme laws of the land. This means federal laws trump all other laws in the United States. So if the federal government wants to prosecute people for the possession of marijuana in a state where it is legal, they can legally do so thanks to the supremacy clause.
Answer:
they ate the population of dirty Jews
Explanation:
While both Greek and Romans were pretty ethnocentric by modern standards, the Romans assimilated far more people into their institutional lives.
Many non-Greeks adopted Gteek lifestyles, language and habits after the age of Alexander, but the cross-pollination was more frequently cultural than political. Cleopatra might have dressed like an Egyptian queen and patronized the Egyptian gods, but she wouldn't have had Egyptian generals or Egyptian judges. The Greeks tended to settle into the cultures they occupied like the British in India: remaining separate from and believing themselves superior to the people around them, even while encouraging the 'natives' to adopt their culture habits.
Romans did a much more thorough job assimilating the peoples they conquered. Non-Romans could and did become citizens, even from very early times. This started with neighboring groups like the Latins, but eventually extend to the rest of Italy and later to the whole empire. Eventually there would be "Roman" emperors of Syrian, British, Spanish, Gallic, Balkan, and North African descent Farther down the social scale the mixing was much more complete (enough to irritate many Roman traditionalists). This wasn’t just a practical accommodation, either — when emperor Claudius allowed Gauls into the Roman Senate he pointed out that by his time the Romans had been assimilating former enemies since the days of Aeneas.