Martin is against of the Commerce and Slave Trade Compromise as he does not want to slavery anymore.
<h3>Who opposed
Martin Luther?</h3>
Despite initially opposing Luther's views and identifying as the "defender of the faith," King Henry VIII of England split with the Catholic Church in the 1530s and brought England under the broad reform movement.
Luther was more and more enraged at the clergy for selling "indulgences" that promised absolution from the consequences of sin.
Thus, option D is correct.
For more details about Martin Luther, click here:
#SPJ1
The evasion of the naval blockade during the Civil War was a set of operations designed to avoid the situation of blockade that the unionist side imposed on the Confederate side during the American Civil War, which stretched over 5,600 kilometers (3,500 miles) , from the Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico, and to the Mississippi River. The evasion was carried out by means of steamships, many of them specially built to reach a high speed for the time, that had to sail normally at night to not be detected. If they were sighted, the ships (called blockade runners) tried to maneuver or simply surpass any Union ship that was acting as a blocking patrol. The boats used for this task were generally privately owned, often operating with a privateering license issued by the Confederate States of America.
It's C. People were trying to get Germans out of U.S
1st Blank is Christianity and 2nd Blank is Blue Laws
The Byzantine Empire's economy has always been regarded among the most strongest in the Mediterranean for several centuries. Their solid presence in Constantinople gave them a significant advantage as it was the center of a trading network that ran all throughout Eurasia into North Africa. With trading as their stong suit and a State that tightly controlled both internal and foreign transaction, they were set up for success. The one factor that set them apart has to be <u>their inmplementation of coinage</u>, which consolidated a monopoly around the Byzantine empire.
Hope this helps!