<u>Answer:</u>
Citizens from Washington came out to watch the battle.
<u>Explanation:
</u>
- In the early days of the beginning of the civil war, the citizens of the north were not very terrified of the idea of the war.
- As the entire war place took place in small battles fought at different places, the intensity of the war was not felt to the extent that it should have otherwise been felt.
- Moreover, the northerners had this notion in their mind that they were fighting for a good cause and they had no reason to be afraid of anything.
Answer: Homo sapiens as a distinct species of the hominid family, which includes the great apes.
Explanation:
Although we did not evolve from any of the apes living today, we share characteristics with chimpanzees, gorillas, and orangutans (the great apes), as well as other apes. We most likely evolved from Homo heidelbergensis, the common ancestor we share with Neanderthals, who are our closest extinct relatives.
Answer:
Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.
Explanation:
These three religions hail from Southwest Asia and spread into Europe. I hope this helped.
Question: Under the communist party, organized religion in the Soviet Union was officially:
<em>Options:</em>
- 1) Tolerated
- 2) Encouraged
- 3) Subsidized
- 4) Banned
Answer: The correct answer is: <u>4) Banned.</u>
Explanation: The Soviet Union was the first state to have as an objective the abolisment of religion. The Communist regime ridiculed religion, harassed believers, confiscated church property, and propagated atheism in the schools. The Soviets had originally believed that if churches were deprived of its power, religion would be quickly eliminated. When this did not happen, they took more drastic measures. In Stalin’s purges (1936-1937) tens of thousands of clergy were grouped and shot. In some areas, it even became illegal for parents to teach religion to their own children. From 1917 to the 1980s, the more religion sustained, the more the Soviets would do to eliminate it.