Answer:
I know the answer
Explanation:
Because the Holocaust involved people in different roles and situations living in countries across Europe over a period of time—from Nazi Germany in the 1930s to German-occupied Hungary in 1944—one broad explanation regarding motivation, for example, “antisemitism or “fear,” clearly cannot fit all. In addition, usually a combination of motivations and pressures were in play. For the Holocaust as other periods of history, most scholars are wary of monocausal explanations. Interpretations of individuals’ motivations fall into two broad categories: first, cultural explanations (including ideology and antisemitism); and second, social-psychological ones (fear, opportunism, pressures to conform and the like).
<span>At the constitutional convention, the name given to the plan that took elements of both the New Jersey and Virginia plans was the "Connecticut Compromise" sometimes known as the "Great Compromise". </span>
Answer:
They were expected to marry young and have children.
Explanation:
Back then it was important for women to get married and have children to expand the family.
Ivan the terrible was (1) <span>a patron of arts and trade, founder of the </span>Moscow Print Yard, Russia's first publishing house; (2) <span>he is also remembered for his paranoia and arguably harsh treatment of the </span>Russian nobility<span>. The </span>Massacre of Novgorod is regarded as one of the biggest demonstrations of his mental instability and brutality. (3) <span>Ivan managed countless changes in the progression from a medieval state to an empire and emerging regional power, and he became the first ruler to be crowned as Tsar of All the Russias.</span>