Answer:
Until 1871, Germany consisted of a number of independent independent states of varying size and governance. The battles between the countries were numerous. A major cause was religious differences which resulted in, among other things, the thirty-year war in the 17th century. Another reason was changing alliances with neighboring states, mainly France.
After the Napoleonic Wars, the German states were united in 1815 in the German alliance with Austria as the dominant power. Nationalism spread throughout Europe in the 19th century, and so did the German states. Ideas of a united German empire began to take shape and two competing models developed. One was called Grossdeutschland ("Greater Germany") and included the multi-ethnic empire of Austria-Hungary. The other, called Kleindeutschland ("Little Germany"), would exclude Austria, be dominated by Prussia and gain a clear German majority. Through a more advanced industrialization and the German Customs Association (Zollverein), where Austria was not included because of its protectionist stance, Prussia became increasingly dominant in Germany economically and infrastructurally. After Prussia's victory against Austria in the German Unity War in 1866, the Little German solution won; Prussia took the dominant role in Germany and, when one was on the verge of victory in the Franco-German war, proclaimed the German Empire in 1871.
In essence, the decision argued that as a slave Scott was not a citizen and could not sue in a federal court. ... Taney also stated that Congress had no power to exclude slavery from the territories (thus invalidating the Missouri Compromise [1820]) and that African Americans could never become U.S. citizens
We did not know what DNA looked like Molecularly.
Answer:
Mikala Rempe in her poem <em>On how my mother sleeps </em>speaks about the character who describes the memory, memory of his mother sleeping.
Explanation:
This poem tries to answer big dilemmas in life: What does it mean to be grown up and what makes you who you are.
The poem also points out the sadness of time passing, sadness that the speaker feels because he can’t touch his mother anymore, but the thing he can touch is the memory of her that never dies.