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Annette [7]
4 years ago
6

Which beat ideal is reflected in the passage

History
2 answers:
skelet666 [1.2K]4 years ago
7 0

Answer:

Is B wanderlust- the desire to travel

Explanation:

steposvetlana [31]4 years ago
6 0

Explanation:

:))))))))))))))))))

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Diocletian Both Items to place in the chart: Increased the size of civil service Increased the size of the army Set wage and pri
Lelu [443]

From 284 to 305, Diocletian ruled as the Roman emperor. He oversaw significant improvements in the empire throughout his rule.

By dividing and enlarging the civil and military services as well as the provincial divisions, Diocletian established the largest and most bureaucratic government in the history of the empire. Diocletian appointed the consuls, stopped the senators from collaborating to draft laws, divided the imperial counselors among specialized offices, defined their roles to limit the power of the praetorian prefects (the emperor's personal bodyguards), specialized administrative work, and increased the number of bureaucrats. Additionally, the earlier command was provided and the army was reorganized. He released soldiers from active duty after 20 years of service, and the military benefited most when he put a price cap on items to cut the cost of living. Two new taxes, the jugum, and the capitatio, were enacted. The former was a tax on a parcel of arable land, whilst the latter was a charge on individuals. This adjustment was accompanied by a monetary reform. In 303–304, Diocletian issued the four edicts while vowing to refrain from any atrocities.

Diocletian reformed the empire without resorting to political idealism. His reforms weren't the outcome of a preconceived plan; rather, they were enacted as a result of historical necessity.

Learn more about Diocletian here

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3 0
2 years ago
The Equal Rights Amendment ______.
serious [3.7K]

Correct answer:

<h2>B. Was never ratified</h2>

History/details:

The Equal Rights Amendment, formulated as early as 1923 by the National Women's Party, proposed that "equality of rights under the law shall not be abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex." Feminist groups in the 1960s and 1970s, such as the National Organization for Women, finally succeeded in getting Congress to pass the Equal Rights Amendment as a proposed addition to the US Constitution. It was passed by Congress and sent to the states for ratification in 1972.

The National Organization for Women continued to be a leading voice in pushing for ratification for the amendment. However, conservative groups, especially led by a woman named Phyllis Schlafly, campaigned against ratification. A key point Schlafly focused on was that women would then be subject to military draft and military combat service in the same way as men. This became the key issue and the Equal Rights Amendment failed to achieve the necessary number of states supporting ratification.

4 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
How were the post-World Wai II independence movements in India, Algeria, and Korea similar and different?
GarryVolchara [31]

Answer:

Before we begin, take a few seconds to look at a current political map of the world. Pretty colorful, isn't it? Sure, there are larger swaths on the map, like Russia and Brazil, but Eastern Europe, Africa, and Southeast Asia all have several colors snaking around and crammed in between one another, don't they?

Well, a big reason for the numerous amount of countries in the world today is the process of decolonization that occurred after World War II (WWII) in Asia, Africa, and the Middle East. Indeed, as recently as 70 years ago, the political map of the world was far less colorful than it is today. Now, in 2014, there are over 200 nations on the planet!

Explanation:

8 0
3 years ago
What was george waghingtons approach to foreign policy
melamori03 [73]
It was primarily to keep the United States neutral in foreign affairs<span> as much as possible he didn't believe it was smart for the new nation to involve itself in the </span>affairs<span> of other nations.</span>
6 0
3 years ago
Answer the following question in a five paragraph essay, using COMPLETE SENTENCES and evidence from the reading
Dennis_Churaev [7]

Answer:

"REPRESENTATION" remained the core issue for the Philadelphia Convention. What was the best way for authority to be delegated from the people and the states to a strengthened central government?

After still more deeply divided argument, a proposal put forward by delegates from Connecticut (a small population state ), struck a compromise that narrowly got approved. They suggested that representatives in each house of the proposed bicameral legislature be selected through different means. The UPPER HOUSE (or SENATE) would reflect the importance of state sovereignty by including two people from each state regardless of size. Meanwhile, the LOWER HOUSE (the HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES) would have different numbers of representatives from each state determined by population. Representation would be adjusted every ten years through a federal census that counted every person in the country.

By coming up with a mixed solution that balanced state sovereignty and popular sovereignty tied to actual population, the Constitution was forged through what is known as the CONNECTICUT COMPROMISE. In many respects this compromise reflected a victory for small states, but compared with their dominance in the Congress under the Articles of Confederation it is clear that negotiation produced something that both small and large states wanted.

Other major issues still needed to be resolved, however, and, once again, compromise was required on all sides. One of the major issues concerned elections themselves. Who would be allowed to vote? The different state constitutions had created different rules about how much property was required for white men to vote. The delegates needed to figure out a solution that could satisfy people with many different ideas about who could have the franchise (that is, who could be a voter).

For the popular lower house, any white man who paid taxes could vote. Thus, even those without property, could vote for who would represent them in the House of Representatives. This expanded the franchise in some states. To balance this opening, the two Senators in the upper house of the national government would be elected by the STATE LEGISLATURES. Finally, the PRESIDENT (that is, the executive branch) would be elected at the state level through an ELECTORAL COLLEGE whose numbers reflected representation in the legislature.

To modern eyes, the most stunning and disturbing constitutional compromise by the delegates was over the issue of slavery. Some delegates considered slavery an evil institution and GEORGE MASON of Virginia even suggested that the trans-Atlantic slave trade be made illegal by the new national rules. Delegates from South Carolina and Georgia where slavery was expanding rapidly in the late-18th century angrily opposed this limitation. If any limitations to slavery were proposed in the national framework, then they would leave the convention and oppose its proposed new plan for a stronger central government. Their fierce opposition allowed no room for compromise and as a result the issue of slavery was treated as a narrowly political, rather than a moral, question.

The delegates agreed that a strengthened union of the states was more important than the Revolutionary ideal of equality. This was a pragmatic, as well as a tragic, constitutional compromise, since it may have been possible (as suggested by George Mason's comments) for the slave state of Virginia to accept some limitations on slavery at this point.

Slave trade

The slave trade was always a controversial issue in the history of the United States.

The proposed constitution actually strengthened the power of slave states in several important respects. Through the "FUGITIVE CLAUSE," for example, governments of free states were required to help recapture runaway slaves who had escaped their masters' states. Equally disturbing was the "THREE-FIFTHS FORMULA" established for determining representation in the lower house of the legislature. Slave states wanted to have additional political power based on the number of human beings that they held as slaves. Delegates from free states wouldn't allow such a blatant manipulation of political principles, but the inhumane compromise that resulted meant counting enslaved persons as three-fifths of a free person for the sake of calculating the number of people a state could elect to the House of Representatives.

Explanation:

6 0
3 years ago
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