Answer:
Becoming the most influential leader of Russia.
Explanation:
He enlarged the size of Russia considerably and called himself the "Duke of All Russias," the first ruler who manifested a pretension to rule all the Russian lands. He proclaimed Moscow to be the Third Rome, built the Kremlin and laid the foundations of strong autocracy.
Answer:
C. In one part of town (ghetto).
Explanation:
The 1935 Nuremberg Laws, an anti-Semitic law designed and executed by the German Nazi government was one of the harshest and initial acts of racial discrimination against the Jewish people. This law would become the base for which a citizen of Germany is accepted or not as a legal citizen or be termed as a Jew.
According to this law, the definition of a Jew is someone who is born not only a Jew but also has Jewish grandparents. Moreover, it also termed a person a Jew even if that person does not follow the Jewish religious beliefs. Also, they were made to live in one part of the town where they were grouped and put together, and not mix with the 'common' German people.
Thus, the correct answer is option C.
Following WWII, the United States and the Soviet Union were the two most powerful nations in the world. WWI devastated Europe with many lives being lost as well as destruction to the landscape. WWII was even more destructive, both economically and politically exhausting great nations like France, UK, and Germany. Stalin, Roosevelt, and Churchill met at the Yalta Conference in 1945 to discuss the situation of postwar Europe. This later lead to a separation of Eastern Europe, (which went into Soviet hands) and Western Europe which America financially aided and sent supplies to to help rebuild.
Explanation:
The gains achieved by the White minority in the first four decades of the 20th century were, by the 1940s, increasingly under threat however, as African resistance to the racially based system rapidly escalated. This crisis was brought to a head by the continuing decline of the reserve economies. Full proletarianisation in South Africa, would threaten the migrant labour system upon which White profitability depended. This crisis coincided with rapid secondary industrialisation and a substantial growth of urban African populations, as well as growing trade union activity and rising African working class militancy. These developments were threatening not only the conditions for accumulation but White political hegemony itself.
The answer is true
hope i helped :)