Explanation:
The Rev. Dr Martin Luther King as so important because he came to symbolise the Civil Rights movement. He did not invent it, and he was not the only leader in it - but he captured the public imagination more than anyone else. Such things as the “I Have A Dream” speech may have been taken (almost word for word) from other Civil Rights speakers (just as his doctoral thesis was actually the work of another person) - but it was the way he delivered a speech and the time-and-place that was important. In the 1960s if people had heard of only one Civil Rights leader it was Martin Luther King. Without in any way being insulting , he was a “showman” - and it was GOOD that he was a showman. A quiet academic theologian would not have got any public attention or been able to inspire a mass movement.
Yes his private conduct left a lot to be desired (and which of us is without sin?) and his political opinions tended to go into some strange places in the 1960s - but the basic point remains. Was Segregation a great moral evil? Yes it was. Who did more than any other person to campaign against it? To turn the public against it? Martin Luther King was that person.
The answer is A. The freedmen's bureau was created to help former slaves. They didn't help out the whites. They helped blacks only. As for B, if your curious as to what organization did that, it was called the Freedmen's School. :)
Answer:
- gave a speech at Harvard
- promoted intellectual independence and urged american authors to move away from european ideas
- was an essayist, lecturer, and poet
- shared his thoughts through dozens of published essays and more than 1,500 public lectures across the United States
-champion of individualism
- wrote most of his important essays as lectures first, then revised them for print
- influenced many people
- he led the Transcendentalist movement
- champion of individualism and a prescient critic of the countervailing pressures of society
-his words have been passed down from generation to generation
-beloved writer; his words embody an important facet of the American experience
Explanation:
I believe it was one of Hamilton’s friends named Denham
Before the split in 1054, the Eastern Church completely rejected the Pope’s power. Option C is correct.
Schism of 1054,whch was also regarded to as the East-West Schism was the event that precipitated the final separation between the Eastern Christian churches (led by the patriarch of Constantinople, Michael Cerularius) and the Western church (led by Pope Leo IX).
This spanned until the 11th century.