Answer:
They created new ways to solve mathematical problems, using ideas from Greece and India.
Explanation:
I did it on edge 2020 :)
Answer:
By charging the war leaders with war crimes.
Explanation:
The basis of the Nuremberg trials were the violation of the
1. Geneva Convention of 1864
2. Hague Convention 1899-1907
the rules for conduct of war were set by these conventions.
Some of the charges were:
1. crimes against peace
2. Planning, initiating, and waging wars of aggression
3. War crimes.
4. Crimes against humanity.
The trials brought the Holocaust to an end with the trial of 21 german leaders, 12 of them were sentenced to death, 7 to life in prison, 3 received temporary prison sentence.
Clovis: was the son of Childeric I, a Merovingian king of the Salian Franks, and Basina, a Thuringian princess.
Sainte-Geneviève: wa<span>s the patron saint of Paris in the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox traditions.
</span>Maurice De Sully: <span>was Bishop of Paris from 1160 until his death.
</span>Saint-Denis: <span>was a legendary 3rd-century Christian martyr and </span>saint and <span>bishop of Paris in the third century and, together with his companions Rusticus and Eleutherius, was martyred for his faith by decapitation.
</span>John of Jandun: <span>was a French philosopher, theologian, and political writer.
</span>Guillebert de Metz: was <span>a Flemish copyist of the fifteenth century, alderman of Grammont, born around 1390-1391 and died after 1436. He is known to be the author of a Description of Paris (1434).
</span>Héloïse: <span>was a French nun, writer, scholar, and abbess, best known for her love affair and correspondence with Peter Abélard.
</span>Robert de Sorbon: <span>was a French theologian, the chaplain of Louis IX of France, and founder of the Sorbonne college in Paris.
</span>François Rabelais: <span>was a French Renaissance writer, physician, Renaissance humanist, monk and Greek scholar.
</span>Pierre Abélard: <span>was a medieval French scholastic philosopher, theologian and preeminent logician.
</span>
Catherine de Médicis: <span>was an Italian noblewoman who was queen of France from 1547 until 1559, by marriage to King Henry II.
</span>Gaspard de Coligny: <span>was a French nobleman and admiral, best remembered as a disciplined Huguenot leader in the French Wars of Religion and a close friend and advisor to King Charles IX of France.</span>