1.a
2.a 3.a 4.b 5.b 6.a 7.a
Answer:
Integrity vs Despair
Explanation:
Erik Erikson was one of the famous psychologist who has given the theory of psychosocial development in which he has mentioned eight distinct stages.
Integrity vs Despair: This stage is considered as the last stage in Erikson's theory and starts from the age of sixty-five of a person and lasts through the death of a person.
At this stage, an individual views his or her accomplishments and hence the person develops integrity by knowing that he or she is leading a settled or successful life. The conflict that arises at this stage is that an individual feels whether or not he has accomplished his or her desires and made life meaningful.
In the question above, the statement signifies the Erikson's stage of integrity vs despair.
How a tomb is decorated and what is in a tomb can tell a researcher or archeologist a lot about what type of person is buried within without even knowing who is in there. Different classes of people got different types of burials. A King might have had all of his servants killed and buried with him, a wealthy merchant might have been buried with lots of gold as an offering to the gods, a poor person would likely not have a tomb.
The correct answer is letter A
Gulag is an acronym, in Russian, for Central Field Administration. These were prisoner camps where inmates were punished with forced labor, physical and psychological torture.
The term “Gulag” was popularized in the West thanks to the book “Archipelago Gulag”, by the Russian writer Alexander Soljenítsin, published in 1973, in Paris.
Forced labor camps have existed since the Russian Empire. However, with the fall of the monarchy and the rise of the Russian Revolution in 1917, the system of concentration camps was extended to the most remote regions of the country.
The Gulags had their peak in the Stalin government between 1929-1953 and went into decline after the death of the Soviet dictator. However, they were only officially abolished under the Gorbachev government in the 1980s, when the Soviet Union began to open up to the world.
Initially, people considered “enemies of the people” were sent to the Gulags. The first oilcloths of prisoners belonged to specific classes such as the bourgeois, priests, landowners and monarchists. There were also those who were suspected only of their origins as Jews, Chechens and Georgians.
I think it was Ireland...