The wide variety of peoples inhabiting Georgia has meant a correspondingly rich array of active religions. Today most of the population in Georgia practices Orthodox Christianity, primarily in the Georgian Orthodox Church whose faithful make up 82.4% of the population. Around 1% belong to the Russian Orthodox Church, while about 2.9% of the population follow the Armenian Apostolic Church (Oriental Orthodoxy), almost all of which are ethnic Armenians.[2] Adherents of Islam make up 10.7% of the population[3] and are mainly found in the Adjara and Kvemo Kartli regions and as a sizeable minority in Tbilisi. Catholics of the Armenian and Latin churches make up around 0.8% of the population and are mainly found in the south of Georgia and a small number in Tbilisi. There is also a sizeable Jewish community in Tbilisi served by two synagogues.
The Georgian Apostolic Autocephalous Orthodox Church is one of the world's most ancient Christian Churches, founded in the 1st century by the Apostle Andrew the First Called. In the first half of the 4th century Christianity was adopted as the state religion. This has provided a strong sense of national identity that has helped to preserve a national Georgian identity, despite repeated periods of foreign occupation and attempted assimilation.
yea
Trade between three continents or ports is called triangular trade.
There is often trade imbalance between the three ports or continents,
because some of theses locations in the triangular trade rely more on
imports or exports, and this usually takes place when one or more of
these locations is lacking in a commodity and has to rely solely on
import, while another relies quite a lot on export.
Answer:
On November 19, 1794 representatives of the United States and Great Britain signed Jay's Treaty, which sought to settle outstanding issues between the two countries that had been left unresolved since American independence. ... The French Revolution led to war between Britain and France in 1793.
Explanation:
Hope this helps:)
Answer:
President Abraham Lincoln, is the right answer.
Explanation:
Abraham Lincoln served the post of the 16th U.S. President. His tenure began from March 1861 until his murder in April 1865. He led the U.S. throughout the Civil War, its most ferocious combat and its greatest virtuous, legal, and political deadlock. It was during his presidency that he preserved the Union, emancipated the social system of slavery and strengthened the federal government, and refurbished the economy of the U.S.
Tribunes could pass laws in the Senate
hope this helps
lol
even though i think both can work, but put pass