Answer:
After the Kansas-Nebraska Act reopened the possibility of slavery extending into new territories, tensions between pro- and anti-slavery advocates erupted into violence.
Radical abolitionists, like John Brown, attacked and murdered white southerners in protest. A pro-slavery US Senator, Preston Brooks, viciously beat abolitionist Senator Charles Sumner on the floor of the Senate.
Bleeding Kansas foreshadowed the violence that would ensue over the future of slavery during the Civil War.
is this right if it is can u tell me plz
also can you make me a brainlist
1. alliance coalition of countries that opposed the Allied powers in World War II 2. Axis to subdue and limit the freedoms of people 3. dictator a close association of countries 4. economic collapse Italian Fascist party leader during World War II 5. fasces the financial panic and downfall of a country 6. fascism extreme totalitarian government run by a dictator and based on highly-emotional nationalism 7. Mussolini rods bound by straps, blade of an axe protrudes from the rods symbolizing unity and strength, used as a symbol for power and jurisdiction 8. suppress a sole ruler of a nation; often cruel and abusive
Answer:
1- The addition of Texas added to the happening to the Mexican-American War
2- The contention began, to a limited extent, over a contradiction about which waterway was Mexico's actual northern fringe: the Nueces or the Rio Grande
Explanation:
The fundamental driver of the war was the affirmation of Texas into the United States of America. Since Mexico didn't perceive Texas' freedom after their effective resistance to the Mexican government it was viewed as an intrusion into Mexican domain once Texas acknowledged the greeting into the United States.
1. so they can keep track of how many are voting
2.to help count the ballets.
3.to make sure you qualify as a legal voter.
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Answer:
Hope this helps luv!!...lmk if not
Explanation:
The Bastar Rebellion, also known as the bhumkal (earthquake) was an Adivasi rebellion in 1910 against the British Raj in the princely state of Bastar in central India. It was led primarily led by Gunda Dhur, a tribal leader, as well as by a diwan and cousin of the king, Lal Karendra Singh.