Answer:
Correct answer is Colonists were angered that they were not represented in the British government
.
Explanation:
First option is not correct as colonists believed in the democracy and in the equal representations of citizens in the British Empire.
Second option is correct as although they participated in the war, helped Britain to win the war, but still had no representative in the British government that would fight for the rights of the colonists.
Third option is not correct as this had no connection with their ideals and problems.
The answer is Abu Bakr and Ali. It was the difference between the Shiites and the Sunnis.
Answer:
They hoped to destroy the entire American Fleet which they discovered was stationed in Pearl Harbor.
Explanation:
The excerpt reflects the viewpoint of Federalists.
The above appreciations can be found in Alexander Hamilton text "The utility of the union as a safeguard against domestic faction and insurrection." In it, the idea of the Confederate Republic defined by Hamilton as an <em>assemblage of societies</em> is characterized. It defines the extension up to which democracy should operate.
Thus, the ideas in the excerpt are also, some of the ones that constitute what Hamilton referred to as the <em>science of politics and representation</em>, which contained elements that categorized an innovative government as the US is.
No, Richard III is Richard III in William Shakespeare's play. He was known as a cruel and vicious man, capable of murdering children just so that he could get the throne. He is the subject of Shakespeare's play of the same name. Richard Topcliffe was a famous torturer, but he is not the subject of this play.