Roman confederation gave the people more rights and allowed them to have their culture.
Explanation:
Roman confederation and the eventual empire that became from it had one very different purpose fro the others in that it did not differentiate with the new citizens of the country who had come in by conquest.
Instead all they had to do was pay taxes and recognize themselves as roman citizen.
They could keep speaking their language and worshiping their religion as well as have abilities to control and garner wealth in certain alliances too making it good to be a roman citizen for them.
Moctezuma was the second Aztec from 1440 to 1469 emperor and during his government, the Empire was consolidated, territorial expansion was done, and Tenochtitlan became the dominant partner of the Aztec Alliance.
Moctezuma was the son of emperor Huitzilihuitl . After his father’s death, Moctezuma's brother ruled for some years and then he was elected to power. Moctezuma solidified the alliance with neighboring states, bringing social, economical, and political reforms that were beneficial to the relations with other tribes and gave them access to exotic things such as cocoa, rubber, cotton, fruits, feathers, and seashells.
Option D is the right answer.
The Montgomery Bus Boycott was a major success of the Civil Rights movement. This boycott was a social and political protest campaign against the doctrine of racial discrimination in public transportation. The boycott began when an African- American lady was imprisoned for denying to quit her chair to a White man. And this protest resulted in the Supreme Court's verdict that claimed the Montgomery and Alabama laws that segregated buses were illegal.
Answer:
Muckraker, any of a group of American writers identified with pre-World War I reform and exposé literature. The muckrakers provided detailed, accurate journalistic accounts of the political and economic corruption and social hardships caused by the power of big business in a rapidly industrializing United States.
Explanation:
To keep either house of Congress from becoming too powerful. (Gradpoint)