I think it was NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization).
Charlemagne reunited Western Europe. He built an empire that reached across three countries.
The statement is<u> false</u> that successful as they were on rivers and lakes, steamboats were never able to cross the <em>Atlantic</em>
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<h3>What made steamboats successful? </h3>
Steamboat was not able to <u>cross</u> the Atlantic due to the use of a large amount of coal in it. However, with the invention of technology, the <u>hybrid steamboat </u>was designed during <em>1818.</em>
Therefore, the boat was named Savannah that crossed Atlantic to sail in the year of 1819.
Learn more about steamboats here:
brainly.com/question/1007031
The correct answer is - c: Gilgamesh Epic.
The Gilgamesh Epic represents the Babylonian account of the Flood. This is the most famous Babylonian epic and it dates back to the Sumerians. It is written in Akkadian language somewhere in the late second century BC. The main character is Gilgamesh, who was a Sumerian ruler, who ruled somewhere between 2800 and 2500 BC.
Correct answer: A. President Jefferson purchased the Louisiana Territory from France.
Explanation:
Initially, President Thomas Jefferson had commissioned James Monroe and Robert Livingston to negotiate a deal with France to acquire New Orleans or all or part of Florida, as a means of avoiding the potential of an armed conflict in such areas. Monroe and Livingston were authorized to spend up to $10 million. What they found out was that Napoleon was already set to sell a much wider range of territory to the United States, to finance his European wars. Napoleon was asking $22 million for the whole territory that became the Louisiana Purchase. The US team negotiated the price down to $15 million. The deal with France was made in 1803.
Then, however, there was a constitutional crisis back home. Did the President have the authority under the constitution to make such a major addition to the nation's territory and spend the nation's funds to do so? Ultimately, Jefferson was convinced by his Cabinet members and sent the measure to Congress for approval. In a statement he made at the time, Jefferson justified the purchase with this analogy: "“It is the case of a guardian, investing the money of his ward in purchasing an important adjacent territory; and saying to him when of age, I did this for your good."