"A. Historians know more about ancient Sumer today than
<span> historians did long ago because of archaeological digs over the last two centuries," "</span><span>B. When King Tut’s tomb was discovered undisturbed
in the 1920s, we gained a greater understanding of the Egyptians’
belief in the afterlife," and "C. With the discovery of Pompeii, we learned
that life for the upper-class Romans offered comforts and pleasures" are all correct. </span>
Answer:
The first ten amendments protect basic freedoms; especially of the minority groups. It was added to the Constitution to protect the people from the national government from having too much power. Adding the Bill of Rights helped change many people's minds to ratify the Constitution.
The south used these laws to prevent African Americans from voting although it backfired since many of the white southerners didn't have money or much education either.
C. The colony’s conflict with American Indians contributed to tensions between its own social classes.
Bacon's Rebellion was a rebellion led by Nathaniel Bacon of western farmers against the coastal elite in charge of the colonial government.
Western farmers were requesting aid from the Virginia colonial government in dealing with issues with Indians on the frontier. The government was full of wealthy, government officials who refused to help the farmers on the frontier who had less money and influence than the coastal elite. This rebellion was sparked by trouble with Indians but in the end revealed the problems by the social classes in the colony.
Answer:
Those who examine the impact of the Holocaust on politics deal with the extent, depth, type, and dynamics of the impact but not with the impact itself. The impact itself is considered axiomatic because it is so sweeping and vast. Since the issue is so large and made up of so many overt and covert associations - direct and indirect, Jewish and pan-human, immediate and belated, ethical and practical - a general framework that presents and diagnoses the matter becomes, by nature, a telegraphic prologue to innumerable studies already carried out and yet to come.
Explanation: