C. Some school systems were shut down instead of integrating schools.
For example, in Prince Edward County, Virginia, the school system was shut down for five years rather than integrate their schools. Other school systems in Virginia were also part of this "massive resistance" movement against the Brown v. Board decision -- a strategy declared by Virginia Senator Robert Byrd.
Answer:
jhdvjbSFIHBVsbvjabvuafj
Explanation:
jhfliauwbvajwbvjshweuhfoiewhfiw
knjkv
The Mannerism and the Baroque Styles came after the Renaissance movement. Mannerism broke the basic rules of the High Renaissance like balance, harmony, and moderation.
Baroque was adopted by the Catholic church and showed power. Its main characteristics were rich details, dramatic effects, the heavy use of gold.
Both of those movements broke basic principles of the renaissance of balance, harmony, and moderation. Rules of proportion were ignored and religion was the main subject, it was a religious revival.
<span>One factor that spurred economic growth of the United States in the late 1800's was mass production, or the ability of certain factories and other workplaces to create mass amounts of food, materials, or other basic needs. A second factor that influenced growth was geographic expansion, when certain regions began having inhabitants who created small towns and the generation of business and wealth.</span>
The French Wars of Religion were a prolonged period of war and popular unrest between Roman Catholics and Huguenots (Reformed/Calvinist Protestants) in the Kingdom of France between 1562 and 1598. It is estimated that three million people perished in this period from violence, famine, or disease in what is considered the second deadliest religious war in European history (surpassed only by the Thirty Years' War, which took eight million lives).[1]
Much of the conflict took place during the long regency of Queen Catherine de' Medici, widow of Henry II of France, for her minor sons. It also involved a dynastic power struggle between powerful noble families in the line for succession to the French throne: the wealthy, ambitious, and fervently Roman Catholic ducal House of Guise (a cadet branch of the House of Lorraine, who claimed descent from Charlemagne) and their ally Anne de Montmorency, Constable of France (i.e., commander in chief of the French armed forces) versus the less wealthy House of Condé (a branch of the House of Bourbon), princes of the blood in the line of succession to the throne who were sympathetic to Calvinism. Foreign allies provided financing and other assistance to both sides, with Habsburg Spain and the Duchy of Savoy supporting the Guises, and England supporting the Protestant side led by the Condés and by the Protestant Jeanne d'Albret, wife of Antoine de Bourbon, King of Navarre, and her son, Henry of Navarre.