The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Thomas Rowlandson's portrayal of eighteenth-century society was different from Lemonnier's in the following way.
French artist Anicet-Charles Limmonier depicts the scene of aristocratic people at the Mari Rodette Geoffrin's saloon. These aristocratic people are paying attention to the lecture of famous Enlightenment thinker Voltaire. The painting is very colorful and we can see the elegant apparel of the aristocrats.
On the other hand, the portrayal of the famous British cartoonist Thomas Rowlandson's portraits middle-class people in a totally different environment: a middle-class Caffe, in Salisbury Marketplace. The environment is more relaxed, and patrons are reading newspapers and having light conversations.
In the times of the Enlightenment, people used to meet at coffee shops or saloons to talk about the issues of the time.
It was made legal in 1866 and this law made it unlawful to refuse to trade or deal
How regularly the resources are needed
Answer:
Explanation:
Brazil's abolitionist movement was timid and removed, in part because it was an urban movement at a time when most slaves worked on rural properties. Yet the abolitionst movement was also more concerned with freeing the white population from what had come to be viewed as the burden of slavery.
Mound Builders, in North American prehistory, was the designation granted to those people who raised mounds in a large field from the Mississippi River to the Appalachian Mts and Great Lakes to the Gulf of Mexico. The most prominent congregations of mounds are recognized in the Ohio plains. The hills matched 65 ft. in height and were fashioned solely by standard labor. Mound builders existed in dome-shaped houses constructed with pole walls and thatched rooftops.