The answers are,
<span>Russia’s defeat in war showed the czar’s inability to rule effectively
The intelligentsia and the working class demanded greater liberal reforms.
The social unrest in Russia's Tsar government because it did not address any of the problems with the transition problems of industrialization. The Russian empire was bureaucratic in decisions without considering and democratic form of system. </span>
Answer:
The correct options are the third and fifth one
Explanation:
The war of 1812, faced the newly independent US and Britain and its colony of Canada.
Recall that the United States had already achieved its independence in the war of 1775-1783 where the 13 American colonies were revealed against the British.
The United States by popular acclamation approved in Congress declares war on June 18, 1812. The one now is not a direct war against the island of Great Britain, but a form of liberation against the British drowning, resulting in an attack on the Canadian border that threatened the security and independence of his young country. Because Canada belonged at that time to the British Empire. Curiously, the Native American Indians saw in the British a protection against the overwhelming American advance that was moving westward. This thought was fueled by the battle of Tippecanoe in 1811 where American troops destroyed an Indian settlement.
Answer:
D
Explanation:
I remember this as a huge issue when it came to congress. Studied it 2 years ago.. It was a huge problem as majority population was in the north while few whites stayed in the south.
We need a picture of the diagram
1857, Roger B. Taney delivered his opinion as chief justice in the Dred Scott v Sandford. In it, he said that Dred Scott was not a U.S. citizen, so he could not sue in U.S. courts that he was a free man. Taney ruled that Scott was bound by Missouri's slave code because he lived in Missouri. Scott's time in free territory did not matter in this case. Taney argued that congress could not ban slavery in the territories. To do so, would violate the slaveholder's property rights, protected by the Fifth Amendment. In effect, Taney declared legislation such as the Missouri compromise unconstitutional.