Although several of these women were involved in supporting women's suffrage movement, the best options from this list are "Susan B. Anthony & Elizabeth Cady"
Answer:
The question is incomplete. This is the complete question:
What territories did the US gain as a result of winning the Spanish-American War?
The territories gained by the US included Cuba, Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Philippines
Explanation:
The Treaty of Paris (1898)—which was a treaty signed by the US and Spain, and a product of the Spanish-American War—consisted of agreements and terms of negotiation that favored the US, and allowed it to gain the territories of Cuba, Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Philippines—which, prior to the Paris treaty of 1898, were controlled by Spain. The US became a major power and player in the Pacific region after it gained these territories.
Answer:
a.
Explanation:
It is hard to answer with so little context, however during the war, when the allies found out about concentration camps- they did not know the extent of it. Their primary concern was to defeat Hitler's regime to stop the spread of Nazi/ totalitarian sentiments. When they began their invasion into Germany, the allies, especially the soviets, began liberating the camps. What they found horrified them beyond belief. They did not realize the horrendous extent of Hitler's torture. They then realized how horrible those camps truly were.
But like I said, their primary goal during the war was not to liberate the camps. It was to defeat Hitler.
The first developed societies showed up in Nubia before the time of the First dynasty of Egypt (3100-2890 B.C.E.). Around 2500 B.C.E., Egyptians began moving south, and it is through them that most of our knowledge of Kush (Cush) comes. This expansion was halted by the fall of the Middle Kingdom of Egypt. About 1500 B.C.E. Egyptian expansion resumed, but this time encountered organized resistance. Historians are not sure whether this resistance came from multiple city states or a single unified empire, and debate over whether the notion of statehood was indigenous or borrowed from the Egyptians. The Egyptians prevailed, and the region became a colony of Egypt under the control of Thutmose I, whose army ruled from a number of sturdy fortresses. The region supplied Egypt with resources, especially gold. Although ruled by foreigners from about 1500 until about 780 B.C.E. the people of Kush prospered, enjoying internal and external peace. They greatly benefited from their physical location on important trade routes and appear to have taken full advantage of this by developing a commercial