El crash de 1929 fue una crisis del mercado bursátil que tuvo lugar en Nueva York entre el 24 de Octubre y el 29 de Octubre de 1929. Este evento marcó el comienzo de la Gran Depresión, la mayor crisis económica del siglo XX. Los días clave del crash se denominan: Jueves Negro (24 de Octubre), Lunes Negro (28 de Octubre) y Martes Negro (29 de Octubre).
It is a Democratic Republic, the representatives (republic) are selected by the people (democracy). In Rome having money and power already, made you a senator (representative) and not selection by the people. So they were just a republic. Hence SPQR (the senate and people of rome) was the official name for the roman republic.
Answer:
Both faced the challenge to create a new political system, a democratic government that would embody or satisfy the aspirations of freedom, equality and improvement of their peoples. In this regards, both cases were pioneers. The norm of the time was the monarchy, autocracy, tyranny.
The US wanted to break with Britain, the Old World, the old ways. American colonists aspired to be independent, rule themselves and take charge of their own affairs, build a new country on a new basis.
In France, revolutionary leaders wanted to finish the "ancien regime" or the old regime; the challenge in France was much more complicated and complex, because the old social and economic conditions and relatioships remained, needed to be destroyed or replaced, something that couldn´t happen without resistance; besides, the monarchies of Europe were angry at the ignominious end of a king and acted to attack and finish revolutionary France.
Explanation:
No. people we not allowed to worship
Clovis: was the son of Childeric I, a Merovingian king of the Salian Franks, and Basina, a Thuringian princess.
Sainte-Geneviève: wa<span>s the patron saint of Paris in the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox traditions.
</span>Maurice De Sully: <span>was Bishop of Paris from 1160 until his death.
</span>Saint-Denis: <span>was a legendary 3rd-century Christian martyr and </span>saint and <span>bishop of Paris in the third century and, together with his companions Rusticus and Eleutherius, was martyred for his faith by decapitation.
</span>John of Jandun: <span>was a French philosopher, theologian, and political writer.
</span>Guillebert de Metz: was <span>a Flemish copyist of the fifteenth century, alderman of Grammont, born around 1390-1391 and died after 1436. He is known to be the author of a Description of Paris (1434).
</span>Héloïse: <span>was a French nun, writer, scholar, and abbess, best known for her love affair and correspondence with Peter Abélard.
</span>Robert de Sorbon: <span>was a French theologian, the chaplain of Louis IX of France, and founder of the Sorbonne college in Paris.
</span>François Rabelais: <span>was a French Renaissance writer, physician, Renaissance humanist, monk and Greek scholar.
</span>Pierre Abélard: <span>was a medieval French scholastic philosopher, theologian and preeminent logician.
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Catherine de Médicis: <span>was an Italian noblewoman who was queen of France from 1547 until 1559, by marriage to King Henry II.
</span>Gaspard de Coligny: <span>was a French nobleman and admiral, best remembered as a disciplined Huguenot leader in the French Wars of Religion and a close friend and advisor to King Charles IX of France.</span>