The Statue of Liberty was modeled after Libertas, Roman goddess of freedom.
She came from the French
The torch is a symbol of enlightenment. Which lights the way to freedom, showing a pathway to Liberty.
She was created on October 28, 1886.
(She was a gift from the French people commemorating the alliance of France and the United States during the American Revolution.)
She is 305’ .
The answer is athena. Regardless of the dynamic engineering attributes of the Parthenon, the statue of Athena was intended to be the point of convergence. Its sobriquet was a fundamental character of the goddess herself. Various copies and works roused by it, both old and present day, have been made.
The correct answer is Italy
They were a terrorist organization in Italy in the 70s and 80s and they committed numerous criminal activities such as kidnappings, killings, robberies, and all other kind of bad stuff. They based their behavior and their style of fighting the government on Latin American guerillas. They dissolved in 1988 after numerous years of doing what they wanted.
D. All of the above because many considered him guilty by associations, also many of his friends had taken bribes or stolen government resources. So the answer has to be D all of the above.
Pocahontas was the daughter of Powhatan, the leader of an alliance of about 30 Algonquian-speaking groups and petty chiefdoms in Tidewater Virginia known as Tsenacommacah. Her mother’s identity is unknown.
Historians have estimated Pocahontas’ birth year as around 1595, based on the 1608 account of Captain John Smith in A True Relation of Virginia and Smith’s subsequent letters. Even Smith is inconsistent on the question of her age, however. Although English narratives would remember Pocahontas as a princess, her childhood was probably fairly typical for a girl in Tsenacommacah.
Pocahontas was a favorite of her father's – his "delight and darling,” according to the colonist Captain Ralph Hamor – but she was not a princess in the sense of inheriting a political station. Like most young females, she learned how to forage for food and firewood, farm and building thatched houses. As one of Powhatan’s many daughters, she would have contributed to the preparation of feasts and other celebrations.
Like many Algonquian-speaking Virginia Indians of the period, Pocahontas probably had several names, to be used in various contexts. Early in her life she was called Matoaka but was later known as Amonute. The name Pocahontas was used in childhood, probably in a casual or family context.