Explanation:
More than 3 million people (including over 58,000 Americans) were killed in the Vietnam War, and more than half of the dead were Vietnamese civilians. ... Communist forces ended the war by seizing control of South Vietnam in 1975, and the country was unified as the Socialist Republic of Vietnam the following year.
B is the right answer. All of the other options would show a decrease in the emphasis on knowledge and education.
Crops include eggplant, legumes, locust bean, marama, marula, moringa, potatoes, butterfruit and grains etc. For the livestock, African production grew cattles, camels, cows, pig, chicken, sheep and other animals that contribute to the growth and balance of agricultural and ecological development.
A communist system of government is an economic system where the government plans and controls the economy with a single party governing and administering power that is authoritarian in nature. The state controls are imposed with an elimination of the privatisation of property or capital with a claim to make progress towards a higher social order where goods and services are equally shared among the people i.e, the classless society.
Answer:
In this painting called 'The Triumph of Marat', Marat is being carried by the people, the scene shows the people in a jubilant mood, celebrating the acquittal of Marat by the Revolution tribunal.
Marat's radical views and the zeal he voiced them with made him very popular among the lower classes within Paris and in the provinces.
A painting like this would have likely produced a mixed reaction from viewers in the salon, because of what a controversial figure Marat was.
Explanation:
Jean Paul Marat was French political theorist who was an advocate of extreme revolutionary views and measures. He was a prominent figure in the French Revolution, and was very popular with the lower classes of Paris.
The painting in figure 16 in chapter 1 of the NCERT titled 'The triumph of Marat' depicts him being carried jubilantly by the people after he was acquitted by the Revolutionary tribunal.
This painting would have produced mixed reactions from the viewers in the salon because Marat was such a controversial figure, and paintings of him at the time were mostly showing the scene of his assassination. But this painting showed him in a positive light.