<em>Huguenots would find a welcome and prosperous trade network along the lengths of </em><em>the Rodano river.</em><em> </em>
The Huguenots were groups of Calvinist Protestants who lived in the area currently shared by France and Switzerland on the banks of the Rhone River, which was the main commercial route between southern and northern Europe. Both trade and ideas flowed rapidly in the reformist era.
In times of the Roman Empire, important civil works were made such as ports, canalizations, bridges, connections between different rivers, etc., to enhance the commercial deployment between the countries of the Mediterranean coasts, the Central European regions such as Switzerland, and those of northern Europe as Germany, the Netherlands and even England crossing the channel of the spot.
The Huguenots were persecuted in France by the State and the Catholic Church and many of them (some 200,000) emigrated to other European countries such as the Netherlands, England and Germany. They also emigrated to the British colonies of the United States as active promoters of American emancipation and pioneers in deploying liberal ideas in the United States. They founded some ephemeral colonies in Florida, but did not participate in the colonization of the Mississippi River because these territories were dominated by the official French power from which they had fled.
What exactly are you supposed to put in the blanks?
Answer:
The right choice is:
B. equal voting rights for women
Explanation:
The act granted the right to vote to all males of any race, color or previous condition of servitude. There was not female vote in the USA by then. Another provisions are: freedom of religion was preserved but polygamy and plural mariage were forbidden; manufacture and sale of liquor were prohibited; public schools were established with English instruction.
Answer:
The Bizantine Empire is the "new" Roman Empire.
Explanation:
The Bizantine Empire was the eastern continuation of the Roman Empire after the Western Roman Empire's collapse in the fifth century CE.