The answer would be the successful overthrow by a European power of a foreign local government. This is on account of the Ethiopian ruler Tewodros II submitted suicide when he understood he'd lost the last skirmish of the crusade, which was mounted by Britain to free British and other European prisoners seized by Tewodros.
<u>Answer</u>:
During the Gilded Age, the government passed legislation to accomplish many goals. Some of the goals are
(B) actively help people
(C) handle the great number of people living in cities
(D) help small businesses
<u>Explanation</u>:
Gilded age is the period when the American economy grew at a fastest rate in its history. It transformed America in economical, social and technological ways. This period is also referred to as the “nadir of American race relations,” which means racism was worst during this time, worse than the time during American Civil War.
There was urbanisation and large number of people moved into cities. So, government had to pass legislation to help these large number people who had moved in. It also passed legislation to help small businesses.
<span>Hitler acquired absolute dictatorial powers, through the enabling act, which directly followed. "T</span>he Reichstag fire and dirty politicking."
Answer:
In the Middle Ages these would be the knights, the people right before the nobles in the class system. Knights were needed in order to protect the noble's land from other nobles and their armies, as well as rouges and barbarians that still roamed the area in hopes of stealing from the wealthy.
Answer:
D.All the above
Explanation:
The revolution of 1830 is the transfer of power from the Bourbon house to the Orleans house, under the principle of popular sovereignty over the king’s divine right and the establishment of a liberal regime in France. In 1848, there was the bourgeois-democratic revolution, whose task was to establish civil rights and freedoms (which subsequently resulted in the Louis Philippe I abdication of the throne and the proclamation of the Second Republic).
Both revolutions represented a movement towards the expansion of the democratic rights and freedoms of the French; the first one was anti-monarchist (against the Bourbons), while the second was anti-oligarchic.