What is this a question to
The answer is A. They had an alliance called the blank check with them
|. Themes.
Theme 1: The Roman Empire.
Theme 2: Christianity.
2. Events for themes.
Theme 1: THE ROMAN EMPIRE.
There are many important events you could choose from the Roman Empire but here are a few examples:
- Event 1: Founding of the city of Rome (753 B.C.)
- Event 2: Julio Cesar becomes the first Roman dictator (45 BC).
- Event 3: Julio Cesar's assassination and the beginning of a civil war (44 BC).
- Event 4: Ceasar August becomes the first Roman Emperor, so the Roman Empire begins (27 BC).
- Event 5: Emperor Romulus Augustus is defeated by the Germans, this is the end of the Western Roman Empire and the fall of ancient Rome (476 AD).
Theme 2: CHRISTIANITY.
Christianity and the Roman empire's timelines have a very strong correlation and some of their main events could actually be the same (especially at the very early stages of Christianity), but below I will try to include different ones from some of the ones I included for the first theme, again these are just some examples of a very vast variety to choose from.
- Event 1: Jesus of Nazareth is born (4 BC).
- Event 2: Death of Jesus (30 CE).
- Event 3: The Roman emperor Nero starts the persecution of Christians (64 AD).
- Event 4: Emperor Theodosius makes Christianity the official religion of the Roman Empire (380 AD).
- Event 5: The Christian Church splits into the eastern (Orthodox) part and the western (Catholic) part (1504 AD).
Joseph Stalin
Georgian-born revolutionary Joseph Stalin rose to power upon Lenin’s death in 1924. The dictator ruled by terror with a series of brutal policies, which left millions of his own citizens dead. During his reign—which lasted until his death in 1953—Stalin transformed the Soviet Union from an agrarian society to an industrial and military superpower.
Stalin implemented a series of Five-Year Plans to spur economic growth and transformation in the Soviet Union. The first Five-Year Plan focused on collectivizing agriculture and rapid industrialization. Subsequent Five-Year Plans focused on the production of armaments and military build-up.
Between 1928 and 1940, Stalin enforced the collectivization of the agricultural sector. Rural peasants were forced to join collective farms. Those that owned land or livestock were stripped of their holdings. Hundreds of thousands of higher-income farmers, called kulaks, were rounded up and executed, their property confiscated.
The Communists believed that consolidating individually owned farms into a series of large state-run collective farms would increase agricultural productivity. The opposite was true.