Battle of Fort Albany – French forces engage and defeat British relief forces in Hudson Bay. 1689 Battle of Bantry Bay – France defeats the English
Answer:
Cortez and his men allied with neighboring tribes that also shared a hatred and dislike for the Aztecs. They besieged the aztec capital for around 90 days and with their superb weaponry and new disease called smallpox they were able to capture the Aztec capital Tenochtitlán.
Explanation:
Colonial era: british
WW1: American
WW2: British (America for the atom bomb... but thats just one weapon. and they massed produced everything else really)
after that: AMERICA!!
<em>Letter B </em>is correct. Oliver Cromwell was indeed a Calvinist protector of the Puritans in England, but he did not command any closure of theaters or Christmas banishment.
<em>Letter A and C: </em>Although John Locke is considered to be the 'father' of the Enlightenment. Empiricist and representative of the Liberal Individualism, he argued that sovereignty should not belong to the State, but to the people.
Although he was the first to propose the government powers separation in England, Charles Montesquieu (one of the most important representatives of the Enlightenment movement in France, along with Voltarie and Rousseau) also proposed that the power should be divided among Executive, Legislative and Judiciary.
<em>Letter D</em>: Benjamin Franklin, inventor, writer, philosopher, diplomat and one of the signatures under the U.S. Declaration of independence, was also fond of the Enlightenment ideals. Known as the greatest diplomat in the history of America, he was as popular as Voltaire in XVIII Century Enlightened France, what made him able to convince the French Monarchy to aid their cause against the Great Britain domain, towards the independence consolidation. Among his many deeds after inaugurating democracy in U.S., he engaged in several community-oriented projects, including the creation of libraries and universities for the population.
The correct answer is Sir Ernest Rutherford.
One of the first findings on atomic energy theory was reached in 1911 by Rutherford, who became known as the father of nuclear physics.
He discovered that the mass of the atom was concentrated in its nucleus, and proposed that the nucleus has a positive charge and is surrounded by negatively charged electrons, which had been discovered in 1897 by J. J. Thomson.
His theory was complemented in 1913 by Niels Bohr, who placed the electrons in definite shells or quantum levels.