C. Andrew Johnson
Andrew Johnson was the seventeenth president of the US and followed Lincoln after his assassination. He was a Democrat and as vice president offered a good bridge to the South as the Civil War was ending but as president he was not trusted by the Republicans.
Andrew Johnson pardoned Confederate leaders, allowing them to keep their land and sometimes positions in society. He provided an easy path back into the Union and did not protect blacks from the growing power of groups like the Ku Klux Klan. Johnson vetoed a civil rights act that would have prevented segregation and violence against former slaves. His policies would convince Republicans that they would have to take Reconstruction over in Congress.
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I believe that the answer for this is C but I'm not sure if that's correct
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(Hope this helps can I pls have brainlist (crown) ☺️)
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Cleopatra actively impacted Roman politics during her reign as queen of Egypt (51–30 BCE), and was particularly well-known for her ties with Julius Caesar and Mark Antony. She became the paradigm of the romantic femme fatale, as no other lady in antiquity had. Cleopatra has been the subject of several books, plays, and films.
Cleopatra, full name Cleopatra VII Thea Philopator ("Cleopatra the Father-Loving Goddess"), Egyptian queen (born 70/69 BCE, died August 30 BCE, Alexandria), famed in history and theatre as Julius Caesar's lover and subsequently as Mark Antony's bride. After her father, Ptolemy XII, died in 51 BCE, she became queen and reigned with her two brothers, Ptolemy XIII (51–47) and Ptolemy XIV (47–44), as well as her son, Ptolemy XV Caesar (44–30).
A fire and brimstone preacher, Jonathan Edwards was a stalwart Puritan and much of his Calvinist background is apparent in the frightening imagery of his sermon, "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God." In fact, the image of the bottomless pit of hell whose fiery floods wax high enough to burn the gossamer thread that holds the unworthy souls over it evoked so much terror in the congregation of Edwards that women fainted and men became terrorized and trembled.
This sermon of Edwards is constructed around a passage from Deuteronomy in the Old Testament of the King James Version of the Bible: "Their foot shall slide in due time." Using the metaphor of a slippery slide, Edwards, at a revival where his famous sermon was given, points to the dangers of spiritual sliding. The yawning abyss waits for the sinners, whose wickedness makes them "heavy as lead," and only the "mere pleasure" of God keeps them from burning in the images of "fiery floods" and "fire of wrath." The image of a "bow" for God's wrath that can easily bend and send forth its arrow is an unnerving one, indeed, as the "slender thread" dangling near the "flames of divine wrath" which can singe it at any moment.