Answer:
Attacks of Germanic groups, violence and break down of trade.
Explanation:
The problems faced by western Europe after the fall of the Roman Empire are attacks of Germanic groups, violence and break down of trade. Germanic invaders attacked on western European cities and cause great damage to the people as well as property. The kings were too weak to repel the invaders so many citizens of the city moved into the countryside in order to save their lives. The Magna Carta was written in order to get peace and void violence between the king and the rebels. Everyone is subject to the law, even the king, guarantees the rights to every individuals, the right to justice and the right to a fair trial are the key points of Magna Carta. Magna Carta has directly influenced future political thoughts and the creation of laws, such as the United States Constitution, Declaration of Independence and Bill of Rights.
No, but i wont tell the little ones that =w='
Answer: He greatly supported the Confederacy, meaning that Texas joined their side during the Civil War.
Explanation:
After he was elected governor of Texas in 1861, Lubbock took steps to increase Texas' miltary strength. He greatly supported the draft imposed by the Confederacy of able-(white) men, going as far as to oppose or deny conscription excemptions, recomending white cattle ranchers to use slaves in order to free up white workers who could be conscripted and incorporated into the Confederate army. He also set out to build military facilities and factories in Texas to aid in the war effort against the Union. He organized Civil Courts not recognized as legitimate, imprisoning or linching suspected Union supporters in Texas. After the end of his term as governor, he joined the Confederate army as Liutenant Colonel.
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.