Mercantilism is an economic system that dominated the major European trading nations during the sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries. This "mercantile system" was based on the premise that national wealth and power were best served by increasing exports and collecting precious metals in return
The <span>modern-day name for the country from which knights traveled to invade England in 1066 is "B. France," since this was referred to as the "Norman Invasion". </span>
A trust is basically a monopoly. When anti-trust laws are brought up, they basically are laws that make sure monopolies are stopped, since they discourage competition among businesses. Hope this helps!
They send the case back (remand it) to the trial court for a new trial Hope this helps! :D
Answer:
Radical Republicans
Leader(s) Senator John C. Frémont (Calif.)
Senator Charles Sumner (Mass.)
Representative Thaddeus Stevens (Pa.)
President Ulysses S. Grant (Ohio)
Founded 1854
Dissolved 1877
Merger of Ex-Free Soilers
Succeeded by Stalwarts
Ideology Abolitionism
Reconstructionism
National affiliation Republican Party
Politics of United States
Political parties
Elections
The Radical Republicans were a faction of American politicians within the Republican Party of the United States from around 1854 (before the American Civil War) until the end of Reconstruction in 1877. They called themselves "Radicals", with a goal of immediate, complete, permanent eradication of slavery, without compromise. They were opposed during the War by the moderate Republicans (led by United States President Abraham Lincoln), by the conservative Republicans, and by the pro-slavery and anti-Reconstruction Democratic Party as well as by conservatives in the South and liberals in the North during Reconstruction. Radicals led efforts after the war to establish civil rights for former slaves and fully implement emancipation. After weaker measures in 1866 resulted in violence against former slaves in the rebel states, Radicals pushed the Fourteenth Amendment and statutory protections through Congress. They disfavored allowing ex-Confederates officers to retake political power in the South, and emphasized equality, civil rights and voting rights for the "freedpeople", i.e. people who had been enslaved by state slavery laws within the United States.[1]
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