Answer: Liberal
Explanation:
Louis XVI approved French military support for the American colonies in their successful struggle against the British, but the expense nearly bankrupted the country. Louis convened the Estates-General in an effort to solve his budget crisis, but by doing so he unwittingly sparked the French Revolution.
Yes, victory by the Union was inevitable regardless of how well the Confederacy fought or the intervention of any external potential allies.
Why? The North had a demographic advantage over the South - There were more people living the North than the South.
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Answer:
A. Diary entries written by colonial leaders who believed that American Indians were not equal to Europeans.
Explanation:
Diary entries by Spanish conquistador or English leaders portrayed the Indians as barbarians. They saw the native Americans as unequal to their status. According to them, Native Indians were primitive, which convey their lifestyle, which subsisted through hunting, fishing, and gathering wild plants. The Natives Indians had their languages, customs, religions, and practices, which according to the Europeans, considered heathens and pagan. The only purpose of these colonizers was to take away lands that belonged to the Natives Americans before the arrival of European in America.
Elected public officials in the Roman Republic were called magistrates.
There were many different levels and titles of magistrates, so here are a few examples:
Censor - Censor's were in charge of the count of citizens (population) and also had a few responsibilities to look after public virtue and public finances.
Governor - A governor's responsibility was to collect taxes and be in charge of the local Roman army. Governor's are also known as proconsuls.
Consuls - Consuls were at the top of the Roman Republic. They had the decisions of what the laws were, if they wanted to go to war, and also taxes.
The other titles of magistrates are: Consuls, Senators, Plebeian Council, Tribunes, Governors, Aedile, and Censor.
Answer:
Deity) a god or goddess (in a polytheistic religion)., Polytheistic) relating to or characterized by belief in or worship of more than one god. Ziggurat) (in ancient Mesopotamia) a rectangular stepped tower, sometimes surmounted by a temple. Ziggurats are first attested in the late 3rd millennium BC and probably inspired the biblical story of the Tower of Babel (Gen. 11:1–9)., Secular) denoting attitudes, activities, or other things that have no religious or spiritual basis. or (of clergy) not subject to or bound by religious rule; not belonging to or living in a monastic or other order.
Explanation: