The First Amendment guarantees four basic rights or freedoms.
Freedom of religion
Freedom of speech and the press
Right to assembly
Right to appeal to the government for action.
Answer:
Option D Greek City States
Example: Athens
<span>Hernán Cortés is one of the most well-known Spanish conquistadors. He is best remembered for conquering the Aztec empire and claiming Mexico for Spain. He also helped colonize Cuba and became a governor of New Spain.</span><span>
The Spanish scorned the Aztecs' religion and sought to convert them to Christianity</span>
Answer:
1. Bolsheviks
A radical political party that believed a revolution was the only way to bring about change in Russia.
The Bolsheviks were a radicalized political group within the Russian Social Democratic Labor Party, led from the beginning by Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov, also known as Vladimir Lenin, and later by Iosif Vissarionovich Dzhugashvili, also known as Stalin.
2. Menshevikso
A political party that believed reform would be gradual, with the bourgeoisie ruling until the proletariat were ready to take control.
The Mensheviks were a faction of Socialists that opposes the Reds.
3. Reds
The group led by Lenin during the Russian Revolution that promised "peace, land, and bread" for peasants who supported their cause.
The members of revolutionary communism who participated in the confrontations of the Russian Revolution of 1917 were called Reds.
4. Whites
The group during the Russian Revolution made up of Czar Nicholas’s forces, Mensheviks, and people who resisted communism.
The White Movement was made up of Russian counterrevolutionary nationalist forces, in many cases Pro-czarists, who after the October Revolution fought against the Red Army during the Russian Civil War from 1918 to 1921. They were supported by Western governments in the face of the threat of a world communist revolution.
The immediate cause of World War I that made the aforementioned items come into play (alliances, imperialism, militarism, nationalism) was the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria-Hungary. ... This assassination led to Austria-Hungary declaring war on Serbia.