Answer:
its true
Explanation:
French for "blow of state"), usually shortened to coup,[1] (also known as an overthrow) is a seizure and removal of a government and its powers. Typically, it is a violent, illegal, unconstitutional seizure of power by a political faction, military, or a dictator.[2] Many scholars consider a coup successful when the usurpers seize and hold power for at least seven days.
The people who resisted slavery were abolitionist
Answer:
Explanation:
symbols, language, art/ artifacts, religion, values, and norms are aspects of culture because thats what makes everyone different from the next and thats what makes the culture a culture
There were several Native American chiefs in the Great Sioux War of 1876. Sitting Bull and Crazy horse were the two most famous of them. Crazy Horse was a Lakota Chief of the Oglala Tribe who fought several battles against the US army. His most famous war feat was serving as a decoy that lured General Custer into an ambush that ended with a victory for Native Americans. He was killed by a military guard while imprisoned in Nebraska for allegedly resisting incarceration in 1877.
Sitting Bull was a Lakota Chief of the Hunkpapa tribe who fought against the federal army for years before joining other chiefs, including Crazy Horse and inflicting a sever victory over American army men under the command of General Custer in Little Big horn. He was on the run until 1881 when he surrendered to US forces. After a period of incarceration he met Annie Oakley and joined Buffalo Bill Cody’s Wild West Show. At the time of this death he intended to join the Ghost Dance movement and was the subject of an arrest attempt that went wrong and ended up in his death by the gun of a US Indian agent in his reservation in North Dakota on December of 1890.