Answer:
They both had different political views
Athens had a more free life style but Spartans started to train for the military at the age of 7.
Spartans didn't care about education if it wasn't about warfare.
Athens cared about grace and beauty
Athens treated women badly; they were to be silently raising their children. In Sparta, however, they had military training, participated in sports events, and overall had more rights than women of all other empires of Ancient Greece.
Explanation:
False
Dennis Banks (1937-2017) was a Native American and was never mayor of Los Angeles. He was co-founder and longtime leader of the American Indian Movement (AIM).
When Antonio Villaraigosa was elected mayor of Los Angeles in 2005, he became the first Latino mayor of that city since <span>Jose Cristobal Aguilar, who had served as Los Angeles' mayor in the 1860s and 1870s.
The National League of Cities lists Henry Cisneros, who was mayor of San Antonio from </span><span>1981 to 1989, as the first Mexican-American mayor of a major city.</span>
Answer:
Slavery
Explanation:The United States became a continental nation with the purchase of Louisiana from France in 1803 and the settlement of the lands beyond the Appalachian Mountains. Westward expansion fueled conflict with Native populations and led to their forced removal. By 1820, 2 million Americans lived west of the Appalachians, out of a total national population of 10 million. The regional cultures that had developed along the Atlantic Coast—New England, Middle Atlantic, Chesapeake, and Carolinas—were transplanted into the Old Northwest (Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, and Wisconsin) and the Old Southwest (Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Missouri, Tennessee, and Texas). But although Americans had begun to identify themselves as a nation, they were divided by sectional interests that deepened with rapid industrialization and the question of slavery.
<span>a church building recognized as a great architectural achievement of Justinian's reign</span>