<u>Question 1</u>
The correct answer is: "white men".
<u>Question 2</u>
The correct answer is: "involving common people in the democratic process"
The policies implemented by President Jackson, regarding suffrage and other democratic procedures, are grouped within the so-called Jacksonian democracy or Jacksonian Era.
His goverment extended suffrage to most white men by applying the so-called equal political policy, aiming to end what he considered an hegemony of the elites in government and in the practice of democracy. Although democracy was expanded, it was still limited to US citizens of European descent and was applicable to adult males only.
Hmmm, I do not know the passage however when a law is removed from being a law, it happens a few ways. The Supreme Court could decide that the law is unconstitutional and then it's removed. The president cannot veto a law after he has approved it, however, he can veto it while it's just a bill.
I hope this sort of helped, sorry if I was a bit unclear.
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Answer: a large building, typically of the medieval period, fortified against attack with thick walls, battlements, towers, and in many cases a moat.
Explanation:
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Answer:
he was a hero and is best known for his truly heroic final act: incarcerated in the Warsaw ghetto, with nearly 200 children from the orphanage he ran, he decided to refuse the offers of rescue he received from his Polish friends, and to accompany the children instead on their journey to Treblinka
Explanation:
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He broke with the Roman Catholic church when Catherine would not give him a divorce after 24 years of marriage. There were two reasons - he wanted a male heir and he had become in love with Anne Boleyn, a member of the court. This began the Church of England and the reformation in England.
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He began the Dissolution of the Monasteries and churches, sometimes referred to as the Suppression of the Monasteries. This was a set of administrative and legal processes between 1536 and 1541 which Henry VIII disbanded Catholic monasteries, priories, convents and friaries in England, Wales and Ireland, he then appropriated their wealth, disposed of their buildings by selling or using to build his own buildings. Although the policy was originally envisaged as increasing the regular income of the Crown, much of the former monastic property was sold off to fund Henry's military campaigns circa 1540s. He was given the authority to do this in England and Wales by the "Act of Supremacy", which he forced though Parliament in 1534. This made him Supreme Head of the Church in England, therefore separating England/Wales from the previous Papal authority, and by the First Suppression Act (1536) and the Second Suppression Act (1539).