Answer:
Napoleon Bonaparte
Jacques-Pierre Brissot
Charles de Calonne
Lazare Carnot
Marquis de Lafayette
Louis XVI
Marie-Antoinette
Jacques Necker
Explanation:
There might be more but I don't know
The transatlantic slave trade began in the 15th century<span>, after the Portuguese started exploring the coast of West Africa.</span>
Benjamin Franklin was the leading figure of the American Enlightenment and a physicist with many inventions in the field of electricity, such as lightning rods, bifocal glasses, etc. He founded many civic organizations including the Library. He was also a political theorist, mason, statesman, diplomat, inventor, humorist. His father wanted Benjamin to attend a school with a priesthood, but he only had money to send him to school for two years. He attended the Boston Latin School, but he could not graduate, he continued his education only by reading a lot. While still attending school, he turned out to be very talented because in only one year from the middle class, he was reaching to the very top. His formal education ended when he was ten, after which he worked with his father for some time, starting with twelve as an assistant in the printing press with his brother. So he did not end formal education to work with his father and brother, but he started working with his father and brother, because he could not continue his education because of the financial situation.
The answer is: He failed out of school.
Answer:
Explanation:
We the people for rhetoric people
Missouri Compromise
The Missouri Compromise split the Louisiana Territory with the North being free from slavery and the South being allowed to have slavery.
The issue of slavery was a rising concern and with each state entering into the Union the balance of slave and free states was skewing. With a new land mass to be concerned with, the government needed a compromise to deal with new states coming into the Union in an effort to maintain slave v. free states. Missouri was entered as a slave state and Maine entered as a free state. The compromise also set the 36'30 line splitting Louisiana Territory. The compromise would last until 1850.