The Great Schism was between the Roman Catholic Church and the Greek Orthodox Church.
The Great Schism refers to a conflictive religious event that occurred in 1054. In this conflict there was a mutual rupture and excommunication between the highest hierarch of the Catholic Church in Rome, the Pope or Bishop of Rome (together with the Christianity of Occident), and the ecclesiastical hierarchies of the Orthodox Church (together with the Christianity of the East) especially the principal of them, the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople.
Unlike the radical Republicans<span> Reconstruction </span>plan Lincoln did<span> not want to punish the South but instead wanted them to rejoin the Union as quickly as possible. </span>Johnson's Plan<span>: President </span>Johnson<span> (who was </span>Lincolns<span> successor). ... The </span>radical Republicans<span> also gave more protection to the freed black men than </span>Johnson<span>.</span>
Answer:
C
Explanation:
The Voting Rights Act of 1965 outlawed poll taxes, literacy tests, and other devices that had been used to prevent Southern blacks from voting. Together, these two acts constituted the most comprehensive civil rights legislation ever passed, and were a paramount achievement of Johnson's presidency. No other answer has "Voting Rights Act" so it's C.
Answer:
The first regularly elected president of the Republic of Texas.
Explanation:
Sam Houston was an American politician and soldier who was born on the 2nd of March, 1793 in Virginia, United States of America.
Sam Houston, Commander-in-Chief of the Texan army, is best known as the first and third regularly elected president of the Republic of Texas. Houston was elected as the first president of the Republic of Texas on the 22nd of October, 1836 and he left office on the 10th of December, 1838.
Also, Sam Houston is the only American to have been elected as the governor of two (2) different states in the United States of America; he was elected as the 6th governor of Tennessee and the 7th governor of Texas in 1827 and 1859 respectively.