George Washington was the first president of the United States in April of 1789
The relationship between the Yamato imperial family and the Minamoto family’s military government was D. The Yamato family formally served as part of the Minamoto military.
<h3>What is a Military Government?</h3>
This refers to the type of government that is comprised of military members that rule and governs a group of people or a country and is usually an authoritarian government.
Hence, we can see that historically speaking, the Minamoto family's military government was a military dictatorship, and the relationship that existed between the Yamato imperial family and the Minamoto family’s military government was that the Yamato family formally served as part of the Minamoto military.
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ANSWER: Martin Luther. Good luck
In the morning with the first rays of the sun, the peasant woke up in his small house, which was in a small village consisting of 11 courtyards. A big friendly peasant family gathered at breakfast: A peasant with his wife, 4 daughters and 6 sons. Having prayed, they sat down for wooden benches. At breakfast, there were grains cooked in a pot, on a home hearth. After breakfast peasant should work to provide food to the knights and nobles.
Almost all the children of the peasant have already worked as adults. Only the youngest son, who barely passed 5 years, could only graze geese. The harvest was in full swing. All day peasant with his family worked in the field, making only one break for lunch. In the evening they came home very weary. After supper, the peasant helps his wife in feeding the pigs and milking the cow. After that, the peasant began to make barrels for water. After sunset, everyone went to bed. Mother and father on a wide wooden bed, children on benches at walls which have covered with hay. Tomorrow morning the peasant with his family was going to getting up early again and working hard again...
The correct answer is C.
Freedom Rides were performed during the Civil Rights Movement and started in 1961, in the route Washington D.C.-New Orleans. Activists organized themselves to use interstate buses that communicated different Southern cities, in order to <u>check whether segregation had been abolished or not in public transport interstate facilities</u>, as the US Supreme Court decisions <em>Morgan v. Virginia</em> (1946) and <em>Boynton v. Virginia </em>(1960) had stated.
They could see in person how Southern states had ignored those decisions and how segregation continued ocurring.