Answer:
part 1:
Britain enforced unfair taxes on the colonists.
part 2:c
Answer:
D. Historians believe that he is a myth rather than a real historical person.
Explanation:
Attila the Hun Attila the Hun (405-453), also sometimes known with the nickname as Attila the Scourge of God (Flagellum Dei) or simply Attila was the most powerful king of the Huns. He reigned over what was then Europe's largest empire, from 434 until his death. His empire stretched from Germany and the Netherlands to the Ural river and from the Danube River to Poland and Estonia. During his rule, he was among the most dire of the Western and Eastern Roman Empire's enemies: he invaded the Balkans twice and besieged Constantinople in the second invasion; he marched through Gaul (modern day France) as far as Orleans before being defeated at the Battle of Chalons; and he drove the western emperor Valentinian III from his capital at Ravenna in 452. He was regarded as sacker of cities. In the year 453 Attilla was at his wedding party,got drunk,hit his head,and chocked on his own blood this is how Attilla died a terrible and unfair death.
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<span>B)They split their small, outnumbered army into two forces.
</span><span>The Battle of Chancellorsville (April 30 to May 6, 1863) is looked upon as General Robert E. Lee’s greatest Civil War victory for the Confederate side. The Union army was almost twice the size of Lee's Confederate forces. Splitting his troops caught the Union side by surprise.
It was a costly victory for the Confederate side, however. While the Union suffered over 17,000 casualties, Lee's armies also had a high casualty rate of nearly 13,000 men. And one of those casualties was General Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson, who was killed by friendly fire in the final stages of the battle.</span>
Humanism was a cultural and intellectual movement of the Renaissance. It was a system that focused on the potential and worth of each individual.