Answer:
An example of the expansion of citizenship is Option B: The Nineteenth Amendment barred voting discrimination based on sex.
Explanation:
There is a lot of ambiguity surrounding citizenship and women but essentially before the right to vote, the citizenship rights a woman enjoyed were tied largely to her husband. She therefore had what is called derivative citizenship. A husband and wife became the same legal person under most laws and it was the husband's responsibility to act on behalf of his wife. She was not allowed to vote or hold property in her own name unless she had the permission of her husband in most cases. An American woman who married a foreign citizen would also lose her American citizenship. The assumption was that the woman would assume the citizenship of her husband, but the laws of many foreign countries did not make this automatically so. Women would become stateless in many cases by marrying a foreign spouse. This was especially the case in the marriages of American women and Asian men who were subject to legislation like the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 that denied them citizenship.
The Egyptians introduced many gods and a lot of Nubian traditions were spread when they started to move around in Egypt. They also traded with one another all the time!
Answer:
The most important cause of the French Revolution was arguably the unfair system of collection of taxes between the Three Estates; the obligations of the Third Estate and the fact that they had no money to upgrade their position, especially if they were peasants
Explanation:
To gain backing of Americans, both the Allies and Central
Powers used Propaganda intended to influence opinion. Governments
during the First World War keen massive capitals and huge quantities of effort
to creating material intended to shape opinion and action worldwide. The labors
of states to defend their actions, and to build global support, caused in some
of the most influential propaganda ever shaped.