<em>Here read this and figure it out. </em>
<em>Columbus arrives as a supplicant at the court of Queen Isabella of Spain, hoping for cash and three tall ships. When the Queen asks him what he desires, he bows over her hand and murmurs, "Consummation." The Queen is offended. Columbus becomes known at Isabella's court for his colorful clothes and excessive drinking. The Queen plays with Columbus, permitting him familiarities, then banishing him to the stables and piggeries for forty days. "The search for money and patronage," Columbus says, "is not so different from the quest for love." Isabella claims Granada, the last redoubt of Arab Spain. Columbus gives up hope. He departs the court, passing long columns of Jews, who are being expelled from Spain. He dreams that Isabella is herself having a dream, in which she sees that all the known world is hers, but that she will never be satisfied by the possession of the known. Isabella's heralds arrive and tell Columbus that she has summoned him for his voyage--she saw a vision, and it scared her.</em>
The <span>modern-day name for the country from which knights traveled to invade England in 1066 is "B. France," since this was referred to as the "Norman Invasion". </span>
Some similarities between the US Bill of Rights and the English Bill of Rights are that both were written to amend constitutions and that both were written after a revolution against a monarch. A difference between them is that the US Bill of Rights focuses only on civil liberties while the English Bill of Rights also addresses governmental matters.
Answer:
B. The nationalists desired an end to foreign dependence.
Explanation:
The statements best summarize the cause of nationalist revolutions in Central and South America is "The nationalists desired an end to foreign dependence."
This is evident in the fact that following the Napoleon movement to take over Spain and some other European countries, led to many colonized countries in central and south America under Spanish rule see the weakness of their colonial masters. This reinforces their zeal to govern themselves, a form of nationalism approach, which led them to desire an end to foreign dependence.