Answer:
They had many gods and could choose one to worship
Explanation:
Answer:
The great army of the West, commanded by General William T. Sherman, enters Savannah, Georgia, at Christmas of 1864. They have just come on their march to the sea, starting out in Atlanta. They have marched through the heart of Georgia... They have destroyed everything in their path that could be of use to the Confederacy: railroad tracks, they have burned plantations. They have liberated tens of thousands of slaves, enforcing the Emancipation Proclamation of President Lincoln... Sherman says when he starts out on the march, "I can make Georgia howl." He's bringing the war to the civilian population. He doesn't kill civilians. He doesn't attack them, but he destroys property; he destroys their livelihoods and he liberates their slaves.
He's trying to demonstrate that the South has no power that can prevent the North from prevailing in this war. If he can march right through the heart of one of the most important Southern states without any opposition even, wreaking devastation and liberating the slaves... And for generations afterward, the name Sherman will be a byword for cruelty in the minds of white Southerners and white Georgians who experience this.
Explanation:
Pretty sure they were only to be elected and chosen by the pope
Explanation:
Answer:
Women's suffrage
Explanation:
Progressive women became increasingly involved in activism with the goal of acquiring equal voting rights. Women only got the right to vote in the U.S. in 1920, thanks to the 19th Amendment and the progressive movement.
In fact, the first wave of feminism is considered to be the movement that achieved the women's suffrage, and some of its most important leaders were Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucy Stone, and Ida B. Wells.
The US supported the Iraq leader Saddam Hussein.