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emmainna [20.7K]
4 years ago
14

How did abraham lincoln deal with dissenters?

History
1 answer:
Sunny_sXe [5.5K]4 years ago
8 0
Asked them politely to go away.
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Why did the conflict in Korea escalate?
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It escalated when North Korea Invaded South Korea, When the UN became involved in the conflict to stop war, and also when the US sent in troops and medical units to support South Korea.

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Which of the following is the BEST question to ask about this passage
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how did the railroad companies help to encourage settlement of the Great Plains?what other human geographic factors affected set
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Rail road companies facilitated settlement of the Great Plains because it provided a means of transportation for settlers to get to the location. The government had also provided land to these companies which they sold at an affordable cost to the new settlers. The area was a large expanse of flat lang making it easy for newcomers to establish agriculture. <span />
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FA 1. Contextualize Pax Romana by completing the following tasks:
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The Pax Romana took place throughout the surrounding region of the Mediterranean Sea, especially in Europe between approximately 27 BC. to the year 180 AC.

<h3>What was the Pax Romana?</h3>

Pax Romana is a Latin term to refer to a period in the history of the Roman Empire in which it reached high stability and was characterized by:

  • Inner calm.
  • Outside security.
  • Maximum economic development.
  • Maximum territorial expansion.

The main cause for this period of internal and external calm to take place was the absence of warfare that allowed all the empire's efforts to focus on other issues such as:

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Learn more about Pax Romana in: brainly.com/question/417329

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3 years ago
What three things would conquered people would have to do in the Roman Empire?
mina [271]

Answer:

Generally they had two very different approaches. By ancient standards — not ours, of course — the Romans were stern but not sadistic conquerors.

Their standard tactic was to enroll defeated enemies as Roman allies or socii. The local elites (or at least, a biddable subset of them) would remain in charge of local affairs. They would be self-governing as far as domestic affairs went. The primary requirement was that the foreign policy of an allied state was firmly subordinated to Rome: no independent alliances or wars were allowed. Socii were required to contribute troops to Roman wars; these troops fought in independent units under their own officers, but high command was exclusively Roman.

The worst thing that usually befell a defeated enemy was the loss of some territory, which could be taken to provide land to Roman settlers who would live there in a new city of their own: a colonia. The colonia was in part a form of plunder, since it took valuable agricultural lands from the defeated enemy. It was also a military foothold intended to keep an eye on strategic locales. However coloniae usually worked as agents of Romanisation as well, particularly in places like Gaul and Spain where the local people would see a Roman colony as a valuable market, a source of exotic goods, and a conduit to the wider world.

Most conquered peoples were gradually assimilated into Roman citizenship. In Italy, this came about through an actual war: long time Roman allies fought to demand full citizenship in the Social War of 91–89BC. More often, local elites would become Roman citizens on a piecemeal basis. People farther down the social scale had fewer opportunities but it was hardly impossible: for example the apostle Paul, a Jew from the province of Cilicia in modern Turkey, was nevertheless a Roman citizen. Eventually the whole of a conquered region might acquire “Latin Rights,” a kind of limited citizenship for every free inhabitant.

The extension of citizenship completed the integration of all the upper classes across the Roman world: non-Romans eventually came to outnumber Italians in the civil service, the army, the Senate and in the ranks of emperors. Finally in 212 AD all free persons in the empire became Roman citizens — though by that time citizenship had little practical political meaning since the empire had no democratic institutions above the level of local government.

In general this system worked pretty well, and by the standards of the time it was fairly generous: the Romans only rarely resorted to the wholesale enslavement and depopulation of defeated enemies, which was otherwise not uncommon.

The flipside of this, however, is that Romans took a very grim view of “allies” who tried to reassert themselves. They regarded a surrender to themselves as a permanently binding contract, and they regarded any breach of that contract with unrestrained fury very different from their normal tactics. The most egregious violence that the Romans inflicted on defeated enemies — the sack of Syracuse (212 BC), the destruction of Carthage and Corinth (both in 146 BC), the levelling of Jerusalem in 70AD — was done to those the Romans regarded as faithless allies, rather than open enemies.

In short, the Romans offered their opponents a mix of incentives: good terms for easy surrender, but terrible punishment for what the Romans saw as “ingratitude” or “stubbornness”

Explanation:

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3 years ago
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