I would put something simple like Very Aggressively
Answer:
The Church pursuit the inquisition to fight heresy.
Under Inquisition, the Church used violence and torture many people for eliciting confessions.
Explanation:
The Inquisition was part of the Catholic Church established to punish the heresy in Europe. It began in the 12th century and continuing for hundreds of years.
The Inquisition became notorious for its tortures and persecution of Jews and Muslims, especially in Spain. The Spanish monarchs believe in Christianity and relation with the Papal Church. Spain saw 32,000 executions and conversion of Jews in Catholic.
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
You forgot to include the options for this question. However, we can say the following.
Some Romans believed that an empire would better serve Rome’s needs than a Republic because "The emperor could make decisions quickly without our having to convince others."
When the Roman Republic was established in 509 BCE, the system was based on democracy and the creation of rules to serve the people. The Senate was an important institution for the Roman Republic and the Roman law influenced other legislations until the modern-day era. However, the desire for control, power, and greed, changed things in Rome and the Emperor dropped the democratic system and created absolutists and centralized system in which only the Emperor was the one who imposed his will over the entire Empire.
1) Southerners complained that their economy was crippled by the Embargo Acts Tariff of 1828. The “Tariff Act of 1828”, also called the “Tariff of Abominations” by Southern states since they saw this act as a menace to their economy. With the passing of this act, the south had to pay higher prices for the goods they did not manufacture and at the same time they had problems to sell their good (cotton) to their main buyer, Great Britain.
2) The South Carolina politician that became known as the “Father of Nullification” was “John C. Calhoun”. John C. Calhoun was a Southern politician that strongly disagreed with the tariff act of 1828 and advocated for its nullification. At the time of the passing of the act John C. Calhoun was the US vice president.
3) The Nullification Crisis ended when the “Congress” passed a bill to “reduce” the tariff. In 1833 the congress passed the “Compromise Tariff of 1833” and this ended the Nullification Crisis as South Carolina accepted the act.