Answer:
At the beginning of World War I, Germany was a constitutional monarchy in which political parties were limited to the legislative arena. Wilhelm II (1859-1941), the German kaiser (emperor) and king of Prussia from 1888 to 1918, was one of the most recognizable public figures of World War I (1914-18).
Explanation:
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Answer:
D. Making laws
Explanation:
A senate refers to a deliberative assembly or council of elected citizens found in the upper chamber or house of a bicameral legislature. A bicameral legislature can be defined as a legislative body that comprises of two chambers or houses; upper house and lower house. The upper chamber or house consists of senators while the lower chamber consists of house of representatives.
Generally, the type of government in which legislators such as a senator are found is known as a democracy. Thus, democracy refers to a government of the people, by the people and for the people.
<em>The primary function of the Senate is to make (enact) laws and that is why they're usually referred to as the legislative arm of government (legislature). In addition to making laws, senators are saddled with the responsibility of confirming any appointment made by the president that requires consent and the ratification of treaties. </em>
Also, senators are usually elected by the people of the state they are representing and as such must be an indigene of the state.
Answer:
they were both revolutions
ones french and ones american
Explanation:
Answer:
The biggest principle that the allies wanted to clean up after Napoleon was legitimacy.
Explanation:
Napoleon was a legitimate, recognized head of state, who everyone except England was allied with at one time or another. As a foreigner, they couldn’t execute the French head of state for acting on behalf of France. To just declare him a criminal and shoot him would have been admitting that the Czar of Russia and Emperor of Austria had been making deals with a criminal.
Also, some of the allies LIKED changes made by Napoleon and wanted to keep it. For example, Kings of the Confederation of the Rhine wanted to keep being Kings, not Grand Dukes or Electors. It was in their interest to not declare Napoleon an outright criminal.
Even the allies holding him on St. Helena wasn’t backed by law. How they were treating Napoleon had no legal precedence. They were making things up as they were going along. The reason why the British would never allow Napoleon to set foot on England was that Napoleon’s supporters would have filed a Habeas Corpus suit on behalf of Napoleon and make the British courts answer what law they were holding Napoleon under.
In the long run it actually played to the advantage of British that Napoleon was alive and under their control. Letting loose Napoleon was the ultimate political trump card they had against the Germans and the French.