Answer:
1) The rise and fall of Rome
By 200 BC, the Roman Republic had conquered Italy, and over the following two centuries it conquered Greece and Spain, the North African coast, much of the Middle East, modern-day France, and even the remote island of Britain.
Explanation:8 Reasons Why Rome Fell
Invasions by Barbarian tribes. ...
Economic troubles and over reliance on slave labor. ...
The rise of the Eastern Empire. ...
Over expansion and military overspending. ...
Government corruption and political instability. ...
The arrival of the Huns and the migration of the Barbarian tribes. ...
Christianity and the loss of traditional values.
Women’s rights,abolitionist movement
Frederick Douglas uses metaphors in this chapter such as <em>“…and thereby run the hazard of closing the slightest avenue by which a brother slave might clear himself of the chains and fetters of slavery”</em> to tell the reader that enslavement is not just a restriction of liberty of one’s body but also the restriction of one’s soul. The mind of a slave is not free. Douglas also lets the reader know that even though himself is free from slavery physically, his mind and spirit is not because society did not create conditions so he can feel like a completely free man.
Frederick also mentions “<em>I have never approved of the very public manner in which some of our western friends have conducted what they call underground railroad…” </em>By underground railroad he that meant the secret and illegal routes and houses that helped slaves to escape to free cities.
He compares some men that were “money kidnappers” - men who gained money to bring back slaves who fled to nonslave states as - <em>“ferocious beasts of the forest like in wait for their prey”</em>
Andrew jacksons had many qualification for presidency. One of them were wanting to get better.
From first to last: First Barbary war, embargo act, non intercourse act, battle of Tippecanoe, declaration of war 1812, USS Chesapeake incident, battle of put-in-bay, battle of lake champlain, treaty of ghent, battle of new orleans.