The development of the Napoleonic Code was a fundamental change in the nature of the civil law system, making laws clearer and more accessible. It also superseded the former conflict between royal legislative power and, particularly in the final years before the Revolution, protests by judges representing views and privileges of the social classes to which they belonged. Such conflict led the Revolutionaries to take a negative view of judges making law.
During the 19th century, the Napoleonic Code was voluntarily adopted in a number of European and Latin American countries, either in the form of simple translation or with considerable modifications.
Eastern Canada hold more older (European) settlements than Western Canada. Eastern Canada was settled by the French and then the English in an effort to expand their terrortories and then resource (fur trade) extraction. The bulk of the original population of these regions are direct descendants of the original settlers and of the "Loyalists" who moved north from the United States when the US became independant from Britain.
I believe the answer is Barbed Wire.
Befor the inventions of barbed wire, the Cattles are let to roam freely across the plains and the owners are required to pay a lot of cowboys to supervise them so they didn't go missing. Witht he invention of barbed wire, they can keep the cattle in a secure place without supervision.
Answer:
How did Julius Caesar die? Julius Caesar was murdered in the Roman SenateHouse by a group of nobles on March 15, 44 BCE. The assassination plot was led by Gaius Cassius Longinus and Marcus Junius Brutus.
Explanation:
The Einstein–Szilárd letter was a letter<span> written by </span>Leó Szilárd<span> and signed by </span>Albert Einstein<span> that was sent to the </span>United States President Franklin D. Roosevelt<span> on August 2, 1939. Written by Szilárd in consultation with fellow </span>Hungarian<span> physicists </span>Edward Teller<span> and </span>Eugene Wigner<span>, the letter warned that Germany might develop </span>atomic bombs<span> and suggested that the United States should start its own nuclear program. It prompted action by Roosevelt, which eventually resulted in the </span>Manhattan Project<span>developing the first atomic bombs.</span>