Answer:
<h2>d) All of the choices are correct.</h2>
Explanation:
The French Revolution was a movement of the Third Estate (as the commoner class was known) against the elites who controlled all power in France. The 3rd Estate was the bulk of the people (98% of the population), all considered "commoners." (The clergy and nobility were the 1st and 2nd Estates.) So, the 3rd Estate included those from a wealthy, bourgeois wine merchant to a day laborer in the city or a peasant farmer in the countryside. The initial leaders of the Revolution came from a bourgeois background.
When the Revolution began, it was difficult for the bourgeois leaders to manage the new government in a way that met the concerns and demands of the poorer classes (city workers and rural peasants). So the discontent of the poor and the peasants were a problem for the French National Convention. So too was the rise of the Jacobin movement, a more radical group which challenged the more conservative Girondists for power. The "Girondists" were named after the Gironde region, a wine producing region. Wealthier bourgeois types (like wine merchants) were the sort of persons in the Girondist group. The Jacobins were adamant about establishing equality for all persons in France, whereas the Girondists at times seemed more concerned about protecting the interests of businessmen for the sake of a profitable business environment.
On 18 June, the United States declared war on Great Britain, citing, in part, impressment. After the Napoleonic Wars impressment was ended in practice, though not officially abandoned as a policy. The last law was passed in 1835, in which the power to impress was reaffirmed.
The name of the first satellite put into orbit by the United States is called Explore 1 and was put into orbit in January 31, 1958.
Answer:
The South had an agricultural economy that depended on enslaved workers
Explanation:
The main reason there WAS slavery was because of the money the Southern economy made off of cotton.
The Waldensians and the Albigensians a)were declared heretics and persecuted by the Catholic Church. The Waldensians believe in apostilic poverty (which means no ownership of lands or accumulation of money), believed that every Church should be independent in how it is run and did not venerate sacred events such as the Last Supper. The Albigensians thought that there was an evil God and a good God, which goes against the Catholic Church's belief that there is only one God.