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Art [367]
3 years ago
13

Why was entasis, each column swelling about a third of the way up, employed in the parthenon?

History
1 answer:
Strike441 [17]3 years ago
7 0
Correct Answer:To fool the eye against them appearing narrower as<span>they rise.

</span>
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1. The government of ___ has been influenced by drug cartels and cocaine production.
asambeis [7]
<span>1. The government of ___ has been influenced by drug cartels and cocaine production.

Colombia

2. As an art form, magic realism is characterized by

a combination of realistic events and fantastic backgrounds.


3. The term "cooperative" refers to (1 point)(0 pts) a corporation with division


a farm owned and operated by a group of peasant workers.

4. Most leaders of the newly independent African nations came from

the urban middle class.

5. The economies of many African nations have suffered because these nations are forced to import
____ from Western nations like the U.S.

technology


6. The United Nations divided Palestine into a Jewish state and an Arab state in

1948.


7. Kwame Nkrumah helped ___________ become the first of many sub-Saharan African countries to
become independent in the 1950s and 60s.

Ghana


8. By 2002, more than 29 million people in sub-Saharan Africa lived with the virus that caused

AIDS.


9. _____ became the first black president of South Africa after spending almost 26 years in prison.

Nelson Mandela


10. Modern African cultures are characterized by the tension between

traditional ways and modern Western culture.


11. Which nation held 52 Americans hostage for over a year?

Iran

</span>
5 0
4 years ago
What are the similarities between the first and second great awakening?
Vadim26 [7]
First Great Awakening: • 1730s-1740s • Credited founder: Jonathan Edwards (remember Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God?) Based on Puritan/Congregationalist ideals o Northampton, Massachusetts o Preached personal salvation o Discussed repentance for sins (why? Remember “declension”?) • Other major supporter: George Whitefield (revivalist, travels through the colonies) o More emotional, revival-like sermons and preaching o Influences the south (slaveholders participate; try to prevent slaves from attending) • Influence of the “backcountry” – non-wealthy colonists living further west, take new revivalism to heart and form new sects (remember the significance of this group on Early American History) Second Great Awakening: • Early 1800s; usually 1810s to as late as the 1840s • Most known leader: Charles Grandison Finney (has appeared in related DBQ essays) • Directly influenced by increasing political participation of common citizens • Plays a direct role in the antebellum reform movements, especially abolitionism (but also including temperance, prison reform, and women’s rights – remember the Mock Exam FRQ?) • Popular in the backcountry; especially the southern Appalachian regions • Again, slaveholders tried to prevent slaves from attending; eventually had to come up with Christian reasons for slavery • Role of the Second Great Awakening on the frontier? As people move away from traditional homelands, they must search for a sense of community • This is really where newer sects gain increased membership: Methodists, Baptists • Also, very different sects emerge: Mormons, Seventh-Day Adventists 
4 0
3 years ago
What happened <br> between the Roman Catholic Church and the Scientific Revoltuion.
olya-2409 [2.1K]

Answer:

Basically the Catholic Church viewed the earth as the center of the universe and that God created the universe to serve people. But during the scientific revolution people such as Nicolause Copernicus, Johannes Kepler and Galileo Galilei challenged the Churches views with their theories.

Explanation:

Hope this helps

3 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
What was the main reason tanks were introduced during world war i?
aliina [53]

Answer:

To break the stalemate of trench warfare

7 0
3 years ago
What is and example of a geographic pattern
Katyanochek1 [597]

Definition of a Geographic Pattern: A geographic pattern is a term used as a general descriptor for lesions in which large areas of one colour, histologic pattern or radiologic density. Variably scalloped borders sharply interface with another pattern, colour or density, creating something like a national boundary and/or coastline.

Example: An example of a geographic pattern can be applied to nearly everything on Earth. Animals and plant species, disease infections, weather patterns, and man-made structures are an example of this.


Hope this helps! <3

4 0
4 years ago
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