Answer:
North Africa and Spain
Explanation:
I hope you meant Africa instead of America because otherwise I'm not sure
A, all are equal before God. Jesus preached that anyone from the rich to the poor have sinned, and will be judged equally.
You put your questions in the wrong category, love. You need to move them to physics.
Answer:
1) Making Inferences In what ways do you think the events during Elizabeth’s youth molded her character?
- Although these events somewhat traumatized the Princess, they also molded her into a strong, independent personality.
Explanation:
2) Interpreting Significance Queen Elizabeth’s refusal to marry was a controversial political decision at the time. Why? Why might Elizabeth have chosen to remain single?
- Because there could not be a queen in a monarchy before a country without a king, it was necessary if or if (male chauvinism of the time). Moreover, Elizabeth decided not to marry anyone, because her greatest wish was to be committed to her country, to be loved and respected by its inhabitants/citizens; and to reign on the throne of England until the day she died.
President Lincoln learned that to recreate the Union, servility must end. Politically, Lincoln faced constrain on all sides: from African Americans fleeing servility, from Union generals acting self-reliant, from extreme Republicans calling for instant abolition, and from pro-slavery Unionists who opposed emancipation. commanding a balance, he trust the president only had the authority and political support to free enslaved the people residing within the eleven rebel states. In the summer of 1862, he began to draft the Emancipation Proclamation. Lincoln constantly implicit his critics that he had no ambition for rescinding the proclamation. He frequent his fidelity to emancipation in this note to Henry C. Wright of the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society. In 1864, he would risk his political fortunes and his reelection by throwing his full advocate behind the 13th Amendment to the Constitution, which abrogate slavery.