Answer:
The Paris Commune
Explanation:
The Franco-German War broke out in 1870, the Second Empire collapsed, and the Third Republic was proclaimed. On March 18, 1871, the republican Paris Commune was established to fight the Germans in France as well as to fight the Army of Versailles, which had remained loyal to Napoleon III and had concluded an armistice with the Germans that the members of the Commune judged to be dishonourable. Courbet, who had been recently elected president of the artists’ federation and was charged with reopening the museums and organizing the annual Salon, took part in the revolutionary activities of the Commune. Instead of opening the museums, he decided to protect the major public monuments, especially the Sèvres porcelain factory and the palace at Fontainebleau, for Paris had been under constant bombardment by the Germans. Alarmed by the excesses of the Commune, he resigned May 2.
Answer:
A group of musicians that perform as a unit.
Explanation:
I leaned this in music class and I've played ensembles with drums
Answer:
Reverse Adoption theory
Explanation:
According to The Reverse Adoption theory (also known as The Trickle-Up theory), particular styles that began on the streets, among the lower socio-economic class, can get picked up by designers and then those who belong to the upper-class. Since the 1960s, manufacturers and retailers started paying more attention to the people on the street and their styles, looking for inspiration and ideas. Some of those ideas eventually reached the market.
For example, T-shirts were primarily worn by workmen and men in the military as the most practical choice of clothing. They became popular among the working class and eventually in the fashion industry as well. The punk subculture followed a similar path.