Answer:
Abraham Lincoln became the United States' 16th President in 1861, issuing the Emancipation Proclamation that declared forever free those slaves within the Confederacy in 1863.
Explanation:
When the American Civil War began, president Abraham Lincoln was far less prepared for the task of commander in chief than his Southern adversary. Jefferson Davis had graduated from West Point (in the lowest third of his class, to be sure), commanded a regiment that fought intrepidly at Buena Vista in the Mexican War and served as secretary of war in the Franklin Pierce administration from 1853 to 1857. Lincoln's only military experience had come in 1832, when he was captain of a militia unit that saw no action in the Black Hawk War, which began when Sac and Fox Indians (led by the war chief Black Hawk) tried to return from Iowa to their ancestral homeland in Illinois in alleged violation of a treaty of removal they had signed. During Lincoln's one term in Congress, he mocked his military career in an 1848 speech. "Did you know I am a military hero?" he said. "I fought, bled and came away" after "charges upon the wild onions" and "a good many bloody struggles with the Musquetoes."
When he called state militia into federal service on April 15, 1861—following the Confederate bombardment of Fort Sumter—Lincoln therefore faced a steep learning curve as commander in chief. He was a quick study, however; his experience as a largely self-taught lawyer with a keen analytical mind who had mastered Euclidean geometry for mental exercise enabled him to learn quickly on the job. He read and absorbed works on military history and strategy; he observed the successes and failures of his own and the enemy's military commanders and drew apt conclusions; he made mistakes and learned from them; he applied his large quotient of common sense to slice through the obfuscations and excuses of military subordinates. By 1862 his grasp of strategy and operations was firm enough almost to justify the overstated but not entirely wrong conclusion of historian T. Harry Williams: "Lincoln stands out as a great war president, probably the greatest in our history, and a great natural strategist, a better one than any of his generals."
lol ik it's long but this part I took it from a magazine so understand ^^
Answer:
To remember the arrival of Jesus Christ in Jerusalem for the festivities of the Jewish Passover.
Explanation:
As the Gospels narrate, Jesus decides to go to Jerusalem with his disciples for the Jewish Passover. He knew what was going to happen. He would be apprehended by the pharisees and taken to the Romans to be punished. Lord Jesus knew his passion and death were approaching. He arrived in Jerusalem on a donkey, a scene that had been envisioned by prophet Isaiah and is found in the Old Testament.
Answer
brought hardship, homelessness, and hunger to millions
rise of crime rate
There would be many crusades which failed. Which lead to the heavy population of once Roman christians in the middle east becoming converted to Islam along with many upper African country's accepting Islam as their faith.