The main way in which the Scopes Trial illustrated the urban rural split in the 1920s in the US is that it showed how adamant people were about evolution--both that many people heavily supported its teaching in public schools, and that many people did not.
The Renaissance is a period from the 14th to the 17th century, considered the bridge between the Middle Ages and Modern history. It started as a cultural movement in Italy in the Late Medieval period and later spread to the rest of Europe. ... The Renaissance was a time of great beauty and art.
Answer:
the civil rights
Explanation:
because of the lost generation
Michelangelo's contribution to today's society is changing focus form religious dogmatism to anthropocentric art. He was one of the forefront renaissance artists who admired the human body and the idea of humanity and wanted to put it into art as much as he could, which inspired many future artists do develop their art in this direction. You can still see his paintings and how he painted the Sistine Chapel as well as his sculptures in museums.
He was revolutionary because the way he painted was often forbidden and he was accused of sacrilege. However, his popularity and skill made him a must-have artist for the church so the church used his art even though they disliked his ideas and the way he portrayed saints and Jesus stories.
He changed the world by starting a whole new wave of artists who moved even more away from the church and its orthodox understanding of art and towards a new era where humans and their problems were the main focus of art.
After the Civil War, white supremacists in the South were determined to stop any social or political progress by the African-American . At the 1866 Constitutional Convention, Texans passed out restrictive laws, known as Black Codes, to African Americans that limited their autonomy. The Codes basically returned the African American to their prior position of slaves. African Americans without jobs often were given to white guardians for work without pay. The penalty for quitting those jobs often included imprisonment for breach of contract. Other laws prevented freedmen from having free access to public facilities. They were not allowed to testify against whites, serve on juries or in state militias, or to vote. They were, however, free to develop schools and churches, which became vehicles for improvement within their communities. By the late 1860s, African Americans had aligned themselves with the Republicans and began to carve a pathway to true freedom as American citizens.
Their fight was not an easy one, it was not until 1890 that twenty states passed laws that enacted segregation laws and African American people could feel free at long last.
So, the answer for this question is:
twenty states passed laws that enacted segregation laws