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Brums [2.3K]
3 years ago
11

What shared belief of both Justinian and Charlemagne helped build cultural unity in Europe?

History
1 answer:
Advocard [28]3 years ago
5 0
<span>What shared belief of both Justinian and Charlemagne helped build cultural unity in Europe? the importance of Islamic scholarship the preservation of the Roman law code the superiority of</span>
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Of Roosevelt’s opponents, who was the most popular amongst the elderly?
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Answer:

FD Roosevelt (C)

Explanation:

A gathering of government projects and approaches set up under President Franklin D. Roosevelt during the 1930's; the New Deal was intended to enhance conditions for people enduring in the Great Depression.The Progressive Party was an outsider in the United States shaped in 1912 by previous President Theodore Roosevelt after he lost the presidential selection of the Republican Party to his previous protege, officeholder President William Howard Taft.

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Describe one part of the Greek theater shown in document 4 and explain what it was used for.
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What is the main controversy over the citizenship requirements for the presidency?
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<span>The correct answer is D. The debate of whether or not a person born outside of the United States is a natural born citizen is a tricky one. Technically, someone who was born outside of the US, but whose parents are US citizens, are automatically US citizens. However, some people speculate that to be a natural born citizen of the US, you must actually be physically born within the confines of the US.</span>
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3 years ago
Pls Pls Pls Pls answer dis ASAP I WLL GIVE YOU 25 POINTS BUT IT HAS TO BE RIGHT
soldier1979 [14.2K]

Answer: Drafting

The delegates ultimately combined elements of both plans in what became known as the Connecticut Compromise. The legislative branch would be bicameral, consisting of an upper house—the Senate—and a lower house—the House of Representatives. Representation in the House would be based on population, and each state was allotted two seats in the Senate. The office of the president would constitute the executive authority and was to be chosen by the electoral college.

The structure of government would be federalist in nature, consisting of three independent branches: the legislature, Congress; the executive, the president: and the judicial, the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court would adjudicate disputes between states, and Congress was authorized to levy taxes, declare war, raise an army, regulate interstate commerce, and draft laws consistent with the purpose of exercising these powers.

The compromise also addressed another major point of contention between northern and southern states over the issue of slavery. Should enslaved people be counted for the purpose of a state’s representation in Congress? And if so, how? The northern states did not think enslaved people should be counted at all, while the southern slaveholding states thought they should. The Three-Fifths Compromise established that enslaved men and women would be represented in the House at a ratio of 3 to 5 of their actual numbers. Thus, every five individuals would count as three for the purposes of both legislative representation and taxation.

The Three-Fifths Compromise was one of the most notorious provisions of the Constitution. For delegates from the northern states, many of whom were morally opposed to the institution of slavery, the compromise was viewed as a necessary evil in order to secure the ratification of the Constitution since the southern states had threatened to refuse to ratify the document if the interests of southern slaveholders were not protected therein.

- RATIFYING the Constitution

Before the Constitution could take effect, it had to be ratified—formally approved by the assemblies of at least nine of the 12 states that had sent delegates to the convention.Ironically enough, after the acrimonious debates over legislative representation, the small states were the first to ratify the Constitution. The most serious opposition to ratifying the document came from the larger states of Massachusetts, New York, and Virginia. These states were home to large rural populations that sympathized with the plight of farmers like Daniel Shays, who had spearheaded a rebellion against what he perceived as the unjust economic policies and political corruption of the Massachusetts state legislature.

According to many of the Constitution’s opponents, it would create a large, intrusive, and much too powerful federal government that would inevitably recreate the tyranny that the Patriots had fought against in the American Revolution. In order to combat this opposition and get the Constitution ratified, a series of amendments, known as the Bill of Rights, was appended to the document to ensure that the federal government would respect the natural rights of citizens.

4 0
2 years ago
Which of the following people were sentenced to life im prison but then later became president of south africa?
Lorico [155]

Question

Which of the following people were sentenced to life im prison but then later became president of south africa?

f.w. deklerk

nelson mandela

david livingstone

gadla henry mphakanyiswa


<h2>Nelson Mandela (1st President of South Africa)</h2>

4 0
3 years ago
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