<span>The colomber pursues Stefano in order to give him a magic pearl.</span>
Answer:
The short term effect is that the Southerners believed that Abraham Lincoln was an abolitionist and also felt betrayed by Stephen Douglas's suggestion that territories could refuse to grant slavery legal protection.
Explanation:
Lincoln-Douglas debates, series of seven debates between the Democratic senator Stephen Douglas and Lincoln Abraham.
Lincoln and Douglas were not simply campaigning for themselves but also for their respective political parties. The main focus of these debates was slavery and its influence on American politics and society—specifically the slave power, popular sovereignty, race equality, emancipation.
Lincoln, an obscure former state representative, argues that the nation would eventually encompass all slave states or all free states, and nothing in between. He cites the end of the Missouri Compromise and the Dred Scott decision as evidence that slavery is spreading into the Northern states.
Lincoln thought that the national government should ban slavery from expanding into new territories while Douglas thought popular sovereignty should decide whether the territories wanted slavery or not.
Because of the Great Schism - - East-West Schism - there was a split of the Christianity into an Eastern Orthodox Catholicism and a Roman Catholicism.
This happened especially because Pope Leo III crowned Charlemagne as a Holy Roman Emperor, the Byzantine Empire did not like this and eventually, this led to a formal split that occurred in 1054.
Because of this split, the Roman Catholic Church that existed in the Byzantine Empire became Greek Orthodox Church and the Roman Catholic Church was maintained.
The Eastern Orthodox Church was no central doctrinal or governance, unlike the Roman Catholic Church, that has the Catholic pope. The Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople is considered as a primus inter pares of the bishops that run each church.
I think its C because <span>The </span>Battle of Britain<span> marked the first defeat of Hitler's military forces.</span>