Answer:
You included no options so I shall only be able to try to answer based on context and the history of Cecil Rhodes.
<em>This political cartoon shows Cecil Rhodes standing over the continent of </em><em><u>Africa</u></em><em>. Rhodes, shown as a colossus, demonstrates the European feelings of </em><em><u>ethnocentrism</u></em><em>. Rhodes believed that Europeans were responsible for civilizing </em><em><u>Africans </u></em><em>by teaching them about Western culture.</em>
Cecil Rhodes was a British man who was the founder of the British South Africa Company which was to aid the British empire is acquiring more colonies in Africa especially in the south of the Continent.
Cecil Rhodes looked down on Africans and believed them to be uncivilized and in need of guidance from Europeans who he believed were more superior to Africans. This showed ethnocentrism because he believed that Africans were uncivilized based on Europeans standards of civilization not that of Africans.
Answer: The Republic of Ghana is named after the medieval West African Ghana Empire. The empire became known in Europe and Arabia as the Ghana Empire after the title of its Emperor, Ghana. The Empire appears to have broken up following the 1076 conquest by the Almoravid General Abu-Bakr Ibn-Umar. The Gold Coast was the first British colony in Africa to become independent. After independence, its name changed to Ghana, and the first president was Kwame Nkrumah. Ghana is in West Africa, in the Gulf of Guinea. The name Ghana comes from an ancient kingdom several 100 kilometres northwest of the modern republic.
<em>leave brainliest!</em>
Answer:
it was recorded in many documents
Explanation:
I think the text says that because, in order to be a citizen (or functioning member of that society) you need to hold yourself accountable for the mistakes you make and to correct yourself based on what you from them.
"<span>a. giving the Indians equal rights and justice as citizens of the United States" was not one of their proposed solutions, since none were willing to cede rights or territory. </span>