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Lerok [7]
3 years ago
13

What motivated Martin Luther to write and nail his 95 theses to the church door

History
1 answer:
Kobotan [32]3 years ago
7 0

Answer:

c

Explanation:

C. he was frustrated that the Christian church had split into two parts during the Great

Schism in 1054

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The answers you provided are corr3ct onlu things is that Thomas Jefferson wasnt the only one to author the declaration

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Missing Benjamin Franklin, John adams, Roger sherman, and Robert R. Livingston, but since the answer does not outline the rest of the names your correct in you initial answers for both

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Both as an idea or ideal and as a political practice, nationalism has had a profound influence on the course of modern world his
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Answer:

The period of 1860-1914 would see the nationalist ideas become politically influential.

Explanation:

Nationalism as a political ideal was rationalized in the late XVIII century. With the French Revolution, the idea of an autocrat embedded with the will of the State was challenged by that of a State represented by its citizens, taking the idea from the old Roman Republic, but with the philosophical basis of the Enlightenment. Thus, between 1776-1815, nationalism was related to the notion of a citizen State against the monarchies, but not with the idea of territory and common language or history.

This would be dealt at the second period, 1860-1914. In Europe, this period would see the unification of Germany and Italy, while in the rest of the world (Asia, Latin America, the Middle East) saw the Meij Restoration in Japan, and the consolidation of the Latin American nations (the unification of Argentina, the struggle against French intervention in Mexico, the Triple Alliance war between Brazil, Uruguay, and Argentina, the Pacific War).

In this period nationalism become a key political factor, and in Europe, it would trigger the "armed peace" between the newly formed German Empire against France and Great Britain, that would lead to the creation of the Entente, the prelude to the Alliance that would enter the war against Germany in 1914. The aftermath of this period, that is the two World Wars, would see national extremism getting to power, and also the blending of nationalism with right-wing factions, that would emerge as fascism and nazism.

In the aftermath of 1945, and to 1960, nationalism would boom in the former European colonies in Africa and Asia, and prove to be a leading factor in the decolonization movements.

In can be concluded that nationalism was politically influential in the period 1860-1914, that it appealed to a commonality of language and history (this was also the Romanticism period culturally speaking) of the people, and that is consequences would be the World Wars, the breaking of the old empires of Austria-Hungary, Russia, Germany, and the Ottomans.

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4 years ago
In what three ways did the Industrial Revolution spur New Imperialism?
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I will try and answer a very complex question, and by no means is this answer definitive. Due the process of industrialization (the move from an agrarian socioeconomic model to goods, manufacturing, and services model) makes for a very capital intensive model. Part of that. The dependency on fossil fuels such as petroleum/oil (as well as the energy policies of nation states) leads to secure resources through not only diplomacy. This is a world of limited resources, and fear of resource depletion is a powerful incentive.
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