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DochEvi [55]
3 years ago
5

Which event was a major cause of the enlightnemtn

History
1 answer:
lara [203]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

Causes. On the surface, the most apparent cause of the Enlightenment was the Thirty Years' War. This horribly destructive war, which lasted from 1618 to 1648, compelled German writers to pen harsh criticisms regarding the ideas of nationalism and warfare.

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Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to
Keith_Richards [23]

I looked this question up and found out it compares Lincoln's "Gettysburg Address" and Roosevelt's "The Four Freedoms Speech." Since the speech is too long, I will not add it here, but it can be easily found online. As for the answer choices, they are the following:

A. the importance of equality

B. the importance of freedom

C. the importance of taxation

D. the importance of avoiding war

E. the importance of lost soldiers

Answer:

The ideas that are addressed by both Roosevelt and Lincoln are:

A. the importance of equality

B. the importance of freedom

Explanation:

Abraham Lincoln was the 16th President of the United States, and Franklin Delano Roosevelt was the 32nd. Their speeches, "Gettysburg Address" and "The Four Freedoms Speech" are both famous for their themes as well as their rhetoric.

Two ideas that both speeches have in common are the importance of freedom and the importance of equality. Even though the contexts in which each speech was given were very different, both Presidents focused on how freedom is, or should be, a premise in everyone's life. Both of them believed in that ideal, and both claimed that it was the groundwork of the American nation. Likewise, both Presidents speak of equality between all human beings. We are all born the same, and disrespecting that fact is what leads to wars and injustices.

8 0
3 years ago
What is the Bering Land Bridge Theory?<br> Please answer
sammy [17]
That an ice bridge formed over 2 continents and the animals walked over it and came into a new land.
then the natives which hunted them followed
4 0
4 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Find the sale price when the original price is $68.00 and the discount rate is 38%.
kvv77 [185]

Answer: C. $42.16

Explanation:

6 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
What attracted German and Scots-Irish migrants to Pennsylvania in such<br> large numbers?
Firlakuza [10]

Answer:

Religious freedom and lower taxes

Explanation:

German migrants fled their homelands because of military conscription, religious persectuion and high taxes. Scots-Irish migrants came because of taxes and for religious tolerance compared to persecution in their own countries.

7 0
3 years ago
What are the political impacts of Westward Expansion in the late 19th century?
ozzi
During the first quarter of the nineteenth century the United States grew drastically, in power and in geographical size. The Louisiana Purchase more than doubled the nation's size and opened up a little known region to exploration and eventual settlement. Soon, explorers were returning from forays into the wilderness with stories of great stretches of beauty and fertile land. Some Americans ventured westward, but the nation was largely consumed by its struggle to maintain its neutrality in the face of threats from Britain and France. The War of 1812 settled this issue, leaving the United States free to pursue North American goals. The nation turned its attention to the issue of expansion. The founding fathers had envisioned the United States as a bastion of freedom that would cover territory reaching all the way across the North American continent. Their descendents had not forgotten this desire, and encouraged expansion into western territories through laws and rhetoric.

The first wave of westward expansion accompanied the rise of manufacturing in New England and increasing mobility throughout the nation. As settlers moved to what is now the Midwest, the national infrastructure grew up around them, connecting the nation's cities and towns through a system of roads, canals and railroads. Accompanying the rise in new methods of transportation came progress in the fields of agriculture and medicine, as new machines were invented and new treatments for disease discovered. American culture developed in the form of writing, acting, and painting, and American intellectuals gained worldwide respect. Many painters and writers cited the American West as their inspiration, and the West began to symbolize the American identity: rough and rugged individualism willing to face new challenges.

However, expansion did not occur exclusively in an atmosphere of progress. The age of Jacksonian Democracy saw the rise of political strife between the ruling Democrats and the opposition Whigs. As the two-party system matured, political tension became clearly focused around the issue of slavery. As the West gradually developed, the existing states were rapidly torn apart. Economic and social divisions became accentuated and both North and South clung to their beliefs and customs.

In 1848, the Mexican War concluded, and the United States gained full control of the Texas, California and New Mexico territories. As settlers poured into these regions, it was clear that the westward expansion was closely linked to the future of slavery. North and South focused significant energy on pursuing their political desires in regard to slavery in the settled territories of the West, and the famous Lincoln-Douglas Debates had at their core the future of slavery in the West. Despite efforts at reconciliation, most notably the Compromise of 1850, the Union was thrown into a civil war over the issue of slavery from 1861 to 1865, and western expansion slowed due to the conflict.

After the Civil War and period of Reconstruction faded, expansion began again in the late 1800s. Now western settlers were spurred onward by the development of the transcontinental railroad, a major byproduct of the period of industrialization that had begun in earnest. The expansion and immigration of the late 1800s merged with this industrialization to provoke the growth of American urban society. As the needs of industrial workers became ever more important, the national political scene became dominated by the discrepancy in needs between America's rural and urban populations, as well as the needs of the new classes created by industrialization and the abolition of slavery. By the early twentieth century, the United States consisted of 48 contiguous states stretching clear across the North American continent, and with its devastatinv defeat of the Spanish in 1898 had become a legitimate international power. US cities increasingly traded with foreign markets and the nation became involved in international politics. The economic and political evolution that had accompanied, and in part resulted from, westward expansion culminated with US involvement in World War One.

8 0
3 years ago
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