Doing what?????????????????????
Answer:
If a child of a Russian noble didn't learn mathematics, that child was not allowed to marry. The Great Sovereign at that time, Peter I, decreed in 1699 that the New Year's celebration switch to January 1 from September 1. He also decreed that children between 10 and 15 had to learn mathematics in order to get married. This didn't apply to children of freeholders and government clerks. After children mastered math, they were given marriage certificates written in their own handwriting. If they didn't master the subject, they weren't allowed to be given these certificates, and thus, couldn't marry.
By asking the role. Hope you got something from my A
U.S. treaties and international agreements currently in force (i.e., excluding those, some of which are included on this page, that are no longer in force, and that are signed but not ratified or otherwise have not yet entered into force), divided between (1) bilateral treaties organized by state and then by topic, and (2) multilateral treaties organized by topic, see the annual State Department publication.
I have an incomplete list but I hope it helps.
Contents
1 Pre-Revolutionary War treaties
2 U.S. international treaties
2.1 1776–1799
2.2 1800–1849
2.3 1850–1899
2.4 1900–1949
2.5 1950–1999
2.6 2000–current
3 U.S.–Native American treaties
3.1 1778–1799
3.2 1800–1809
3.3 1810–1819
3.4 1820–1829
3.5 1830–1839
3.6 1840–1849
3.7 1850–1859
3.8 1860–1869
3.9 1870–1879
3.10 1880–present
Hope this helps! ^^
Answer:
yes
Explanation:
It created a leadership void that no other fundamentalist leader could fill.