Answer: B. Mongolian empire
Explanation:
The Mongolian empire at its height was so large that it is considered to be the largest land empire to ever exist. It stretched all the way from China to eastern Europe and provided for the integration of cultures of people from all over Eurasia.
Founded by Genghis Khan, the empire kept growing even after his death under his sons but eventually fragmented after some internal conflicts.
Answer:
freedom of religion
right to a fair trial
freedom from slavery
right to government participation
Explanation:
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights includes which basic rights has thirty rights for humans regardless of which country or continent they found themselves in.
Considering the available options, it contains freedom of religion, the right to a fair trial, freedom from slavery, right to government participation.
Some other rights include " a free and fair word" "right to education" "right to copyrights" etc.
The correct answer is D.
Legislative or Congressional oversight refers to the surveillance performed by the US Congress on the Executive power (government) and all the agencies that conform it. Such surveillance is generally conducted by the Congress comitees and it includes the review and monitoring of programs, and policy implementations.
<u>This Congressional power is a mechanism embodied within the System of Checks and Balances. </u>The System of Checks and Balances is designed to preserve the division of powers between the three branches: legislative (Congress), executive (Government) and judiciary (courts system), so that none of them gathers enough power to overrule the others. With this aim, each of the branches is granted powers (expressed or implicit) to supervise the other two.
Answer:
because in protestant religion it said that the king or prince had to take care of the churches and Henry the 8th who was ruler at the time really liked that idea so he brought protestantism into england, slowed began to spread into Ireland
The english civil war had an effect on the laws of the colonies