Similar:
1. Andreas Vesalius (1514-1564) and John Hunter (1728-1793) both had an enormous impact on the study of human anatomy.
2. Both of them believed that the path to knowledge in regard to human anatomy and physiology was through <u>practical</u> methods, by dissection, observation, and surgical experimentation.
Different:
1. Vesalius was a pioneer in the field of anatomy, doing original work that challenged centuries of previously accepted thought in the field. Hunter built on the tradition begun by Vesalius and developed knowledge of anatomy further.
2. Vesalius earned his doctorate at a prestigious university, the University of Padua, and then went on to became famous as a faculty member of that university. Hunter never completed a course of university studies in surgery. He started out by doing dissections for his brother (an obstetrician) and then learned surgery directly from a surgeon at a hospital (in London).
Sit-ins were arguably the most valuable tool used by civil rights activists to achieve their goals. All over the country, African-American citizens protested segregation in public places (like restaurants) to expose the inequality present in the US. This type of peaceful protest started with four African-American college students who refused to move from a food counter at a Woolworth's in North Carolina. Despite facing physical violence, these students refused to fight back, showing their constraint. Due to the brave actions of these four men, thousands of African-Americans followed suit all over the country. This caused a change in public restaurants all over the country, as the sit-ins caused business owners to lose a significant amount of money.
Spain's colonial basin was the Caribbean sea, Spain wanted to secure anything in the Caribbean sea to control it's trade.
<span>At the same time Robert E. Lee and the ANV were losing at Gettysburg, Penn., John C. Pemberton were losing at Vicksburg, Miss. These events were important to the Union.</span>
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