Answer: where’s the passage?
Explanation:
Answer:
it celebrates a day when the French masses rose up against oppression.
Explanation:
Bastille Day is a national festival that takes place in memory of the fall of the Bastille, the historic moment that begins the French Revolution.
The Bastille, or more precisely Bastille Saint-Antoine was a prison and a symbol of the absolute and arbitrary power of the Old Regime of Louis XVI. On July 14, 1789, the protesters took control of the fortress, being the first major intervention of the French people and breaking the absolute power of the king.
For French citizens this event is considered as the symbol of the battle against oppression and hence the importance of the date and the motivation for the whole celebration.
In this period the acclaimed principles of Freedom, Equality and Fraternity - Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité, the motto of the Revolution - have so far surpassed the aristocratic, monarchical and religious ideals towards the conquest of new forms of government grounded in democracy.
It was with the French Revolution that the absolutist monarchy, ruler of the country for centuries, was abolished.
The most common form of rule in world history has been monarchy (from the Greek <em>monos</em>, "one," and <em>arche</em>, "power"). It is an unipersonal, hereditary and lifelong form of government. The Head of State is the king (or queen), the prince or the emperor. Although monarchy was at first absolute (the ruler had absolute or total power), it then evolved into a limited form (the ruler needed the help of the most powerful members of society) and finally into a constitutional form (the ruler is primarily a symbolic figure and the nation is governed by a parliament).
At present, the monarchy is the form of government of a few countries around the world, such as Spain, England, Japan and Denmark, to name a few.
(B) A fort was established and many were killed by disease.
After Lewis and Clark's expedition, the people of mandan village were faced by a devastating outbreak of smallpox disease in the year 1837, as much as the epidemic was devastating it played an important role in uniting the surviving people in Mandan and Hidatsa village who later interacted in trade farming and hunting