Answer:
Church
Explanation:
In Anglo-Saxon England, one of the most important sources of learning was the Church. Priests and nuns were often educated and able to read and write. Therefore, the scholars of the Church were greatly valued and sought out by Kings in order to bring scholarship to their courts and Europe in general. This role of the Church continued for many centuries, as literacy was not a widespread skill until modern times.
 
        
             
        
        
        
There were many reasons for not unifying in one
political system:<span>
One of them was the geography, Greece contained many mountainous
terrains, valleys which were separated from each other, many islands where it
was easy to form new towns and settlement, giving birth to many power centers
instead of one
Another reason was the sense of heroism in Greece and to
fulfil that the great Mediterranean, they could sail to wherever they wanted in
the times of need resulting from any kind of crisis and this helped them
establish new colonies all over the Mediterranean.
<span>Third reason was the presence of aristocracy who denied the
establishment of a monarch and each city or state defended their independence.</span></span>
 
        
             
        
        
        
A cultural historian would get, by interviewing unemployed people during the Great Depression, B. The names of specific people who were unemployed and D. Stories about the experience of being unemployed.
This is because such historian would be doing microhistory, gathering information and stories about people directly from the source, while the economic historian would be doing macro-history, not paying attention to individuals. 
 
        
                    
             
        
        
        
It was the landmark case "Marbury vs. Madison" that allowed the Supreme Court to claim the power of judicial review (the authority to declare a law unconstitutional), since this now acts as one of the major "checks" the court has on the legislative branch. 
        
             
        
        
        
Great Britain and Greece. coal plants danger for disappear