The Greek tyrant, Peisistratus :)
Answer:
Irish Mark System
Explanation:
Irish Mark System was the system of prison management of Ireland prisons. The system was developed by Sir Walter Crofton.
The system was modeled after the Mark system of Alexander Maconochie. According to the Irish Mark System, the prisoners were trained academically and in trade, given military training, and they were prepared to have self-control also. <u>This system was divided into three stages of confinement:</u>
Isolation- Prisoners were kept in prison for nine months.
Congregate work- In this stage, the prisoners were given credits or marks based on their industry or good behave.
Intermediate Prison- In this stage, prisoners were under minimal supervision.
After successfully completing all the stages, the prisoners were given 'ticket of leave.'
It was basically set up like a mass assembly line in the monastery and was called a scriptorium.
Answer: Option D
<u>Explanation:</u><u>
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In ancient times the writings were done in clay tablets and then was done in wax and then on the papyrus or paper. In Monastery there was a place called as the scriptorium where the scripts were written and stored. The Scriptorium was the place where they copied, wrote, maintained manuscripts. The monks working there as scribes would script it and arrange it in a mass assembly line style.
Each scriptorium had a director who was a provisioner who provided materials and checked the copying process. It was also a custom followed that the monks were asked to write at least for an hour.
The Second Great Awakening was a major religious movement in the U.S. that reached out to the unchurched and brought large numbers of people to a vivid experience of Christianity. They believed in the perfectibility of people and were highly moralistic in their endeavors.