The correct answer is true
I agree with Pavlov that Nicholas and Alexandra were not suited by personality to be rulers of a country such as Russia. In that sense, they contributed to the start of the Revolution;however, there were other factors at work, because the forces that led to the Revolution happening had been developing for years in Russia, long before the birth of Nicholas II, even. So these factors seem to have been more at work than Alexandra's personality and actions in causing the Revolution. Also, Queen Mary, King George V and the British royal family were constituentional monarchs, it must be kept in mind, which is rather different than being an autocrat like Nicholas II was, or an autocrat's consort, as Alexandra was. I think Nicholas would have made an excellant constitutional monarch, but he wasn't suited to be an autocrat. So the difference that the Romanovs, especially Nicholas and Alexandra had a lot of power, whereas the British royal family actually had very little power must be borne in mind, although it's true that Alexandra's personality and attitude was likely not suited to even being the consort of a constituentional monarch, and also Nicholas II was not a good autocrat.
Hitler's plans for Europe's domination suffered their greatest specific defeat under the leadership of Stalin, whose forces stopped Hitler's advances in the East in Russia.
Answer:
to torture and eliminate Jews
Explanation:
A concentration camp or internment camp is a detention or confinement center where people are locked up because they belong to a generic collective instead of their individual acts, without prior trial and without judicial guarantees, although there may be an integrated legal coverage in a system of political repression. Concentration camps are often used to lock up political opponents, specific ethnic or religious groups, people of a certain sexual orientation, prisoners of war, civilians living in a region in conflict or other collectives.
Unlike a prison camp, which is used as a detention center for enemy soldiers in a conflict, a concentration camp is used mostly for the detention of non-combatants, although in some historical periods they were also used to imprison prisoners of war. war. They are publicly known detention centers, usually large.
The work camp is considered a variant, a concentration camp where prisoners are subjected to forced labor, often in deplorable conditions.
Due to the mistreatment of the civilian population during the Second World War, the Fourth Geneva Convention was drafted in 1949, specifically legislating on the treatment of the civilian population by the warring parties in a conflict.