50 years is a long time but not long enough for the preconquest Aztec to forget their way of living before the Spanish came. The compromise lies in how easy it is to get historical information from the Aztec since some of them will have already learned Spanish very well and between how accurate these historical accounts are since little details about the preconquest Aztec society can be forgotten in 50 years.
Answer:
Both, Kentucky and Virginia resolutions were passed in the state legislatures, against the powers of the federal Government.
Explanation:
The Kentucky Resolution or the Kentucky state legislature passed the first resolution on November 16, 1798 and the second on December 3, 1799. The Virginia Resolution or the Virginia state legislature was passed on December 24, 1798. Both the resolutions threatened the majority rule.
The Kentucky and Virginia resolutions stated that the acts of the national government beyond the scope of its constitutional powers are "unauthoritative, void, and of no force" (federal Alien and Sedition Acts). Both Kentucky and Virginia resolutions argued that the states had the right and duty to declare as unconstitutional those acts of the Congress that violates the Constitution.
Neville chamberlain. Was a British conservative politician who servers as prime minister of the United kingdom from May<span> 1937 to </span>May<span> 1940 ... How did the attack </span>change<span> American Isolationism. It made ... What event </span>took place at Versailles<span> in 1919 ... How many years was it </span>between<span> Japan's attack on China and pearl harbor.</span>
President Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR)
The decision to erect a memorial to Thomas Jefferson was passed by Congress in 1934. Controversy occurred when the Tidal Basin was chosen in 1937 as the site for the memorial. The Tidal Basin is a reservoir between the Potomac River and the Washington Channel. Putting the memorial there required the removal of flowering cherry trees, and there was some objection to that. There was some controversy also over the design of the memorial itself. But FDR, who had been the one who had, in 1934, suggested to the Commission of Fine Arts that a memorial to Jefferson be built, approved the pantheon design for the memorial and gave the project permission to proceed.