Answer: I am pretty sure the answer is B. That answer is the one that makes the most sense. I read up on some articles about it and this was the answer closest to what I read about. Hope it helps! :)
The first American railroads carried <span>passengers and freight.</span>
Answer:
The establishment of the church of England changed the government because it removed all the influence that the catholic church had in the politics of the united kingdom. In addition, the break with the Catholic church has left the local nobility free to take possession of the church's land and assets. These factors would serve to strengthen the power of the English monarchy.
Explanation:
The name of the Anglican Reformation was known by the decision of the English king King Henry VIII, to change the official religion of the country, making official a church created especially for this purpose, with rites similar to Catholicism, but which would have as supreme chief the English monarch. In the Pope's place. This church is the church of England.
This change was promulgated in 1534, and stems from the pope's refusal to accept the divorce of Henry and his first wife, the Spanish Queen Catherine of Aragon. The result is the English king's break with the Catholic church. The break had the advantage of ending the church's influence on British politics and left the local nobility free to take over the church's land and property. These factors would serve to strengthen the power of the English monarchy.
Soon after, Anglicanism is instituted, where the king is recognized as supreme head of the Church of England. By oath, the English were to submit to the king and not the pope to avoid persecution of justice or even to be excommunicated. Resistance to such changes was minimal, especially Tomas More, the author of the book Utopia, who declined the conversion and was executed.
one was for slavery and the right to have slaves and the other was the south wanted to break away from the US to have freedom
Answer: Throughout history there have been many genocides of peoples across the world, perpetrated by groups and/or on behalf of governments.
The genocide section of The Holocaust Explained will firstly explain the stages of genocide. It will then provide an explanation of a number of genocides perpetrated across the world since 1900. These include: The Herero and Nama Genocide, 1904-1907
The Armenian Genocide, 1915
The Cambodian Genocide, 1975-1979
The Rwandan Genocide, 1994
The Srebrenica Massacre, or Genocide, 1995
The Darfur Genocide, since 2003
Explanation: