Https://ishmam.files.wordpress.com/2011/04/31-rebellion-and-reaction-in-the-1960s-and-1970s.pdf
Answer:
D.) The Constitution
Explanation:
The laws held in each state are important, but they must abide by the Constitution.
The Declaration of Independence was just a letter written by the colonists to the British monarchy.
The orders of the President can be overturned by Congress. There are many systems in place that can challenge what a President says.
The Constitution is the rulebook which all laws stem from. The Supreme Court settles cases based off of this text. This makes it the "law of the land".
The answer choice which are true about The Confessions of Nat Turner are:
- B. It was published to take advantage of public interest.
- C. It claimed to be a definitive account of Turner's motivations.
<h3>Nat Turner</h3>
He was an ex-slave who claimed to have received a divine mandate in order to free all slaves and to kill any slave owner.
He had a book which was named "The Confessions of art Turner" which he told to a white lawyer about his divine inspiration and the morality of killing any slave owner he found.
With this in mind, we can see that the correct answers are options B and C
Read more about Nat Turner here:
brainly.com/question/20389403
Enlightenment would be the cause of battles for independence such as the American Revolution and the French Revolution. Philosophers such as John Locke, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, and Montesquieu argued that countries should be ruled under a republic, not a monarchy. The main ideas from them would be natural rights, the social contract, and the separation of powers. These ideas would inspire people in America to rebel against their tyrants in order to implement this system of ideas inspired by the Enlightenment.
Explanation:
1.a. Asia had a lot of people which meant more money for them if they could open trading ports and such
b. Asia had things like gunpowder,silk,spices basically what is considered rare goods at the time
2. a desire for gold influence European decisions because they wanted more money