The answer is B. Otto von Bismarck!!
~Hope I helped
True.
For people who use K12, this is the correct answer:))
I had this on my test too, and I scored a 100!
Answer:
Wolsey made a name for himself as an efficient adminustrator, both for the crown and the church.
Explanation:
When Henry vill became king in 1509 Wolsey's rapid rise began. In 1514 he was created archbishop of York and a year later the Pope made him a cardinal. Soon afterward the king appointed him lord chancellor. In 1518 Wolsey was made Papal Legate in England enabling him to work for the popes desire for peace by organizing the treaty of London.
The correct answer is C) the Burlingame Treaty.
The treaty that improved U.S. relations with China was the Burlingame Treaty.
The Burlingame-Seward Treaty of 1868 improved the conditions established on the Treaty of Tianjun of 1858. With the signing of the new Burlingame Treaty, the relationship between the United States and China improved. Immigration restrictions were modified and the US federal government diminished its intromission in Chinese affairs.
The late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries were times of crisis for Russia. Not only did technology and industry continue to develop more rapidly in the West, but also new, dynamic, competitive great powers appeared on the world scene: Otto von Bismarck united Germany in the 1860s, the post-Civil War United States grew in size and strength, and a modernized Japan emerged from the Meiji Restoration of 1868. Although Russia was an expanding regional giant in Central Asia, bordering the Ottoman, Persian, British Indian, and Chinese empires, it could not generate enough capital to support rapid industrial development or to compete with advanced countries on a commercial basis. Russia's fundamental dilemma was that accelerated domestic development risked upheaval at home, but slower progress risked full economic dependency on the faster-advancing countries to the east and west. In fact, political ferment, particularly among the intelligentsia, accompanied the transformation of Russia's economic and social structure, but so did impressive developments in literature, music, the fine arts, and the natural sciences.