Answer:
<h3>In 1947, he was elected President of the Kenya African Union, through which he lobbied for independence from British colonial rule, </h3><h3>attracting widespread indigenous support but animosity from white settlers. ... On his release, Kenyatta became President of KANU and led the party to victory in the 1963 general election</h3>
Explanation:
<h2>PLEASE MARK ME BRAINLIEST AND FOLLOW ME LOTS OF LOVE FROM MY HEART'AND SOUL DARLING TEJASWINI SINHA HERE ❤️</h2>
Answer:
Your drawing reflects the Egyptian canon because the movement the figure is making and who it represents -- Egypt's political leader -- are typical of Egyptian art.
Explanation:
This question is trying to make you see the similarities between your drawing and the Egyptian art. The word <em>canon</em> means a body of works that form a tradition.
Thus you must take a look at how the Egyptians painted and decorated their objects to find common characteristics between them and your drawing.
Answer:
the legal system is based on English common law.
Explanation:
Answer:
A - The Greeks were able to stop a Persian invasion, and the Persian Empire stopped trying to conquer Greece.
Explanation:
As a result of the war with Persia, the Greeks defended their freedom, freed their Minor Asian and island ‘brothers’ from the Persian rule, and established their dominance in the Aegean Sea and the Black Sea straits. Persia was unable to resume offensive operations against the Greeks. In 449, after a new defeat of Persia by the Greeks, a peace was made near the Cypriot city of Salamis. The rampant expansion of the Achaemenid dynasty was halted for the first time, and the ancient Greek state entered the era of its highest cultural achievements.
<span>There are actually quite a few similarities between the two. Both couples were separated by family politics, but were able to get around them somehow (the crack in the wall for Pyramus and Thisbe; the masquerade and subsequent balcony scene for Romeo and Juliet) . They both agreed to marry in spite of their parents' disapproval, and both female leads attempted to contrive some way to be together with their lover in spite of their circumstances (Thisbe was scared away by a lioness with jaws dripping blood, and she left her shawl behind which the lioness chewed up; Juliet put herself into a death-like sleep in the hopes that she would escape her own impeding arranged marriage). However, everything went awry when the male leads thought that their beloved had been lost to them forever (Pyramus saw the shawl, and stabbed himself with this sword; Romeo saw Juliet in her deathlike sleep, and drank poison). The suicide of the male leads was soon after imitated by their female counterparts (Thisbe stabbed herself with Pyramus' sword; Juliet stabbed herself with Romeo's dagger). </span>
<span>In plot and, to a certain extent, theme, there really isn't much difference between the story of Pyramus and Thisbe and Romeo and Juliet - it is even possible to assume that Shakespeare derived inspiration for Romeo and Juliet from the story of Pyramus and Thisbe (Pyramus and Thisbe is a story of Roman origins). Shakespeare only added more characters to the story, emphasized the family rivalries, and set his story in Verona.</span>