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belka [17]
2 years ago
6

Help please! I need help on this test about history

History
1 answer:
bazaltina [42]2 years ago
3 0

Answer:

A.) Freedom from imprisonment without just cause

Explanation:

I got it right on performance matter!!

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Why was Suleiman's failure to take Vienna pivotal for Europe?
AVprozaik [17]

Answer:

Because it stopped further Ottoman spreading in Central and Western Europe.

Explanation:

Suleiman is regarded as the greatest of the Ottoman sultans. Since he arrived on the throne, he managed to spread his country. In 1521 he conquered Belgrade, and after the battle of Mohacs he managed to open the door towards the capital of Habsburg Monarchy.

Still, as he didn't managed to conquer the capital, he had to retreat. His failure to capture Vienna, prevented the Ottomans to spread their domain across the Europe.

7 0
2 years ago
What were andrew johnson policies concerning the rights of African Americans?
Lelu [443]

for the most part, historians view Andrew Johnson as the worst possible person to have served as President at the end of the American Civil War. Because of his gross incompetence in federal office and his incredible miscalculation of the extent of public support for his policies, Johnson is judged as a great failure in making a satisfying and just peace. He is viewed to have been a rigid, dictatorial racist who was unable to compromise or to accept a political reality at odds with his own ideas. Instead of forging a compromise between Radical Republicans and moderates, his actions united the opposition against him. His bullheaded opposition to the Freedmen's Bureau Bill, the Civil Rights Act of 1866, and the Fourteenth Amendment eliminated all hope of using presidential authority to affect further compromises favorable to his position. In the end, Johnson did more to extend the period of national strife than he did to heal the wounds of war.

Most importantly, Johnson's strong commitment to obstructing political and civil rights for blacks is principally responsible for the failure of Reconstruction to solve the race problem in the South and perhaps in America as well. Johnson's decision to support the return of the prewar social and economic system—except for slavery—cut short any hope of a redistribution of land to the freed people or a more far-reaching reform program in the South.

Historians naturally wonder what might have happened had Lincoln, a genius at political compromise and perhaps the most effective leader to ever serve as President, lived. Would African Americans have obtained more effective guarantees of their civil rights? Would Lincoln have better completed what one historian calls the "unfinished revolution" in racial justice and equality begun by the Civil War? Almost all historians believe that the outcome would have been far different under Lincoln's leadership.

Among historians, supporters of Johnson are few in recent years. However, from the 1870s to around the time of World War II, Johnson enjoyed high regard as a strong-willed President who took the courageous high ground in challenging Congress's unconstitutional usurpation of presidential authority. In this view, much out of vogue today, Johnson is seen to have been motivated by a strict constructionist interpretation of the Constitution and by a firm belief in the separation of powers. This perspective reflected a generation of historians who were critical of Republican policy and skeptical of the viability of racial equality as a national policy. Even here, however, apologists for Johnson acknowledge his inability to effectively deal with congressional challenges due to his personal limitations as a leader.

7 0
3 years ago
Which colony is the farthest north?
PIT_PIT [208]

Answer:

Massachusetts

Explanation:

8 0
3 years ago
Which power are given directly to the people
Serhud [2]
The power of dicktatoship and freedom .

pls forgive if mistakes..me english no good..me bad
8 0
2 years ago
Read 2 more answers
How was the Market revolution changing the<br> United states?
Digiron [165]

Answer:

In the 1820s and 1830s, a market revolution was transforming American business and global trade. Factories and mass production increasingly displaced independent artisans. Farms grew and produced goods for distant, not local, markets, shipping them via inexpensive transportation like the Erie Canal.

Explanation:

HOPE THIS HELPS ;}

7 0
2 years ago
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