I think it’s the testaments sorry if it is wrong
Answer:
Missi or Missi Dominici is the Latino term for "envoys of the Lord". They are officials appointed by and on behalf of Charlemagne, the Emperor of the Holy Romans between 768 and 814 AD, to supervise the administration, order and justice.
Based on his Christian belief, Charlemagne selected Christian archbishops and bishops and abbots, and sent them throughout his kingdom, so that they might execute justice, to ensure respect for the king, to control the government of the military dukes and administrative counts, to receive their oath of allegiance, to let the king's will be known, at times by distributing basic laws around the empire, and to supervise the clergy of their assigned region.
Charlemagne's notion of fidelity was to ensure order: people keep abiding laws and that the emperor's vision and decisions can be effective all over his kingdom. They were crucial to the success of his government because without order, Charlemagne couldn't rule over a very large empire which comprises the current Western and Central Europe.
Charlemagne believed that all freemen should swear an oath of fidelity to him as emperor so that he knew that his followers were loyal and that he felt safe around his people.
Explanation:
Answer: A) Nixon resigned as President.
Explanation:
Nixon tried to block the judicial process, which led the public to call for the president to be impeached for obstruction of justice. In 1974, in United States v. Richard M. Nixon, the Supreme Court ruled that the president had to surrender the so-called Watergate tapes. Nixon resigned to avoid being impeached. Nixon had begun his presidency hoping to heal America, to “bring people together.” He left the presidency having deeply wounded the nation. The credibility gap between the presidency and the public that had developed under Lyndon B. Johnson had become a chasm under Nixon, as the Watergate revelations fueled a widespread cynicism about the integrity of politics and politicians.
Georgia is holding two runoff elections for U.S. Senate on January 5, 2021, as no candidate received a majority of votes in either the regularly scheduled election or the special election on November 3, 2020. Georgia was the only state to hold two U.S. Senate elections in 2020. The special election is being held to fill the rest of retired Sen. Johnny Isakson's (R) term.
The runoff elections will determine which party has a majority in the U.S. Senate. Democrats need to win both seats to split control of the chamber 50-50. The vice president (Democrat Kamala Harris beginning in January 2021) casts tie-breaking votes in the Senate. Republicans need to win at least one seat to maintain their majority.