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galina1969 [7]
3 years ago
8

Where was the first publishing house built?

History
2 answers:
bogdanovich [222]3 years ago
8 0

The first publishing house was built in England.

Cambridge University Press is the oldest printing and publishing house in the world. It was founded on a royal charter that Henry VIII granted to the University in 1534. Cambridge University Press has been operating continuously as a printer and publisher since the first Press book was printed in 1584. Since 1534, books under Cambridge University's imprint have appeared each and every year.

The Press turnt into one of the largest educational and academic publishers in the world, publishing over 2,000 books and 150 journals a year.

mina [271]3 years ago
7 0
I´m pretty sure the answer is England.
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Latin American liberation movements were often based on Enlightenment ideas of natural rights. Describe some of the natural righ
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The correct answer to this open question is the following.

Latin American liberation movements were often based on Enlightenment ideas of natural rights. Describe some of the natural rights Hidalgo could have listed in his decree as explanations for why he wished to abolish slavery, taxes based on race, and the requirement of the seal.

The natural ideas that priest Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla could have listed in his decree could have been the right to life, liberty, and property. Indeed that is what he referred to when he gathered all the people from the Mexican town of Dolores, Hidalgo.

Enlightenment thinkers and philosophers such as Voltaire, Jean-Jaques Rosseau, Baron of Montesquieu, or John Locke, developed interesting concepts about government and citizen rights that years later influenced important revolutionary movements as was the case of the American Revolutionary War, the French Revolution, and the Independence Movement of México.

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3 years ago
Why might Parliament have included the point that its members should be elected freely
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Parliament may have included that members should be elected freely because it want to make sure that the government members should not always be from the same family. ... They have similar philosophies, both have the laws that apply to individuals as well as the government.
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4 years ago
Who had the better system of citizenship, the athenians or the romans
OleMash [197]
Hope this helps...

Athenians and Romans are two words encompassing different times, spaces and political objectives. The word "citizenship" means different things for either at different times.
As for the word "better", needless to say one would have to state, fore and foremost: for whom.

Athens is an intelligence powerhouse between the VI and the IV Century BC. It virtually disappears after that under the heel of the Macedonians and the Romans.

Rome is a logistic and engineering forge between the VIII Century BC and the IV Century AD.
Their statutes were obviously very different as different were their needs and political objectives .

As for the "better system" you can rest assured that in both cases, whatever institutions they chose, they were best for themselves.

The very notion of "citizenship" was local in Athens (in Pericles time). If you lived in the city, had sufficient means and showed up in the Agora you could vote. There never were in Athens the hundreds of thousands inhabitants that peopled Rome at the highest of the Empire (II century AD).

Athens never had an Empire. Even the one allegedly created by Alexander never was one in the sense we give to the word today. Greeks colonies were independent political units often at odds with the mother country. There were no political links between them, as there were no links between the kingdoms conquered by Alexander. An Athenian was an Athenian if he lived in Athens.
A Roman citizen could live in Rumania and claim "Civis Romanus Sum". Paul did when he was captured on his way to Damascus.

Yet, this did not mean that he could vote for the Roman Senate. He couldn't even if he lived in Rome. In fact the Empire had done away with any formal popular vote that could never be implemented.

In conclusion, the answer to your question is: let's not make cronological errors. Citizenship means to us a combination of allegiance and rights. This combination might have existed in Athens and Rome (it did), but it was not guaranteed by an institution, allegiances were different over different territories and rights could change, in both places, with time and with the whims of the ruler

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