Answer:
The correct answer for this is Roman Empire.
Explanation:
The Roman empire is divided after the death of Constantine. In 364, Emperor Valentinian I divided the empire into western and eastern sections, putting himself in power in the west and his brother Valens in the east.
The western region remained under attack and the empire in divided into numerous states where as the eastern portion became the Byzantine empire.
Answer: The territory is composed of three large islands—St. Croix, St. John, and St. Thomas—and about 50 small islets and cays. The capital is Charlotte Amalie, on St. Thomas.
Explanation: this is something i have been working on for a little bit have dune a little bit but i hope it is the right thing.
Answer:
Explanation:
The first two paragraphs are a summary of fact. The tone is cool and collective. It puts in simple language that a threat, up until the Cuban Missel Crisis, was treated with respect and cool heads prevailed.
But once the soviets were seen as instigators of a policy that clearly violated the Monroe and later the Truman doctrines (though this was not stated), the tone changed and Kennedy's anger and steadfast determination to meat the challenge came out. Much is going on in that last stanza. Kennedy is warning the Soviet Union not to go to far. Their action will not be ignored and it will not be let slide under the rug. He will meet force with force if need be.
His tone is still calm, but he is both angry and determined.
The proprietary colony gets land given to them by the king so he can get paid yearly, & royal colony is under direct control of the England crown.
Maysville road: Jackson vetoed the bill on the grounds that federal funding of intrastate projects of this nature was unconstitutional. He declared that such bills violated the principle that the federal government should not be involved in local economic affairs. Jackson also pointed out that funding for these kinds of projects interfered with paying off the national debt.
National Bank veto: <span>As his term continued, Jackson truly grew a desire to crush the Second Bank of the United States. Over time he had decided that it could not continue as it was, and that it did not warrant reform. It must be destroyed. Jackson's reason for this conclusion was an amalgamation of his past financial problems, his views on states' rights, and his Tennessee roots. </span>