Czar Nicolas Romanov was the last Czar of imperial Russia.
He wasn’t the best leader, he chose at the start of his reign that he would necessarily make all of the decisions in Russia and not have a democratic government, he did many things during his reign that caused for such actions to happen against him and caused the people of the country to demand him to renounce the throne. On the day of his coronation a disaster happened, there were I believe 1642 commoners killed because too many people travelled to a fair set up by Nicolas and his helpers in the family which offered food and drinks to those who went to it first, they didn’t think that so many would show and some commoners got trampled in from the shear size of the people there. That is just one example of his bad leadership, but that even set him up for a bad reign.
He was infamous for his role in pulling Russia out of the air in 1916, causing communism to arise in his country etc.
His family and him were murdered in Yekaterinburg in on the 17th of July 1918 by the Bolsheviks (the communist army) Him, his wife, his four daughters: Olga, Tatiana, Maria and Anastasia: his son Alexei and their dog, were all murmured in the basement of the Ipativ house where they were being kept in by the Bolsheviks. After the abdication of the Czar on the 15th of March 1917 they had been taken to multiple houses by the Bolsheviks and kept and guarded there by them, until they were murdered.
Some of my knowledge may not be perfectly accurate, but hope this helps.
Darwinism was always opposed at almost every level for everything he said. Genius often runs into that problem. It probably was no consolation for him that he was not alone in opposition to his ideas. I always like to tell the story about the fact that Darwin was a divinity student. I think, but I'm not sure, that he actually had a parish for a very short time. He also thought if he found fossils that suggested related creatures to his classification system that happened quickly, he would gladly say evolution was wrong. He found no such quick relationship. I admire his wife particularly, who was very devout (more so than he was). It was she who insisted he publish his findings.
Enough blab. I'm just very fond of Mr. and Mrs. Darwin.
Social Darwinism applies the survival of the fittest to the evolution to human behavior (mostly moral behaviour).
Who opposed it? Almost everyone. Social behaviourists because they thought though the idea acceptable, it did not go far enough. Needless to say religious people then and even today are horrified that God is left out of the equation.
You can see a wonderful film starring Spencer Tracy and Fredric March called Inherit the Wind which was based on the Snopes Case. It was one of the most attention getting legal cases of its generation (1925) I'm pointing out all of this to show where the opposition came from. It had then in 1925 a long history of more than 50 years of being opposed. The church I go to vehemently opposes Darwinism in any form and it is now 93 years after the Snopes Case. and more than a century since the publication of Darwin's original book.
I'm sorry this answer is so long. Had you just asked what it was, you would have gotten a single sentence answer. Since you asked who opposed it, you get much more.
Answer:
social contract theory is an other descriptive theory about society and the relationship between rules and laws, and why society needs them
Silent letters include b, c, e, h, k, n, p, s, u, and w, while silent letter combinations include 'gh'. Each one is associated with its own rules and exception
Answer:navigator Jacques Cartier
Explanation:French navigator Jacques Cartier becomes the first European explorer to discover the St. Lawrence River in present-day Quebec, Canada. In 1534, Cartier was commissioned by King Francis I of France to explore the northern American lands in search of riches and the rumored Northwest Passage to Asia.