Answer:
Jean-Paul Marat wrote a radical newspaper naming all citizens that were enemies of the French Revolution.
Explanation:
Jean-Paul Marat, a radical Jacobin, wrote from 1.789 to 1.792 <em>L'Ami du peuple</em> (The Friend of the People), which advocated for lower-class people and had no hesitation to mention name of people considered as "enemies of the Revolution". The newspaper was considered dangerous because writings ignited violence and rebellion within lower-class people and had an enormous influence in events like Women's March on Versailles (October 1.789), the elimination of Monarchy (August 10, 1.792) and the September Massacres (September 2 - 6, 1.792)
Answer:
38th parallel, popular name given to latitude 38° N that in East Asia roughly demarcates North Korea and South Korea. The line was chosen by U.S. military planners at the Potsdam Conference (July 1945) near the end of World War II as an army boundary, north of which the U.S.S.R.
Explanation:
From the 11th to 13th centuries, medieval Europe<span> absorbed knowledge from </span>Islamic civilization<span>, which was then at its cultural peak. Of particular importance was the </span>rediscovery of some ancient classic texts<span>, most notably the work of the </span>Greek natural philosopher Aristotle<span>, through retranslations from </span>Arabic<span>. Also of note is the reception of advances in </span>astronomy<span> and </span>mathematics<span> made in the Islamic world during the 10th century, such as the development of the </span>astrolabe<span>.</span>
Answer:
The Ottoman Empire and the Ming Dynasty had different views of the world and their place in it. Islam under the Ottoman Empire and Neo-Confucianism under the Ming Dynasty influenced the political, economic, military, and diplomatic interactions with others outside of their realm.
Explanation: