Answer: A chronology that determines the age of a feature or event in years.
Explanation:
There were many similarities between the Declaration of Independence and the Declaration of Rights of Man and Citizen. To begin with, both say that things can be changed for the good of the people. Also, they both state that people have certain rights guaranteed to them.
This should help a little, I hope:
Stalin:
-Communist
-No Private Property
Mussolini:
-Fascist
-Private Property
In other words, I believe it is C.
Answer: (From left to right) Spartan / Athens / Athens / Spartan
Explanation:
Spartan children were sent to military school at the age of 7, and the women were educated and could own property. In Athens, the children were educated but women didn't have many rights.
Andrew Jackson started the "Bank War" over the rechartering of the Second Bank of the United States. Proponents of the bank said that it encouraged westward expansion, expanded international commerce using credit, and helped reduce the government's debt. Jackson, on the other hand, was heavily against the BUS, calling it a danger to the liberties of the people. A champion for the rights of the common man, he advocated to protect the farmers and laborers. He claimed that the bank was owned by a small group of upperclass men, who only became richer by pocketing the money paid by the poorer common man for loans.
Jackson argued against the constitutionality of the BUS that was upheld about fourteen years before, during the 1819 McCulloch v. Maryland case. One of the points of the unanimous decision in that case stated that Congress had the power to establish the bank. Jackson, however, said that McCulloch v. Maryland could not prevent him from declaring a presidential veto on the bank if he believed it unconstitutional. He said that the decision in that 1819 case “ought not to control the coordinate authorities of this Government. The Congress, the Executive, and the Court must each for itself be guided by its own opinion of the Constitution," meaning that the 1819 decision could not control his interpretation of the Constitution or prevent him from doing what he thought was right. This point of view earned him the nickname "King Andrew I" from his critics, who saw his use of the veto and his attempted intrusion on congressional power as power-hungry behavior. In the end, Jackson was successful in challenging the bank, as its charter expired in 1836. He had successfully killed the "monster" that was the Bank of the United States.