Spanish missions were built for the specific purpose of
teaching American Indians to accept European values.
Answer: Option A
<u>Explanation:</u>
Spanish Missions also called as California Mission started during the second half of 1700s. This mission were imitated in order to make the native Americans to follow Catholicism. This California Mission period lasted till 1833 from 1769.
The main reason behind this preaching of Catholicism was to unify (making them to be devoted as Christians and Spain citizens by following their traditions and cultures) the spanish colonies across the pacific coast. So that they can expand the European Territory. In 1769, the Spain king sent military and Franciscan missionaries. Thus the Franciscan priest Junipero Serra started the first mission.
Answer: B lack of line and color and pattern
Explanation:
I believe that they changed to buddhism
Answer:
In the summer of 1963, civil rights leaders planned a mass gathering and march for freedom in Washington DC to bring national attention to racial inequity.
Explanation:
The March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom was a political demonstration on August 28, 1963. It was one of the highlights of the civil rights movement in the United States. Over 200,000 people gathered in front of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. and demanded the end of racial discrimination in the United States. After the march, Martin Luther King gave his famous speech "I Have a Dream" in the National Mall.
The march followed earlier demonstrations, including the Birmingham campaign earlier that year and contributed to the adoption of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
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HOMEWORK HELP > LAW AND POLITICS
Describe a principle that the philosophies of Locke, Montesquieu and Rousseau have in common.
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JPGWOLF37 | CERTIFIED EDUCATOR
Locke, Montesquieu and Rousseau all believed that in order for societies to prevent despotic rule, a term coined by Montesquieu, but understood to mean dictatorial tyranny, governments must not be based on the brute strength or power of a king or military dictator, or based on the rules of powerful men who may change their minds and thus the law as they see fit. This kind of rule, according to all three men, made ordinary citizens live in fear and uncertainty.
To prevent men from living in fear of one another, Locke, Rousseau and Montesquieu believed that societies must be based on social contracts, or what Montesquieu called a constitution, which would outline the laws of the land, and set in stone what rights the people and the state had.
In other words, all three of these men put forth philosophies of government that were founded on certain principles, which everyone in a society would have to agree upon. Each society would derive its legitimacy from these founding principles and laws, which would protect certain basic rights and outlaw certain actions, so that even a monarch or authoritarian ruler would have limits on his power.
Although Montesquieu was the only one of these three to describe a "constitution," both Locke and Rousseau believed that a "social contract" or "social compact" was necessary. The ideas behind these two concepts were similar, and the philosophies of all three of these men served as the basis for what we now call representative democracies, or republics.