Answer:
- Habeas Corpus was suspended during his Presidency.
- Made slavery illegal in the United States.
- First President to be assassinated
- Famous "Address" was given at the dedication of a battlefield cemetery
- "Four score and seven years ago..."
- Lincoln's War Powers
Explanation:
Abraham Lincoln suspended Habeas Corpus during the Civil War as he claimed emergency powers for himself (Lincoln war powers) to enable him deal with the Southern cessation.
He contributed to making slavery illegal by championing the 13th Amendment which cleared Congress before his assassination but was only ratified after. His assassination went down in history as the first time a president was assassinated.
His very famous ''Gettysburg Address'' which began with the words: "Four score and seven years ago..." was given as he dedicated a battlefield cemetery for Union soldiers.
It would be the "c. feudal system" that was <span>formalized in England during the medieval period, since this system left the lower class "peasants" with practically no upward social mobility. </span>
They provided fresh water and fertile soil for farming
Answer:
The correct option is 2.
Explanation:
The 1787 constitution was created on September 17, 1787 and was presented on September 28, 1787.
According to the 1787 constitution. The president has the Power through the Advice and Consent of the Senate, to make Treaties, to do this, two thirds of the Senators present must agree.
And he has the power to nominate Ambassadors, other public Ministers and Consuls, Judges of the supreme Court, and all other Officers of the United States with the Advice and Consent of the Senate.
The Egyptians had long believed that they were the most ancient race on earth, and Psamtik, driven by intellectual curiosity, wanted to prove that flattering belief. Like a good psychologist, he began with a hypothesis: If children had no opportunity to learn a language from older people around them, they would spontaneously speak the primal, inborn language of humankind—the natural language of its most ancient people—which, he expected to show, was Egyptian.
Told the herdsman never tell anyone about it