The Zhou Dynasty used the notion of the Mandate of Heaven to defend the overthrow of the Shang Dynasty. The "Mandate of Heaven" is an earliest Chinese philosophical concept, which was created during the Zhou Dynasty(1046-256 BCE). The Mandate of Heaven decides whether a ruler of China is satisfactorily righteous to lead; if he does not accomplish his responsibilities as an emperor, then he fails the Mandate and thus the right to be emperor. Zhou leaders appealed that the Shang emperors had become fraudulent and unfit, so Heaven commanded their removal.
One of the clearest policy manifestations of the "kill the Indian, save the man" concept in western expansion would be those of the boarding school era. These policies removed Native American children from their homes and sent them to far-off boarding schools in an effort to replace (and remove) Native languages, customs, and culture from an entire generation. White policymakers waged a cultural genocide on the generation in an effort to replace their Native traditions with English, Christianity, and other white, Euroamerican values. The earliest boarding schools were actually created by William Pratt, the military official who first coined the "kill the Indian, save the man" motto.
Discover the capacity of reinvent self.
German troops hired by the British to help fight during the American Revolution. ... This allowed the state's prince, the Landgraf Friedrich II, to keep taxes low and public spending high. So I believe true
<u>Answer:</u>
History as common memory.
Option: (A)
<u>Explanation:</u>
- Some of the events that are associated with the history may not be documented but that are existing for a series of generation through the means of stories and beliefs about the events in the past.
- This is called as history as a common memory. The stories can be manipulated easily and the original form of the story is hard to track.
- This can be important for creating the sense of individual identity and values of a certain community.