Its the truth. he was constantly testing their faith. <span />
C. The sedition act punished people for publishing criticism of the government
The correct answer is D) The end of the war between France and Great Britain
The factor that added to the Panic of 1819 was "the end of the war between France and Great Britain."
This is a correct statement because England and France had ended their war but Britain ended up with a deep debt. British entrepreneurs and merchants still produced their goods and exported them to the United States at competitive prices so people could but the products and maintain the economy of England. What happened was that American businessmen demanded a raise in importations from England to protect jobs in the United States. So this factor added to the fears of the economic situation in America, where the financial crisis due to banking decisions had created serious problems in the American financial system.
You have to specify in what country? If the answer is France, they were mad at Louis XIV because he gave them no taxation yet no representation in government. This was very common in an absolutist government like France at the time. The nobles wanted the say in government so they teamed up with the peasants (had taxation and no representation) who were also very mad and they went to war with the monarchy. The monarchy lost because of the amount of people the nobles and peasants had.
The six elections to the consulship of Gaius Marius did not reflect a change in Rome's government. After having been elected as consul for the year 107 BC in 108 BC, Marius was elected consuls five consecutive times (105-100 BC) and was consul for the years 104-100 BC. This was highly unusual and addition to this,technically, unconstitutional. A law passed in 152 BC forbade re-election to the consulship for 10 years. Another very unusual fact was that in 105 BC he waselected in absentia, while he was fighting a war in Africa. This was because there was a military emergency (the Cimbrian War (112-101 BC) Roman territories<span>were being invaded by two migrating Germanic peoples, the Teutones and the Cimbri. They appeared in Austria and then moved around Gaul and northern Hispania.</span>