Answer:
The three empires were composed of many different ethnicities that were often at odds with each other.
Explanation:
The Austro-Hungarian empire included Austrians and Hungarians, who dominated politically, but also included Croats, Serbs, Romanians, Bulgarians, among others. These groups had ethnic tensions, for language, religion, or cultural reasons.
The Ottomans comprised a Turkish elite who governed from Istanbul over Arabs, Levantines, Kurds, Egyptians, and Magrebies. Everyone knows that the Middle-East is a region brimming with ethnic conflict and the Ottoman years were not the exception.
The Soviet Union faced the same problem. For example, the Baltic States are inhabited by Baltic People, not Slavic People, and as a consequence of their invasion and annexation into the Soviet Union during the Second World War, they still hold grudges against Russians (the Soviet Union was dominated by Russians). Same applies for the Turkic Peoples of Central Asia, or the muslim minorities in the Caucasus (for example, the Chechens, who even fought a brief war against Russia in the 2000s).
<span>Historical method is type of research,
it allows the researchers to see and explore time periods of the
history. Diares,paintings, and newspapers as sources of historical data.Historical
method is techniques by which the researches use this sources and other
evidence, to research and then to write data histories in form of accounts of
the past.</span>
The Privy Council was a select group of advisers that gave direction to the king on where to locate and how to maintain and operate the royal system of privies, which today we would refer to as outhouses, or portapotties. It enabled and facilitate greater debate in the House of Burgesses, in that members were better able to pop out for quick use of the restroom, as opposed to having to formally call to recess to use a chamber pot back at their lodgings. I hope this helps!
Answer:
B
Explanation:
"A bicameral parliament or legislature is one in which two assemblies share legislative power"