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OLEGan [10]
3 years ago
12

Most of chopins music was written to be played on the?

History
2 answers:
pickupchik [31]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

PIANO is the answer

Explanation:

hope it helps

Mark me as Brainliest plz!

:DD

SSSSS [86.1K]3 years ago
4 0

Aya nakamura she is performed by copines song . she is a French malian singer

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What are the grandfather clauses examples of?
KonstantinChe [14]
Do you mean clocks????
6 0
4 years ago
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Question 1: How did trade affect the spread of religion during the Middle Ages? Using details from at least two documents from t
OLEGan [10]

1-Trade affected the spread of religion because, whenever traders would go along these trade routes they would meet new people who they would discuss their beliefs and religions with. (go into more detail withthis because you need TWO paragraphs)

2- Most arts from the Middle Ages had religous ties, or featured a clear hiearchy representing those of low class and high (as well as merchants)

3-The Dark Ages is an appropriate term because not much happened during this time it was a time where things were "dark". Not many artistic,social,economic,and agricultural progress was made, (insert two random documents that support this)

hope this helped been a while since l learned this

7 0
3 years ago
The area of land between the Persian Gulf and the Mediterranean Sea, with the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers running through it, is
LenaWriter [7]

Answer:

Fertile Crescent

Explanation:

It is the Fertile Crescent as the shapes of the river formed a rough crescent shape that was ripe for farming due to the easy irrigation and moist soil.

8 0
3 years ago
How did the Church play a role in people’s lives socially?​
alisha [4.7K]

Answer:

The development of Christianity’s influence on the character of society since the Reformation has been twofold. In the realm of state churches and territorial churches, Christianity contributed to the preservation of the status quo of society. In England the Anglican church remained an ally of the throne, as did the Protestant churches of the German states. In Russia the Orthodox church continued to support a social order founded upon the monarchy, and even the monarch carried out a leading function within the church as protector.

Though the impulses for transformation of the social order according to the spirit of the Christian ethic came more strongly from the Free churches, state and territorial churches made positive contributions in improving the status quo. In 17th- and 18th-century Germany, Lutheran clergy, such as August Francke (1663–1727), were active in establishing poorhouses, orphanages, schools, and hospitals. In England, Anglican clerics, such as Frederick Denison Maurice and Charles Kingsley in the 19th century, began a Christian social movement during the Industrial Revolution that brought Christian influence to the conditions of life and work in industry. Johann Hinrich Wichern proclaimed, “There is a Christian Socialism,” at the Kirchentag Church Convention in Wittenberg [Germany] in 1848, the year of the publication of the Communist Manifesto and a wave of revolutions across Europe, and created the “Inner Mission” in order to address “works of saving love” to all suffering spiritual and physical distress. The diaconal movements of the Inner Mission were concerned with social issues, prison reform, and care of the mentally ill.

The Anglo-Saxon Free churches made great efforts to bring the social atmosphere and living conditions into line with a Christian understanding of human life. Methodists and Baptists addressed their message mainly to those segments of society that were neglected by the established church. They recognized that the distress of the newly formed working class, a consequence of industrialization, could not be removed by the traditional charitable means used by the state churches. In Germany, in particular, the spiritual leaders of the so-called revival movement, such as Friedrich Wilhelm Krummacher (1796–1868), denied the right of self-organization to the workers by claiming that all earthly social injustices would receive compensation in heaven, which caused Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels to separate themselves completely from the church and its purely charitable attempts at a settlement of social conflicts and to declare religion with its promise of a better beyond as the “opiate of the people.” This reproach, however, was as little in keeping with the social-ethical activities of the Inner Mission and of Methodists and Baptists as it was with the selfless courage of the Quakers, who fought against social demoralization, against the catastrophic situation in the prisons, against war, and, most of all, against slavery.

6 0
2 years ago
In at least 150 words, discuss James Madison's theory that factionalism and liberty are inextricably linked with one another. Us
Ad libitum [116K]

James Madison's theory treats freedom of expression as an intrinsic feature of democracy. In this way you should not use the pretext of "defense of democracy" to silence a man because you disagree with him, even if he is a fascist.

We can cite as evidence the power relationship between the king or president and the people. Freedom of expression does not exist for the tyrant to be silenced, but for him to speak and we can answer him.

5 0
3 years ago
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