Answer:
The Atlantic charter was an agreement between United States and Great Britain
Explanation:
The Atlantic Charter was a joint declaration released by US president Franklin D. Roosevelt and British prime minister Winston Churchill following a meeting of the two heads of state in new foundland and it provided a broad statement of Us and British war aims. The meeting happened between Churchill and Roosevelt. They met aboard the Augusta in Placentia bay, Newfoundland to discuss their respective war aims for the second world war and to outline a postwar international system
Answer:
Explanation:
The institution of the caste system, influenced by stories of the gods in the Rig-Veda epic, assumed and reinforced the idea that lifestyles, occupations, ritual statuses, and social statuses were inherited.
Aryan society was patriarchal in the Vedic Period, with men in positions of authority and power handed down only through the male line.
There were four classes in the caste system: Brahmins (priests and scholars), Kshatriyas (kings, governors, and warriors), Vaishyas (cattle herders, agriculturists, artisans, and merchants), and Shudras (laborers and service providers). A fifth group, Untouchables, was excluded from the caste system and historically performed the undesirable work.
The caste system may have been more fluid in Aryan India than it is in modern-day India.
Initially, other rulers in Europe were somewhat pleased that the Bourbon monarchy in France was being reduced in power by the effort to make it a constitutional monarchy. But as the French Revolution proceeded, other ruling houses and nobles in Europe felt the threat that such revolutionary fervor could pose to their own positions, and were ready to fight to stamp out the Revolution. Revolutionary France went to war against those other nations, and when Napoleon took over power in France, he continued those wars and won conquests. Napoleon brought the Civil Code that contained some of the basic ideals of the Revolution to other territories that his empire controlled. Even after Napoleon was defeated, the ideas of liberalism that the French Revolution had unleashed remained as a powerful force, and the 19th century would see a recurring series of revolutionary movements across Europe.