The twelve tribes of Israel and the church in Jerusalem.
Answer: Because New Orleans was a very important trading port. ... The New Orleans was very important for importing and exporting goods;Mississippi River was a major transportation for settlers and good to ship items east.
Explanation:
The Dawes Plan provided short term economic benefits to the German economy. It softened the burdens of war reparations, stabilized the currency, and brought increased foreign investments and loans to the German market. However, it made the German economy dependent on foreign markets and economies, and therefore problems with the U.S. economy (e.g. the Great Depression) would later severely hurt Germany as it did the rest of the western world, which was subject to debt repayments for loans of American dollars.
<span>After World War I, this cycle of money from U.S. loans to Germany, which then made reparations to other European nations, which then used the money to pay off their debts to America, locked the western world's economy on that of the U.S. </span>
<span>Charles G. Dawes was the co-recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1925, in recognition of his work on the Dawes Plan. </span>
C) Puritans
most of them were from England
they wanted to purify the church
Answer:
Knight represents everyone who goes through life and searches for something ideal, and Eldorado represents those unreachable ideals.
Explanation:
<u>Knight represents everyone who is going through life and who is searching for someone.</u> The journey described in the poem is life, presented as an endless search for something better and greater symbolized in the glory and gold of Eldorado.
Therefore, <u>Eldorado itself presents some almost unreachable good, the ideals people hold and crave and search for their whole life.</u> In this poem and everyday communication, Eldorado is used as a symbol of yearning and symbol of the promised place.
Some analyses even think Poe saw Eldorado as the symbol of death – it is the place which knight can reach only after a long journey and suffering. This analysis is explained by the thought that <u>Ideal is unreachable.</u> In the Christian tradition, ideal doesn't exist in this world, but only in the realms of heaven, which means after death.