Congress passed the removal bill that May, and by September Jackson had begun negotiating with the Chickasaws, the Choctaws and the remaining Creeks to move west. Within four years they would be under land cession treaties or on the move. Some Seminoles also left in the early 1830s, and others fought the Army in Florida for several years. But Ross refused even to meet with Jackson. Instead, he turned to the U.S. Supreme Court, asking the justices to invalidate Georgia’s removal law.
As the court’s spring session opened in March 1831, Georgia officials roamed the Capitol to rally states’ rights advocates to the idea of stripping the justices of their power to review the acts of state governments. The justices—in an act that historians would say reflected their worry over the talk coming out of Congress—ruled that they lacked jurisdiction over the Cherokees’ claims against Georgia. Chief Justice John Marshall offered their only hope when he wrote that “the Indians are acknowledged to have an unquestionable...right to the lands they occupy.”
Answer:
Lamar
Explanation:
He increased the navy and the national debt sore under him. it got worse and worse until Sam Houston was reelected and started selling the ships Lamar built in order to pay off debt
Answer: the main enemies of the Mongols were Song China, Persia, and Eastern European kingdoms
Explanation: The Mongols were member members of a ethnographic group in Central Asia that was closely related to a tribe that lived on the Mongolian Plateau. the Mongols and the tribe shared tradition, as well as language.
According to the Googs, "Their homeland is now divided into the independent country of Mongolia (Outer Mongolia) and the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region of China."