Answer: 1) adoption of Catholic Christianity and leaving behind pagan cults in early Middle Ages, 2) Renaissance and Reformation, 3)integration of ancient wisdom of Greece and Roman to philosophy, 4) persecution of Jews, expulsion of Arabs from Europe, Greeks coming to Europe (after the conquest of Constantinople in 1453), 5) discovery and colonization of the New World and other parts of the Globe, 6) so-called Modernity with its scientific revolution in the 17th centurry, 7) Enlightenment with its various (political and scientific) including constitutionalism, 8) romanticism with its significant consequences in arts, philosophy and medicine (psychology), 9) Darwinism and social darwinism in the context of industrial revolution, 10) secularization of European societies, 11) both World Wars, 12) Cold War, 13)decolonization, 14) post-1990 information revolution and globalization of everyday life.
Explanation: globalization of European society started already in the renaissance and continued later on as well. I am excluding Russia from this development because Russia started (just in a very limited way) participating in European development at the beginning of the 18th century.
 
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
since its Friday I'll give u more than one sport 
Explanation:
The ancient Games included running, long jump, shot put, javelin, boxing, pankration, and equestrian events.
 
        
                    
             
        
        
        
Should be christopher columbus
        
                    
             
        
        
        
Answer:
African American parents sued a Kansas school board in 1954 to demand that their children's education be equal to white students' education.
Explanation:
The question refers to the case of Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, which was resolved in 1954 by the Supreme Court in a ruling that disallowed school segregation in the United States.
The case was started in 1951, after Linda Brown, an African American student, was rejected at a white-only school in her neighborhood. This rejection, based on the "separate but equal" principle, forced her to go to a school a mile farther from her home. For this situation, the Browns sued the city board of education, demanding the inclusion of their daughter in said institution.
Finally, the Court forced the school to accept Linda, dismissing the segregationist doctrine.