As Communism<span> in the Soviet Union and </span>Eastern Europe <span>began to collapse due to the revolutions taking place, pressure mounted on the </span>East<span> German authorities to open the Berlin border to the west. Thousands of Germans were escaping to the west through Hungary and the GDR was powerless to stop them.</span>
Answer:
Anne Hutchinson became a leader in colonies for her religious beliefs which threaten the Puritan order.
Explanation:
Anne Hutchinson became popular in the colony because of her criticism in Puritan ministers’ orthodox view about the Covenant of Works in Massachusetts Bay Colony. She challenged and questioned Clergy about the Puritan teachings related to salvation.
Many of the Massachusetts colonists have attended the heretical meetings of Anne Hutchinson because it related to the matters of faith among the colonists who escaped from England to practise religion freely without any trial and persecution. She openly challenged the male-dominated authorities in church and government, which was not common in those times when women required to do household work.
Answer:
Explanation:
2. assassination of Franz Ferdinand and his wife
5. basically both sides sit in trenches that face each other and are relatively close, from which they attack and defend
6. area between opposing forces' trenches where people could meet without hostility
7. really easy to get hit, <em>super</em> high risks of getting sick or injuries getting infected, you were trapped because the enemy would attack if you revealed your position
8. people/countries willing to sacrifice anything to win a war
9. Germany sunk a large number of U.S. merchant ships and killed civilians
11. treaty at the end of WW1 that determined the rules for peace between the Allies and Germany
12. "(1) The surrender of all German colonies as League of Nations mandates. (2) The return of Alsace-Lorraine to France. (3) Cession of Eupen-Malmedy to Belgium, Memel to Lithuania, the Hultschin district to Czechoslovakia. (4) Poznania, parts of East Prussia and Upper Silesia to Poland."