<span>Saul and Solomon, were kings of Israel and their stories have something in common: both committed sins during their respective reigns; sins that ignited anger God. In 1050 BC Samuel designated Saul as the 1 King of Israel. He had infinite military successes, but his PRIDE made him lose the favor of God, his heart was attacked by envy. He was envious of David (the new one chosen by God) and even tried to kill him. Envy filled Saul's heart with hatred and caused his soon end. Solomon, was a wise king, son of David and Bathsheba, widow of Uriah. Solomon inherits his father's kingdom. Endowed with the wisdom that God gave him, that is to say "a listening heart", however, the Bible says that he had 700 women and 300 concubines, most of them from other nations. They brought their own religion, their idolatrous cults and made Solomon's heart begin to move away from God, as did Saul.</span>
Answer:
Once when preparing for a Spanish test I used repetition to help me study. This technique was useful for me, because when I wrote out vocabulary words and continued to review them until the day of the test it helped me remember the words a lot easier.
A. The battle of Salamis took place during the Persian wars.
B. Xerxes never expected such resistance when he entered Greece, that means he never expected them to unite against him. Actually, he thought they would simply surrender when they saw the size of his army.
E. This is probably the most famous battle of the Greco Persian wars.
So the answer is
A.
B.
E.
The British statesman Edmund Burke argued that the colonists were sensitive to threats to their liberties because they were so familiar with slavery. Edmund Burke, born in 1730 and died in 1797, was an Irish statemen who serve in the United Kingdom parliament between<span> 1766 and 1794 in the House of the Commons with the Whig Party. Nowadays he is considered the father </span><span>of modern </span><span>conservatism.</span>