Answer:
Demosthenes wanted the Greek city-states to join forces (urge together) and fight with the Macedonians. They did not follow his advice because it was to late for them to urge together.
Explanation:
The correct answer is C. Tibetan Lama
Explanation:
Before the early 1600s, Bhutan, a country in Asia, was divided into multiple kingdoms each with differences in terms of political power, religion, culture, among others. This division ended around 1616 when a Lama or Buddhist spiritual leader from Tibet known as Ngawang Namgyal unified all the territory of Buthan, created a constitution or code for all the territory, and establish Buddism as the religion, which created a unified nation. Thus, it was a Tibetan Lama the one that consolidated Bhutan.
The correct answer is B. the USSR. Many of the leaders of the Nationalist Party in the Chinese Civil War were very inspired by the political ideology at the present time in the USSR. They were also very interested in the military system and were sent to Moscow to study it. However, there was a conclusion shortly after that the Soviet system was not the best system suitable for China. Nevertheless, the Chinese Nationalist Party kept close ties to the USSR.
It marked the turning point because it’s a union battle and it would be a win for the north not the south.
Hope this helps.
Answer :
Born into royalty, Siddhartha Gautama, now known as the Buddha, lived his early years sheltered from the poverty and suffering that plagued his country of India in that time. Upon seeing this suffering first hand, Siddhartha left his home in search of understanding. <u>After six years in meditation he attained understanding through self-liberation and realization of the true nature of the universe, a state he called enlightenment.</u> Siddhartha immediately began teaching of enlightenment, of the wrong and right views of the world and of the path to reaching a truly free mind. <u>These teachings form the base of Buddhism, and it is the practices and the paths of which the Buddha taught that all Buddhist monks follow in their search for enlightenment.</u>