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dolphi86 [110]
2 years ago
15

What was the goal of Hitler's "final solution"

History
1 answer:
guajiro [1.7K]2 years ago
6 0
The term “Final Solution of the Jewish Question” was a euphemism View This Term in the Glossary used by Nazi Germany’s leaders. It referred to the mass murder of Europe’s Jews. It brought an end to policies aimed at encouraging or forcing Jews to leave the German Reich and other parts of Europe. Those policies were replaced by systematic annihilation.
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How many sons did Edward Weston have
lilavasa [31]

Answer:

2 sons whose names are Brett and Cole

Explanation:

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3 years ago
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What artifact did modern scholars study to help them understand Hieroglyphics
Dmitriy789 [7]

The artifact that modern scholars studied in orderto help then understand Hieroglyphics is the Rosetta Stone.

The Rosetta Stone, is a stone containing writing on it in two languages, Greek and Egyptian, using thre scripts Hieroglyphics, demotic and Greek.

The Hieroglyphics was the cript employed for important or religious documents.

The Rosetta Stone was carved in 196 B.C.

7 0
2 years ago
Name the 4 long term causes of WW1 and how they will lead to war
bonufazy [111]

1- The late nineteenth century was an era of military competition, particularly between the major European powers. The policy of building a stronger military was judged relative to neighbours, creating a culture of paranoia that heightened the search for alliances. It was fed by the cultural belief that war is good for nations. Germany in particular looked to expand its navy. However, the ‘naval race’ was never a real contest – the British always s maintained naval superiority.  But the British obsession with naval dominance was strong. Government rhetoric exaggerated military expansionism.  A simple naivety in the potential scale and bloodshed of a European war prevented several governments from checking their aggression.


2- A web of alliances developed in Europe between 1870 and 1914, effectively creating two camps bound by commitments to maintain sovereignty or intervene militarily – the Triple Entente and the Triple Alliance.


- The Triple Alliance of 1882 linked Germany, Austria-Hungary and Italy.


- The Triple Entente of 1907 linked France, Britain and Russia.


A historic point of conflict between Austria Hungary and Russia was over their incompatible Balkan interests, and France had a deep suspicion of Germany rooted in their defeat in the 1870 war.


3- Imperial competition also pushed the countries towards adopting alliances. Colonies were units of exchange that could be bargained without significantly affecting the metro-pole. They also brought nations who would otherwise not interact into conflict and agreement. For example, the Russo-Japanese War (1905) over aspirations in China, helped bring the Triple Entente into being.It has been suggested that Germany was motivated by imperial ambitions to invade Belgium and France. Certainly the expansion of the British and French empires, fired by the rise of industrialism and the pursuit of new markets, caused some resentment in Germany, and the pursuit of a short, aborted imperial policy in the late nineteenth century.


4- Nationalism was also a new and powerful source of tension in Europe. It was tied to militarism, and clashed with the interests of the imperial powers in Europe. Nationalism created new areas of interest over which nations could compete.


(I deserve to be the brainliest )

3 0
2 years ago
Why is it important to have to have laws in a community?
miv72 [106K]

Answer:

c. so people can to have their rights protected.

4 0
3 years ago
During the age of the exploration both the Spanish and the French did what
allsm [11]

Answer:

These are the options for the question:

A. allowed religious tolerance in their colonies.

B. enslaved American Indians.

C. tried to spread religion in the Americas.

D. forced the American Indians to move to cities.

And this is the correct answer:

C. tried to spread religion in the Americas.

Explanation:

During the age of exploration, both the French and the Spanish tried to spread their religion to the Americas. This religion was Catholic Christianity.

The Spanish arrived first in the Americas, and converted most Native Americans to Catholicism. The French, decades later, did the same, but they tended to mix less with the Native Americans than the Spanish.

8 0
3 years ago
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