Khufu (2589-2566 BC) <span>was the 4th Dynasty (2613-2498) pharaoh who <span>built the Great Pyramid of Giza</span>. Originally, the Great Pyramid stood 481 feet (146.6 m) tall. Although commonly called Cheops (and also Suphis) because of the late Greek influence on Egypt, the name Khufu is the original ancient Egyptian name for this king as demonstrated by his own cartouche. He reigned for approximately 24 years.</span>
<span>Although the Great pyramid has such fame, little is actually known about its builder, Khufu. Ironically, only a very small statue of 9 cm has been found depicting this historic ruler. This statue, pictured above and below, was not found in Giza near the pyramid, but was found to the south at the Temple of Osiris at Abydos, the ancient necropolis.</span>
Answer & Explanation:
Huguenots were French Calvinists who fled religious persecution under Louis XIV; they came to Georgia via South Carolina.
A large Huguenot community in South Carolina dates from the 1680s, and some of its members crossed into Georgia as early as the 1730s.
Lacking a French Protestant church in Georgia, Huguenots often affiliated with Anglican congregations.
John Wesley, the founder of the Methodist Church, reported visiting a French-speaking village near Savannah in 1737.
By 1745 an Anglican priest in Savannah offered to hold services in French for their benefit.
Answer:
yes they were. this was on my history test
<span>Reconstruction was an achievement in that it reestablished the United States as a brought together country: by 1877, the greater part of the previous Confederate states had drafted new constitutions, recognized the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments, and vowed their dependability to the U.S. government. The answer is african americans could go to schools. </span>