Answer:
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Answer:
D. Roosevelt and Nicholas.
Explanation:
They are not dictators, but the Allied leaders from the United States.
Answer:
For some 30 years after 1870, considering the likelihood of another German war, the French high command had subscribed to the strategy of an initial defensive to be followed by a counterstroke against the expected invasion: a great system of fortresses was created on the frontier, but gaps were left in order to “canalize” the German attack. France’s alliance with Russia and its entente with Great Britain, however, encouraged a reversal of plan, and after the turn of the century a new school of military thinkers began to argue for an offensive strategy. The advocates of the offensive à l’outrance (“to the utmost”) gained control of the French military machine, and in 1911 a spokesman of this school, General J.-J.-C. Joffre, was designated chief of the general staff. He sponsored the notorious Plan XVII, with which France went to war in 1914.
Explanation:
basically: Plan XVII
Answer:
He argued that mathematics could be used to measure and describe all motion in the universe.
The last Carolingian King of France was Luois V. He died aged 20 without children and had only one brother who died before him and this was the end of the Carolingian dynasty.
The successor was Hugh Capet - this is the correct answer. Hugh was also a descendant of Charlemagne. <span />