The answer is B) Secularism.
We'll by the time of 1800s the women started getting rights the civil rights just showed them that women weren't any different to men so it just helped getting the facts straighted up
The action through peace and stable rule by Caesar Augustus gave the Romans control over certain trade routes.
Explanation:
During the period of Roman republic incense from Arabia, ivory from East Africa , pepper from India, perhaps silk from China through Eastern merchants to Roman Markets. The trade remained smaller due to unpleasant conditions in East Mediterranean and wealth of Rome possessed in small financiers hand.
Through Augustus's peace and stable rule total Mediterranean established. For the first time lands from Spain to Syria made available for economic unity. The wealth till then wasted in wars was used for more peaceful purposes and necessities made easily available.The mistake Romans did was instead of spending wealth for home industries they spent on importing them.
Alexandria and Antioch recently came under Roman's control. The advantage by Augustus through Oriental Commerce was increase in taxable growth and booming trade. The routes followed by Eastern commerce were divided into two groups.
i.) Based on Red sea and its hinterland, carrying the trade of Arabia,East Africa,India.
ii.)Overland routes into Parthia and central Asia for carrying Chinese silk and some Indian trade.
Hope this helps-
The U.S. presidential election of 1960 came at a decisive time in American history. The country was engaged in a heated Cold War<span> with the Soviet Union, which had just taken the lead in the space race by launching the Sputnik satellite. The rise of Fidel Castro’s revolutionary regime in Cuba had heightened fears about the spread of communism in the Western Hemisphere. On the domestic front, the struggle for civil rights and desegregation had deeply divided the nation, raising crucial questions about the state of democracy in the United States.At a time when the need for strong leadership was all too obvious, two vastly different candidates vied for the presidency: </span>John F. Kennedy, a young but dynamicMassachusetts<span> senator from a powerful New England family, and Richard Nixon, a seasoned lawmaker who was currently serving as vice president. With little more than a single unremarkable term in the U.S. senate under his belt, the 43-year-old Kennedy lacked Nixon’s extensive foreign policy experience and had the disadvantage of being one of the first Catholics to run for president on a major party ticket.
</span>-Almighty Leader