The revolutions of 1848 (Known as
Spring of Nations, People's Spring or Springtime of the Peoples in some
countries) were triggered by street protests beginning in Silicy (in January
1948), an autonomous region of Italy. The wave of revolution that swept through
Europe in 1948 is still the most pervasive revolutionary wave in the history of
Europe.
Answer: Stupas
Stupas are Buddhist commemorative monuments where sacred relics associated with the Buddha were placed.
The monument is richly decorated, consisting of a circular base supporting a massive solid dome, encircled by a railing and four gateways.
Under the rule of Asoka in 273-232 BCE, the wealth and size of the Kingdom depended on the number of stupas. Ashoka spread Buddha’s teaching by building approximately 84,000 stupas.
Common Sense refer to the pamphlet by Thomas Paine that convinced many of the need for independence.
Explanation:
Thomas Paine wrote a short book which convinced the colonists to fight for their independence instead of settling their differences with the British Crown. His ideas in the short book were presented to be very clear and it was accessible for many colonists to read and understand in order to fight fir the independence.
Thomas Paine argues that a popular government can be deposed if it is lending deaf ears to the interests of its people and it is permissible to protest against such a despotic government. This fact convinced the colonists to raise on protests against the King.
Bureaucracy! That is the main problem of the empire and mostly the republic. The republic fell because the size of the empire was to big, the events were moving rapidly and there was no time for bureaucracy, voting, debating and so on. When Rome became an empire it didn't of course change immediately. Some parts of the republic stayed enact. One of them was administrative bureaucracy. Luckily for the empire, after the third century crises, Diocletian started the dominate where the senate lost almost all of its power thus providing the empire with a more effective style of government where one man or two men, later three or four gave direct orders without having to debate and vote. That gave the empire 200 years more to live, although because of its size and changeable political currents it was never to last as a permanent state.