Answers, with explanations:
written constitution = after unification
- During revolutions in 1848-1849, the Frankfurt Parliament had produced a constitution for a unified Germany, but that move was rejected at the time by the king of Prussia, to whom the constitution was offered.
300 German states = before unification
- The German states had a long history of sovereignty in their individual territories. Unification meant bringing all those states together into one national entity.
trade facilitated in the region = before unification
- The Zollverein, or customs union, was created between the German states in the 1830s. This eliminated customs tariffs between states and was a step that began moving in the direction of unification.
risk of French aggression = before unification
- Germany became a united empire after the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-71. Victory over France in that war by the German states operating as a coalition was part of what brought about unification.
boundaries changed by Napoleon = before unification
- When Napoleon conquered territories throughout Europe in the early 1800s, he rearranged borders to enhance his empire's management of conquered territories. In the German states, this made them work together in ways they had not before, and was a catalyst toward desires for unification.
two-house legislature = after unification
- There was a legislature in the North German Confederation (1867-1870), which preceded unification. But that was a single-house (unicameral) parliament, whereas the Reichstag (legislature) of the unified German Empire was bicameral.
It was by declaring
the merchants and financiers free of the royal control.<span>
<span>The Glorious Revolution which is also known by the Revolution
of 1688, was the oust of King James II of Britain (James VII of Scotland) by a
union of English Parliamentarians with the Dutch William III, Sovereign of
Orange.</span></span>
The correct answer is C. John Dryden's critical essays foreshadow the satire of Samuel Johnson.
Dryden's influence as a poet was immense in his own time, and the profound loss that it represented for English literature is evident in the elegies that inspired his deat. His poetry, patriotic, religious and satirical, popularized a type of Hendecasyllable verse that will be the favorite of the eighteenth century, as it was taken as a model by poets such as Alexander Pope and Samuel Johnson
A is true
Pantheism is a belief that all reality is identical with divinity and that there is god in everything. They don't believe that god is a figure that looks like a person and rules from the sky but rather that it's like a sort of energy that is found everywhere and in everything and in everyone and connects everything.
B is False
In Hinduism there is a clear concept of a soul or of an inner self. The physical body changes but the soul keeps changing bodies through the idea of reincarnation. When the soul manages to free itself from the desires of this world it will finally be free to go to a better place and become one with everything. Some of these things are similar to concepts found in Buddhism.
C is True.
Hinduism is a polytheistic religion because they have many gods. Their religion is considered to be among some of the oldest in the world and they preserved their ideas of numerous deities and a pantheon where gods have their roles and are different. There is no universal one omnipotent god like many contemporary religions have.
D is False.
They core thing which is the Absolute or the Brahman is gender-less and impersonal. Depending on the tradition, there is either a gender-less set of gods, a clearly different male and female gods, or there are pairings where each god which is male is partnered with a female god of the same type. This depends on which tradition one follows.
The fascist leaders in Italy came to power in the 1920s and 1930s because they supported the League of Nations.