Analyze the ways in which supporters of slavery in the nineteenth century used legal, religious, and economic arguments to defend the institution of slavery. legal

Answers

Answer 1
Answer:

Answer:

economic: farms wouldnt funtion as efficent without slaves. religious: they belivied white people where superior. and im not too sure about legal.

Explanation:


Related Questions

What is the main idea of Truman's statement about the use of atomic weapons?
Which accurately describes the significance of martin luther?
The Yippies were _____.a pro-war protest movement one of the anti-war protest groups a hip group of white-collar workers a college campus fraternity
How did women’s wages compared with men’s wages after the end of world war 2 and during the 1950’s
Indentured servants who were freed caused conflict in the colonies by

Name Any Movie From The 1500s

Answers

Princess in the tower

To confront urban segregation in the North, what was organized?Congress of Racial Equality (CORE)
Legal Aid Society
Japanese American Citizens League
none of the above

Answers

The correct answer for the question that is being presented above is this one: "Japanese American Citizens League." To confront urban segregation in the North, the group was organized. It was called as the Japanese American Citizens League

Bill Clinton was the elected governor of which state?

Answers

He was the governor of Arkansas
He was govenor of Arkansas

I don't understand this question at all can someone plz help me? - What statements in the Declaration of Independence are important values in a democracy? Please use the exact words.

Answers

Answer: Declaration of Independence as a pillar of democracy.

Explanation:

The Declaration of Independence of the United States represents the fundamental principles of democracy in general, and elements of the same are involved in its constitution. The concept of the Declaration was formed on the principles of people's sovereignty. The Declaration states that people have the exclusive right to elect their representatives and dismiss them if they are not satisfied. Also, the document states that the government's only goal is to work in the interest of the people. The Declaration also talks about basic human freedoms; the document explicitly states that all people are born free and that no one has the right to take away that right.

Which of the following best describes the Huguenots?A. Acadian
B. 29 Protestant
C. 1 Anglican
D. 30 Catholic

Answers

The answer is B(29 Protestant).

In chronological order, which factors led to the Ming dynasty’s decline?

Answers

In the middle of the 14th century a rebellion broke out among the Chinese farmers, who were forced to erect dams on the Yellow River by the Emperor Huizong, belonging to the Yuan Dynasty of Mongol origin, initiated by Kublai Khan almost a century before.

After the rebellion, a poor farmer and Buddhist monk, Zhu Yuanzhang, rose to the imperial throne by initiating the Ming Dynasty. Its lineage would direct the destinies of the most extensive empire of its time during almost three centuries and would lead to China to its period of greater stability, favoring a great cultural splendor and a social and economic development without precedents in the history of the country.

With the seventeenth century came the decline of the Ming Dynasty. The Little Ice Age brought years of cold and dry weather that, by shortening the periods of cultivation, produced strong shortages.

Thus, the famine returned to China. The taxes went up and the works were paralyzed, which in turn generated floods that, like a wheel, generated more hunger due to shortage of crops.

In contrast to the majority ethnic group in China, the Han, in the region of Manchuria, in the northeast of the country, the predominant ethnic group is Manchu.

At the beginning of the seventeenth century the Manchu tribal leader Nurhaci unified the region, vassal of the Ming Empire and, with a strengthened army and the dominant empire in full decline, declared war on Emperor Wanli.

The war lasted for more than twenty years. The Ming empire, in the midst of the economic and social crisis, had scarce resources for war, and desertions in the army were continuous and numerous.

As had happened three centuries before, social discontent resulted in numerous popular uprisings across the country. But finally the catalyst was a mutiny of the troops, who did not receive supplies.

The mutinous troops, with popular support, had no difficulty in imposing themselves on the loyal, weakened army, mostly for the defense of the northern wall. The rebels marched on Beijing and its leader, a former postal service worker named Li Zicheng, proclaimed himself emperor.

When the gates of the Forbidden City opened thanks to a betrayal and the mob entered, the last Ming emperor, Chongzhen, hanged himself from a tree in the imperial garden.

Despite the death of the emperor and the fall of the dynasty, the Ming power did not disappear from China immediately. Some cities and provinces, still loyal to the old emperor, resisted the Manchu power. However, little by little they were falling in front of the new imperial power and the last suitor Ming was defeated and executed in 1662.

ineffective emperors, famine, declining trade, economic problems