If the people surrendered without too much trouble, then their province would be brought into the Empire on an equal basis with the other provinces. If the Romans had to lay siege and take a fortress, then they would sell the survivors into slavery or let them die an honorable death if they so chose. After conquest, the conquered people could keep their religion, their culture, their language … the main thing being that they obeyed Roman law and paid Roman taxes. Gradually, Latin would be spoken or Greek in the eastern part of the Empire, and many provinces adopted Roman ways, especially if they were barbaric before their conquest. Romania got its name by copying Roman ways when it became a province of the Roman Empire. Sometimes the provinces were over-taxed and revolted.
Allies were honored and supported with the power of Rome. Eventually, many allies came to be Romans or their land was incorporated in the Roman Empire. The Romans learned not to put too much trust in auxiliary troops from their allies, due to the loyalty issue.
Answer:
1847
Explanation:
Dred Scott first went to trial in 1847. This trial took place in the St. Louis Circuit Court in the state of Missouri. The legal battle surrounding Dred Scott's status as a slave or a free man eventually led to the landmark U.S. Supreme Court case of Dred Scott v. Sandford in 1857.
Answer:
Explanation:
Lucretia Coffin Mott was an abolitionist, a women’s rights activist, a social reformer, and a pioneer in the battle for the Women's Suffrage Movement.
A faithful Quaker, Mott believed slavery to be detestable, and she went to each abolitionist servitude show of American Women just as the World Anti-Slavery Convention in London.