1. What was Justinian's major goal as ruler of the Eastern Roman Empire?

2. What were some of the not-so-great tactics and methods he used in trying to achieve that goal?

3. What do you think about the way Justinian responded to the Nika Riots? Was it the smart thing to do politically? Was it the right thing to do ethically?

4. What is your opinion of Empress Theodora, the wife of Justinian?

5. Do you think Justinian should be blamed for the deaths from the plague? Why or why not?

6. Overall, do you think Justinian should be remembered as Justinian the Great or Justinian the Terrible? Explain the basis for your opinion.

Answers

Answer 1

Answer:

1. He wanted to retake the west

2. Though not directly, he definitely made liberal interpretations of things like treaties and alliances

3. It was definitely the smart thing to do politically, assuring that no other challenges to his rule would arise in his lifetime. Ethically... maybe letting half the city burn and slaughtering the entirety of the rioters in the stadium was wrong? I think killing people like that is wrong.

4. She was a brilliant political thinker and an integral part of Justinian's rule. Without her advise he probably woulda been deposed during the Nika Riots, or perhaps not managed to maneuver his way into all of the legal reforms he managed to institute

5. Not... really, while his wars certainly helped spread it, trade was an essential part of life and the plague would have ravaged the people anyways.

6. Justinian's ambition and drive, as well as his frankly herculean efforts to make the roman empire a lustrous figure again make it hard not to think of him as anything other than the great. That said don't slaughter people in a stadium, it's a bad look.

Explanation:

You underpaid me, you scrotal follicle.


Related Questions

1. The xyz affair directly led to which of the following
A. The Alien and sedition acts
B. The national banks
C. The creation of the us constitution
D. The proclamation of the neutrality
2. Which of the following best describes the French response to alien and sedition acts?
A. The French treasury stopped sending money to the us
B. The French army invaded the us
C. The French increased attacks in us ships at sea
D. The French signed a treaty with Britain to boycott the us

Answers

Answer:

Q.1 I think its The Alien and sedition acts.

Q.2 I think its C.

Which demand was included in the declaration of sentiments?

Answers

Answer:

The answer is women must be granted equality in the workforce.

Which of the following was true about the Minutemen?
A
There were more of them than British soldiers.
B
They were not as well-trained as the British soldiers.
с
They had trained as soldiers all their lives.
D
They wore bright yellow uniforms with green stripes.

Answers

Answer:

A

There were more of them than British soldiers.

Answer:

a:)

Explanation:

how was persia before the influence of europeans?

Answers

Answer: The Persian Empire is the name given to a series of dynasties ... one of the largest empires in history, stretching from Europe's Balkan Peninsula in ... than 200 years before it fell to the invading armies of Alexander the Great. ... of early civilization, a new style was formed with influences from these sources.

Explanation:

The Ottoman, Mughal, & Safavid empires were able to conquer neighboring people because they
formed strong armies and....

A.
Used rifles and artillery

B.
Were skilled horsemen

C.
Used skilled archers

D.
Used biological warfare

Answers

strong armies, advanced technology, and loyal administrative officers

Why is Age of Feudalism not the best label to describe the Middle Ages but Age of faith is.

Answers

Answer:

Feudalism is less important and widespread than the effects of faith, faith created/believed in this time lasts throughout the world today but there are no serfs or anything.

Most Indian religions
A. Emphasized monotheism
B. Were not very important to their culture
C. Were tied closely to the natural world
D. Used totem poles in ceremonies

Answers

We’re tied closely to the natural world or C

When can your freedom of religion be abridged?

Answers

Answer:

Congress shall make no law respecting and establishment of religion

One thing all the delegates had in common

Answers

Answer:

What they had in common were similar interests

Explanation:

Select the correct answer from each drop-down menu.
Plan called for a unicameral legislature.
Plan suggested a bicameral
legislature with population determining the number of members per state in both houses of government. In the end,
the delegates adopted
Plan. Then they revised it further.

Answers

Answer:

1. The New Jersey

2. The Virginia

3. The Virginia

Explanation:

Hope this helps! :)

Answer:

the answer is in the picture

Explanation:

List three members of American aristocracy in the category of talent
1. Person #1
2. Person #2
3. Person #3
List three members of American aristocracy in the category of achievement
1. Person #1
2. Person #2
3. Person #3

Answers

Answer:

1.jefferson. 2.adams.3. Philip J. costopoulos

I dont know the second sorry

What absolute monarch revoked the Edict of Nantes?

Answers

Louis XIV cupchuvvbhiib
Louis XIV formally Revoked the Edict of Nantes and Deprived the French protestants of all religious and civil liberties.

Which amendment protects Americans from unreasonable searches and
seizures?

A)First Amendment
B)Fourth Amendment
C)Sixth Amendment
D)Thirteenth Amendment

Answers

B is the correct answer
And: B) Fourth Amendment


Which of the following affected the distribution of Jews
throughout the world? (4 points)
Russian Revolution

O Great Migration

O Partition of India

O Independence of German Republic

O Holocaust

Answers

The Holocaust, because they moved throughout the world to escape from the Nazis.

Answer:

The Holocaust

Explanation:

In his Farewell Address, Washington shared his feelings about the US and foreign diplomacy. He believed in

A - neither trade or political involvement

B - both trade and political involvement

C - political involvement with foreign countries,but no trade

D - trade with foreign countries, but no political involvement

Answers

Answer:

D

Explanation:

What ended the persicution of all Christians?
A) The edict of constantine
B) The fall of the Roman Empire
C) The spread of the Roman Empire
D) The death of the Apostle Paul

Answers

Answer:

A

Explanation:

It wasn't Paul. He died at the hands of Roman justice and the games continued long after his death.

It wasn't the fall of the Roman empire. That happened after Constantine legalized Christianity.

The spread of the Roman Empire only fed the people's lust for more Christian murders at what was called the games.

What is a detailed definition of Treaty of Versailles?

Answers

Answer:

Treaty of Versailles, peace document signed at the end of World War I by the Allied and associated powers and by Germany in the Hall of Mirrors in the Palace of Versailles, France, on June 28, 1919; it took force on January 10, 1920.

Explanation:

Answer:

The Treaty of Versailles, signed in June 1919 at the Palace of Versailles in Paris at the end of World War I, codified peace terms between the victorious Allies and Germany.

Explanation:



The main issues that led women to begin moving beyond the home was the
abolition of slavery, prison reform, temperance and education.
A. True
B. False

Answers

Answer:A

Explanation:

After the Civil War, many Freedmen worked as farmers by leasing land from white plantation owners, then paying for the land and use of tools with most of the crops they raised. In other words, the Freedmen became _________________________. (fill in the blank) share croppers share croppers slaves again slaves again powerful powerful rich

Answers

Answer:

Share croppers

Explanation:

After the Civil War, many Freedmen worked as farmers by leasing land from white plantation owners, then paying for the land and use of tools with most of the crops they raised. In other words, the Freedmen became Sharecroppers .

Sharecroppers were also made to obey rules which prevented them from selling their produce to other people and encouraged the sale mainly to their landlords.

Did the fall of Rome happen in the 500’s?

Answers

Answer:

No rome fell in 395 A.D

Explanation:

Answer:

No

Explanation:

Rome did not fall in the 500s

What document makes sure that the government protects the right for people to
express themselves?

Answers

Answer:

The highest law in our land is the U.S. Constitution, which has some amendments, known as the Bill of Rights. The Bill of Rights guarantees that the government can never deprive people in the U.S. of certain fundamental rights including the right to freedom of religion and to free speech and the due process of law.

Explanation:

How did Burr act towards Hamilton immediately following the duel?

Answers

Answer:

he didn't

Explanation:

he killed hamilton

How does Beals portray the difference between hearing about a historical event on the news and actually living through it? Highlight words and phrases that show the contrast, and write annotations that explain these differences. How does paragraph 5 build on this contrast?

Answers

.........................................................................

Establishment of the first English Parliament gave the people ____________________________________

Answers

The correct answer for above statement is:

a voice in political decisions

Explanation:

In 1215, the tenants-in-chief achieved Magna Carta from King John, which confirmed that the king may not levy or collect any taxes (except the feudal taxes to which they were hitherto accustomed), save with the approval of his royal council, which frequently developed into a parliament.

a right to vote
a voice in political decisions
an opportunity to run for political office
an equal amount of power

What was invented during the Han dynasty to show direction?
compass
B
sextant
C
wheelbarrow
D
silk

Answers

Compass ggggggggggggg

define:
Money Supply-
Counterfeit-
fiat currency-
specie currency-
Inflation-
Deflation-
Deficit spending-
Interest-
principal-
net pay-
gross pay-
federal reserve bank-

Answers

Why don’t you search it up it’s too much work

What regions of the United States did the American System help?*
North
South
West
North and West

Answers

Answer:

So I want to say that is Noth and West

Explanation:

Southern cotton planters opposed the high tariffs of the American System. They claimed that the tariff unfairly favored the interests of northern manufacturers. Clay's counterargument was that the South should support the North's growth because the North provided a market for their cotton

What does a national identity include? Check all that apply.

a shared history and heritage
a sense of belonging to the global community
commonly held customs and traditions
a sense of pride in one’s neighborhood
a respect for certain ideals and practices
a dominant language spoken by most people

Answers

Answer: a sense of pride in one’s neighborhood

Explanation:

Answer:

A)a shared history and heritage

C)commonly held customs and traditions

E)a respect for certain ideals and practices

F)a dominant language spoken by most people

Explanation: I hope this helps :)

DESCRIBE WHY MANY AMERICANS IN THE NORTH OPPOSED SLAVERY WHILE MOST SOUTHERNERS SUPPORTED SLAVERY... HOW DID THIS DIVIDE LEAD TO CONFLICT....?​

Answers

Answer:

This year initiates the commemoration of the Sesquicentennial of the Civil War.  This is an occasion for serious reflection on a war that killed some 600,000 of our citizens and left many hundreds of thousands emotionally and physically scarred.  Translated into today’s terms – our country is ten times more populous than it was then -- the dead would number some 6 million, with tens of millions more wounded, maimed, and psychologically damaged.  The price was indeed catastrophic.

As a Southerner with ancestors who fought for the Confederacy, I have been intrigued with the question of why my ancestors felt compelled to leave the United States and set up their own country.  What brought the American experiment to that extreme juncture?

The short answer, of course, is Abraham Lincoln’s election as president of the United States.  What concerned Southerners most about Lincoln’s election was his opposition to the expansion of slavery into the territories; Southern politicians were clear about that.  If new states could not be slave states, went the argument, then it was only a matter of time before the South’s clout in Congress would fade, abolitionists would be ascendant, and the South’s “peculiar institution” – the right to own human beings as property – would be in peril.

It is easy to understand why slave owners would be concerned about the threat, real or imagined, that Lincoln posed to slavery.  But what about those Southerners who did not own slaves?  Why would they risk their livelihoods by leaving the United States and pledging allegiance to a new nation grounded in the proposition that all men are not created equal, a nation established to preserve a type of property that they did not own?

In order to find an answer to this question, please travel back with me to the South of 1860.  Let’s put ourselves into the skin of Southerners who lived there then.  That’s what being an historian is about: putting yourself into the minds of people who lived in another time to understand things from their perspective, from their point of view.  Let’s set aside what people said and wrote later, after the dust had settled. Let’s wipe the historic slate clean and visit the South of 150 years ago through the documents that survive from that time.  What were Southerners saying to other Southerners about why they had to secede?

There is, of course, a historical backdrop that formed the foundation of experience for Southerners in 1860.  More than 4 million enslaved human beings lived in the south, and they touched every aspect of the region’s social, political, and economic life.  Slaves did not just work on plantations.  In cities such as Charleston, they cleaned the streets, toiled as bricklayers, carpenters, blacksmiths, bakers, and laborers.  They worked as dockhands and stevedores, grew and sold produce, purchased goods and carted them back to their masters’ homes where they cooked the meals, cleaned, raised the children, and tended to the daily chores.  “Charleston looks more like a Negro country than a country settled by white people,” a visitor remarked.

Fear of a slave rebellion was palpable.  The establishment of a black republic in Haiti and the insurrections, threatened and real, of Gabriel Prosser, Denmark Vesey, and Nat Turner stoked the fires.  John Brown’s raid at Harper’s Ferry sent shock waves through the south.  Throughout the decades leading up to 1860, slavery was a burning national issue, and political battles raged over the admission of new states as slave or free.  Compromises were struck – the Missouri Compromise, the Compromise of 1850 – but the controversy could not be laid to rest.

The South felt increasingly beleaguered as the North increased its criticism of slavery.  Abolitionist societies sprang up, Northern publications demanded the immediate end of slavery, politicians waxed shrill about the immorality of human bondage, and overseas, the British parliament terminated slavery in the British West Indies.  A prominent historian accurately noted that “by the late 1850’s most white Southerners viewed themselves as prisoners in their own country, condemned by what they saw as a hysterical abolition movement.”

As Southerners became increasingly isolated, they reacted by becoming more strident in defending slavery.  The institution was not just a necessary evil: it was a positive good, a practical and moral necessity.  Controlling the slave population was a matter of concern for all Whites, whether they owned slaves or not.  Curfews governed the movement of slaves at night, and vigilante committees patrolled the roads, dispensing summary justice to wayward slaves and whites suspected of harboring abolitionist views.  Laws were passed against the dissemination of abolitionist literature, and the South increasingly resembled a police state.  A prominent Charleston lawyer described the city’s citizens as living under a “reign of terror.”

Explanation:

Answer:

When Europeans first colonized the North American continent, the land was vast, the work was harsh, and there was a severe shortage of labor. White bond servants, paying their passage across the ocean from Europe through indentured labor, eased but did not solve the problem. Tensions between settlers and former indentured servants increased the pressure to find a new labor source.  Early in the seventeenth century, a Dutch ship loaded with African slaves introduced a solution—and yet paradoxically a new problem—to the New World. Slaves proved to be economical on large farms where labor-intensive cash crops, such as tobacco, sugar and rice, could be grown.

By the end of the American Revolution, slavery became largely unprofitable in the North and was slowly dying out. Even in the South the institution was becoming less useful to farmers as tobacco prices fluctuated and began to drop. Due to the decline of the tobacco market in the 1760s and 1770s many farmers switched from producing tobacco to wheat, which required less labor leading to surplus of slaves. However, in 1793 northerner Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin; this device made it possible for textile mills to use the type of cotton most easily grown in the lower South. The invention of the cotton gin brought about a robust internal slave trade. As the lower South became more established in cotton production the region required more slave labor, which they received from upper South slaveowners looking to offload their surplus of slaves. In 1808, the United States banned the international slave trade (the importation of slaves),  which only increased the demand for domestically traded slaves. In the upper South the most profitable cash crop was not was not an agricultural product but the sale of human lives.  Although some southerners owned no slaves at all, by 1860 the South’s “peculiar institution” was inextricably tied to the region’s economy and society.

Anti-slavery proponents organized the Underground Railroad to help slaves escape north to freedom. Although fictionalized, Harriet Beecher Stowe’s 1852 immensely popular novel Uncle Tom’s Cabin opened northerner’s eyes to some of the horrors of slavery and refuted the southern myth that blacks were happy as slaves. In reality, treatment of slaves ranged from mild and paternalistic to cruel and sadistic. Husbands, wives, and children were frequently sold away from one another and punishment by whipping was not unusual. In 1857 the United States Supreme Court in the decision Dred Scott v. Sandford ruled that all blacks, whether free or enslaved, lacked the rights to citizenship and thus could not sue in federal court. The Supreme Court took their decision a step further by deeming that Congress had in fact exceeded its authority in the earlier Missouri Compromise because it had no power to forbid or abolish slavery in the territories. The Supreme Court also ruled that popular sovereignty, where new territories could vote on entering the union as a free or slave state, lacked constitutional legitimacy. Thus, slaves had no legal means of protesting their treatment. Due to the Dred Scott decision, John Brown’s raid on Harper’s Ferry, and other earlier slave uprisings, Southerners feared servile insurrection above all else but this was rare. Instead as a form of resistance slaves would pretend illness, organize slowdowns, sabotage farm machinery, and sometimes commit arson or murder. Running away for short periods of time was common.The outbreak of the Civil War forever changed the future of the American nation and perhaps most notably the future of Americans held in bondage. The war began as a struggle to preserve the Union, not a struggle to free the slaves but as the war dragged on it became increasingly clear to President Abraham Lincoln the best way to force the seceded states into submission was to undermine their labor supply and economic engine which was sustaining the south—slavery. Many slaves escaped to the North in the early years of the war, and several Union generals established contraband policies in the southern land that they conquered.  Congress passed laws permitting the seizure of slaves from rebellious southerners as the rules of war allow for the seizure of property and the United States considered slaves property. On September 22, 1862, following the strategic Union victory at Antietam, President Abraham Lincoln presented the Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation.

Explanation:

hope this helped =)

The readmission of Southern states into the Union following the Civil War created which of the following political outcomes?
A. An increase in Republican control over state and federal governments
B. A decrease in support for national economic development programs
C. A decline in political participation by American women
D. An expansion of voting-rights protections for former slaves

Answers

Answer:

B

Explanation:

took the quiz

The readmission of Southern states into the Union following the Civil War created political outcomes such as A decrease in support for national economic development programs. Thus the correct option is B.

What is Outcome?

Any topic's conclusion gives information about the subject, including the major point, which aids the reader in evaluating the topic's advantages and disadvantages and formulating an Outcome as a result.

In order for Southern states to be admitted to the Union, Congress mandated that they create new constitutions that guarantee the right to vote for African-American men.

The Others disagreed, arguing that the federal government should not get involved in the internal affairs of the states because the North had already achieved its primary objectives.

Therefore, option B is appropriate.

Learn more about the readmission of Southern states, here:

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