Symbols and innovations associated with revolutionary France included all EXCEPT which of the following?
a. a new calendar
b. new street names
c. a new flag
d. lots of new statues honoring the king's royal family members
e. the practice of addressing each other as "citizen"
Answer: d. lots of new statues honoring the king's royal family members
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Why did the inhabitants of Marseille face famine as well as plague?
a) After the entire city was quarantined, it became difficult to deliver food there. b) Plague can infect food as well as people, making it impossible to eat. Consider This: The quarantine of Marseille was the only weapon authorities had to keep the disease from spreading. See 5.5: Narrative: A Shadow in the Light. c) People starved mainly because they were too sick to eat. Consider This: The quarantine of Marseille was the only weapon authorities had to keep the disease from spreading. See 5.5: Narrative: A Shadow in the Light. d) There was a famine that year, but it was because of a poor harvest and unrelated to the plague. Consider This: The quarantine of Marseille was the only weapon authorities had to keep the disease from spreading. See 5.5: Narrative: A Shadow in the Light.
Who of the following does not belong in the following list
a. Fredrick Douglass b. George Fitzhugh c. Elijah Lovejoy d. David Walker e. William Lloyd Garrison
Choose the correct chronological order for the events below:
a. The reign of Catherine II of Russia; the Tanzimat reforms in the Ottoman Empire; Emancipation of Russian serfs; Young Turks rise to power. b. The Tanzimat reforms in the Ottoman Empire; The reign of Catherine II of Russia; Emancipation of Russian serfs; Young Turks rise to power c. Emancipation of Russian serfs; the reign of Catherine II of Russia; Young Turks rise to power; the Tanzimat reforms in the Ottoman Empire d. The Young Turks rise to power; Emancipation of Russian serfs; the reign of Catherine II of Russia; the Tanzimat reforms in the Ottoman Empire.
A new fourteenth-century Ottoman military elite was Christian prisoners of war, called
a. Janissaries. b. Knights of the Cross. c. Mamluks. d. Caspian slaves. e. Lollards.