The primary mining centers in colonial Spanish America were _______in southeastern Peru (today’s Bolivia) and Zacatecas and Guanajuato in northern Mexico.
a. Santa Cruz
b. Sucre
c. Oruro
d. Potosí
d. Potosí
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What generalization could be made about the Civil Constitution of the Clergy?
A. The Civil Constitution of the Clergy did more than any other action to make the Roman Catholic Church an enemy of France. B. The Civil Constitution of the Clergy made reasoned and necessary rules to limit the control of the Roman Catholic Church over the people. C. The Civil Constitution of the Clergy created an unpopular move to dissolve religious orders and restructure the role of the Roman Catholic Church in government. D. The Civil Constitution of the Clergy was an ineffective tool for changing the power of the Roman Catholic Church in France.
Among middle-class families, children came to be seen increasingly as
A) seething cauldrons of original sin. B) innocent and morally superior. C) perversely willful. D) future workers.
Carl J. Friedrich and Zbigniew Brzezinski believed that totalitarian states a. shared the same ideological aims
b. drew on vastly different methods to achieve their goals. c. were a new development, and nothing like them had ever existed. d. were fundamentally the same as ancient Eastern despotisms, the Roman Empire, Renaissance tyrannies, and absolute monar. e. were products of scientific theory and irrationalism, devoid of any element that might seem religious.
While most accounts begin with Spanish penetration of the Caribbean and Central America, this chapter begins with the second pathway across the North Atlantic, followed by seafarers from England, France, and Portugal to fish off the island of ________.
Fill in the blank(s) with the appropriate word(s).