How did Pennsylvania embody Quaker ideals?

A) Quaker leaders banned customs followed by local Indians like the Leni-Lenape.
B) Quakers sought to forcibly convert the local Indian population to Christianity.
C) Quaker leaders restricted ownership of property to the wealthy elite.
D) Quakers lived in harmony with people from different faiths in a "peaceable kingdom."


D

History

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What were the pros and cons of Alfred Nobel's military inventions?

a) Smokeless powder gave visibility on the battlefield, but at the expense of greater casualties. b) Larger cannons could be used, but they tended to blow up more often. Consider This: How had field battles been conducted up to the time of Nobel’s contributions? See 10.7: Narrative: The Man Who Died Twice. c) Nobel’s blasting powders were cheaper, but much harder to transport. Consider This: How had field battles been conducted up to the time of Nobel’s contributions? See 10.7: Narrative: The Man Who Died Twice. d) Smokeless powder was effective, but required highly educated engineers to use in battle. Consider This: How had field battles been conducted up to the time of Nobel’s contributions? See 10.7: Narrative: The Man Who Died Twice.

History

America's poorest minority group in the 1960s was the ________ , while today's fastest growing minority group in America is the ________

A) African Americans; Mexican Americans B) Native Americans; Mexican Americans C) Mexican Americans; Asian Americans D) Asian Americans; African Americans

History

In diplomatic exchanges between Charlemagne and Harun-al-Rashid, ________ were key to establishing good relations

A) personal meetings B) gifts C) treaties D) exchanging ambassadors

History

Catholic missionaries in the nineteenth century patterned their operations after __________.

A. recent Protestant missionaries B. Catholic missionaries from the centuries of Atlantic empires C. the European Counter-Reformation D. Muslim expansion in Africa

History