The wealthy planters of the Chesapeake region
a. created a lavish lifestyle that was conspicuously different from anything known in England.
b. were typically in debt.
c. were too rich to be concerned with the price of tobacco.
d. lived much of the year in Charleston.
e. spent much time in London.
d. lived much of the year in Charleston.
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What was the political impact of Calvinism?
A) Due to the location of the center of Calvinism in Switzerland, most governments that accepted the new religion were city-states. B) Because of the insistence of Calvinism of the acceptance of a single ecclesiastical authority, Calvinism spread rapidly among the absolute monarchies. C) Calvinism was regarded as so potentially revolutionary that it failed to find a foothold outside of Germany. D) Calvinists sought the participation of all believers in church administration, which encouraged the idea of a wider access to government.
The United States president and the admiral he sent to Japan were, respectively,
A. Zachary Taylor and David Farragut. B. Franklin Pierce and John Paul Jones. C. Millard Fillmore and David Jones. D. Millard Fillmore and Matthew Perry. E. James Buchanan and Abner Doubleday.
By the end of the Napoleonic Wars, the Mughal emperor's lands had been reduced to the region immediately surrounding _________ and Agra.
a. Delhi. b. Madras. c. Calcutta. d. Bombay.
In the election of 1944, FDR's running mate—who became president with FDR's death in 1945—was __________
A) Dwight Eisenhower B) Harry Truman C) Henry Wallace D) Thomas Dewey