<p>legumes are like.. alfalfa sprouts. think green, think foods that kids dont like to eat.</p>
<p>Next question:
Avignon papacy/babylonian captivity.</p>
<p>Explain it</p>
<p>legumes are like.. alfalfa sprouts. think green, think foods that kids dont like to eat.</p>
<p>Next question:
Avignon papacy/babylonian captivity.</p>
<p>Explain it</p>
<p>sorry, forgot the question again.</p>
<p>What treaty gave the Calvinists rights?</p>
<p>gotcha</p>
<p>avignon papacy=in the 1300s when the Pope, Clement V, decided to stay in Avignon, France instead of going to Rome like all the other popes before him. I don't quite remember but, the French had a lot of control over them so the popes were kind of subservient to the French. It lasted about 70 years until Pope Gregory (#) returned to rome.</p>
<p>Calvinists -> Treaty of Westphalia</p>
<p>more on the avignon papacy -> One pope in France, one pope in Rome. They meet up to solve this, decide that there needs to be a third pope to fix this issue. and the third pope calls on a fourth pope. and then there are 4 popes. and the first 3 are eliminated. and pope 4 gets the spot.</p>
<p>And for a question --></p>
<p>17th century (early 17th).. who was the economic power of europe.</p>
<p>think tulip</p>
<p>okay, and that would tie in to the Great Schism too.</p>
<p>btw, how are you studying? meaning, what review books?</p>
<p>economic power...tulip?! okay, um dutch? in netherlands?</p>
<p>question: who were the sans culottes? and how were they important during the french revolution?</p>
<p>princeton review book, taking old AP tests in class, spending too much time on forums. like this.</p>
<p>(and yes that ties into the great schism)</p>
<p>Sans Culottes - Those without weird pant thingies.
other than that, i dont know.
have an answer?</p>
<p>haha yeah and they literally mean "without pants" and they were a middle to lower class group I think. They were proud of that they didn't wear the fancy breeches of the aristocracy. They were important because they supported the Jacobins, the radicals in the National Assembly and they played a role in establishing the Paris Commune.</p>
<p>my euro class does not help at all. seriously. i'm using PR too!</p>
<p>luckily, my euro class is awesome. p.s. remember that africa question before. thats uber important and its almost always on the AP test. So is 1700 = netherlands. </p>
<p>What is the significance of Emile Zola</p>
<p>btw, 2 things: if you are willing to buy anotehr book, the Cliffs Guide is great. my friend and i share between the Cliffs and the PR.
also, what grade are you in?</p>
<p>okay next question:</p>
<p>How did Napoleon come to power?</p>
<p>Are you still around?</p>
<p>He was a military hero from corisca and the government called him in to create stability.</p>
<p>Who was Emile Zola? What did he do? Why is he important?</p>
<p>And as a bonus question:</p>
<p>What is the name of the person who crowned napolean</p>
<p>Sorry, I wasn't really up-to-date on the thread.</p>
<p>Don't know about Emile Zola.</p>
<p>10th grade. How about you?</p>
<p>12th grade</p>
<p>Emile Zola said "J'accuse" (Dreyfus affair)
should i type out a full explanation?</p>
<p>ahh...I'm still here.</p>
<p>Okay, Napoleon crowned himself. He took the crown from the Pope and put in on his own head and then he crowned his wife, Josephine. Also, he had the ceremony at the Notre Dame instead of some cathedral where the French kings where always crowned before.</p>
<p>yupp</p>
<p>i need to think of more questions. so far we've been pretty thorough</p>
<p>uhh</p>
<p>What was the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, who was responsible for it</p>
<p>I got the Dreyfus affair, but what was "J'accuse"?</p>
<p>when dreyfus ws on devil's island, asnd no one believed him, emile zola published an article that said "j'accuse" (i accuse you) which accused the french government of framing dreyfus.</p>