I reckon that King George benefited the least. The American colonists resented him and saw He also in a way "lost" America after the Declaration of Independence. But he was still the king of Britain & Ireland.
The lowerclass
No, the legend of Robin Hood goes back at least to the 1400's. Think about it, why would he be using a bow and arrow when the Brown Bess musket was readily available during the French Revolution. Some reference in that legend also speaks about Richard the Lionheart, which would put it into the time frame of the Third Crusade (1189 to 1192). Ballads do not require or mandate a specific time frame of course, it is only the lesson that matters.
Farmers benefitted the least from the prosperity of the Industrial Revolution. As electricity and technology became utilized more, farmers in rural areas began to see less of a need for their production.
It at least began Modern Parliamentary Democracy.
No. The revolution created a classless society (In theory at least).
First Estate
first estate
The ideas of the French Revolution were democracy. If the Russian people began thinking those things, they would threaten the tsar's power at the least or even dethrone him.
The French government was replaced in the revolution (thats what a revolution is, over throwing the government and making a new one). "Enduring Freedom" is hunting terrorists that were responsible for the 2001 attack on New City (or at least it originally was).
40, 000, according to most of the sources I have seen.
Funny cause I actually had this question on my IB biology test today. The least important function of proteins is hormones at least out of the choices on my test.
it's not........
american revolution
I reckon that King George benefited the least. The American colonists resented him and saw He also in a way "lost" America after the Declaration of Independence. But he was still the king of Britain & Ireland.
The presumption given by Robespierre was that he was preserving the heart and the integrity of the French Revolution from moderates and royalists which were at least in his mind, traitors to France.
England, or at least its leadership, feared the French revolution and especially Napoleon. From the time of Cromwell in about 1650, there had been restrictions on the Catholics in Ireland. Since a rebellion in Scotland, there had been restrictions on the Highlanders in Scotland. In 1799 all those restrictions were removed. England wanted to keep France from coming to the assistance of the repressed peoples.