no
Louis XVI did not support the ideals of the American Revolution, he just wanted to weaken his country's enemy, Britain, who the Americans happened to be fighting against. Louis XVI persuaded himself, for selfish reasons.
Because the revolutionaries won, and the ideals of the revolution became the core of the Mexican Constitution, which holds until this day, this includes:A declaration of human rightsNational sovereigntySeparation of powersDefinition of a representative governmentDefinition of a federal system of governmentConstitutional remedySupremacy of the state over the Church
American Revolution and French Revolution. They were both justified themselves with Enlightenment ideals.
they feared that US expansion would lead it to become an empire. They didnt like that idea because they pictured empires as a threat to individual freedoms, something they inherited from the american revolution.
okay, wow. Mr. VanVoorhis, 8th grade, shivela middle.
whoever put this up is an idiot
they fought it over
Because it was successful and integrated many of its ideals into the Mexican constitution.
They believed that expansion went against american ideals
The democratic ideals of the American people.
The American Revolution
Power divided among branches of government showed American commitment to Enlightenment ideals.
Louis XVI did not support the ideals of the American Revolution, he just wanted to weaken his country's enemy, Britain, who the Americans happened to be fighting against. Louis XVI persuaded himself, for selfish reasons.
i dont know honestly.
Power divided among branches of government showed American commitment to Enlightenment ideals.
Because the revolutionaries won, and the ideals of the revolution became the core of the Mexican Constitution, which holds until this day, this includes:A declaration of human rightsNational sovereigntySeparation of powersDefinition of a representative governmentDefinition of a federal system of governmentConstitutional remedySupremacy of the state over the Church
American Revolution and French Revolution. They were both justified themselves with Enlightenment ideals.