the answer is the Archeabacteria and the Eubacteria.
These kingdoms are called hellentisc because this culture was not completly greek, or hellenic, historians calla it hellenistic, or greek-like.
There were various independent kingdoms in England before they united to become England. Some of these kingdoms were Wessex, Northumbria, Mercia etc.
Copeland-1938 4 Kingdoms --Animal --Plants --Protoctista -Algae -Slime molds -Fungi -Protozoan --Monera -Bacteria
Prokaryotes are primarily classified into two kingdoms: Bacteria and Archaea. Bacteria are diverse organisms found in various environments, including soil, water, and the human body, and they play crucial roles in processes like decomposition and nutrient cycling. Archaea, while also prokaryotic, are often extremophiles, thriving in extreme conditions such as high temperatures and salinity, and they have distinct biochemical and genetic characteristics that differentiate them from bacteria. These two kingdoms reflect the fundamental differences in cellular structure and metabolic pathways between these groups.
There were many kingdoms in the European Middle Ages. There were probably kingdoms that have been forgotten to history, because much of northern and eastern Europe has no history until about 1000 AD. England was one kingdom. But before England existed as we know it, that land was in the kingdoms of Essex, Middlesex, Wessex, Mercia, Kent, Northumbria, and East Anglia, along with ten or so smaller kingdoms. After they combined, the Vikings divided off the northern part into a kingdom called the Danelaw. Spain consisted of the kingdoms of the Sueves and Visigoths at the beginning of the Middle Ages. The Visigoths conquered the Sueves. But they were conquered by Moors. And then, the people who opposed the Moors founded the kingdoms of Asturias, Galicia, Castile, Leon, Aragon, Catalonia, Navarre, and Portugal, while the Moors divided into a number of smaller kingdoms. There were kingdoms within empires. The Carolingian Empire included the Kingdom of the Franks and the Kingdom of the Lombards. The Holy Roman Empire also had kingdoms within it. The list seems endless.
The two kingdoms of bacteria are archaebacteria and eubacteria by troy Watson from southwood
There are two kingdoms of bacteria, Eubacteria and Archaea.
Bacteria is a member of the (Archaebacteria and Eubacteria) member because their used to be 5 kingdoms, so the scientist realized that there was 2 different kingdoms so they decided to make another one which was the 6 kingdom.The 5 kingdom was called Monera.
Kingdom is a classification within the eukaryotes domain. Bacteria is a domain itself, previously called eubacteria (true bacteria). The other domain of prokaryotes is now called archaea. Previously this also was considered a kind of bacteria: archeabacteria. The third domain of living beings is the eukarya, where kingdoms plantae, fungi and animalia etc. belong.
Those ARE the names of the kingdoms.
Bacteria is in the Protist kindom.
There is ONE bacteria kingdom.
Scientists divide bacteria into two kingdoms: Bacteria (also known as Eubacteria) and Archaea. These two kingdoms are based on differences in their genetic and biochemical makeup.
There are two kingdoms of bacteria. The two kingdoms of bacteria are Archaebacteria and Eubacteria. This is taught in biology.
The five kingdoms of life are... 1. Animal 2. Plant 3. Bacteria 4. Fungus/Fungi 5. Protist(s)
The two kingdoms that contain all prokaryotic organisms are Bacteria and Archaea. These organisms lack a true nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles in their cells.
~3 domains 1. archea 2. bacteria 3. eukarya ~4 kingdoms 1. protista 2. fungi 3. planta 4. animalia