Which of the following is an example of how Peter the Great reformed Russia? A. He ended the practice of serfdom. B. He withdrew from territories occupied by earlier Russian rulers. C. He changed the Russian alphabet. D. He cut back on military spending and training.*******

Can you guys not agrue about which is better wikipedia or grolier and ANSWER THE FREAKING QUESTION THAT WAS ASKED!!!

what is the answer? ;-;

no one cares where you get it from they just want the answer

I think its c

I wouldn't recommend trusting Wikipedia. A more reliable source would be Grolier.

This is helpful

help whats the answer csdvfgsbf

To determine which of the options is an example of how Peter the Great reformed Russia, we need to analyze each option and its relevance to the reforms implemented by Peter the Great.

A. He ended the practice of serfdom.
Peter the Great did not end the practice of serfdom in Russia. Serfdom continued to be a fundamental aspect of Russian society until its abolition in the 19th century.

B. He withdrew from territories occupied by earlier Russian rulers.
Peter the Great did not withdraw from territories occupied by earlier Russian rulers; in fact, he expanded Russian territories and established a strong Russian presence.

C. He changed the Russian alphabet.
This option is not an example of a reform implemented by Peter the Great. The Russian alphabet was actually reformed by another Russian ruler, Tsar Peter I Alexeyevich, also known as Peter the Great's father.

D. He cut back on military spending and training.
This option is also not accurate. Peter the Great heavily invested in modernizing and expanding the Russian military, creating a formidable armed force known as the Russian army.

Therefore, none of the provided options represents a reform implemented by Peter the Great.

From Wikipedia, more is available:

During the Great Northern War (1700–1721), which dominated most of Peter's reign, Russia, along with a host of allies, seized control of the Baltic Sea from Sweden and gained considerable influence in Central and Eastern Europe. The war, one of history's costliest at the time, consumed significant financial and economic resources, and the administrative system Peter had inherited from his predecessors strained to gather and manage resources.[1] During his Grand Embassy (Russian: Великое посольство, Velikoye posol′stvo), Peter conducted negotiations with a number of European powers to strengthen his position against Sweden and the Ottoman Empire, and his exposure to the more developed nations of Western Europe motivated him to take steps toward turning Russia into an industrial economy. Despite Russia's vast size and considerable natural resources, a number of factors, including corruption and inefficiency, hampered economic growth. Peter believed that targeted reform could not only strengthen his hold on power, but increase the efficiency of the government, and thus better the lot of his people.

Another major goal of Peter's reform was reducing the influence of the Boyars, Russia's elite nobility, who stressed Slavic supremacy and opposed European influence. While their clout had declined since the reign of Ivan the Terrible, the Boyar Duma, an advisory council to the tsar, still wielded considerable political power. Peter saw them as backward, standing in the way of Europeanization and reform. He specifically targeted the boyars with numerous taxes and obligatory services, including a tax on beards.

Like most of Russia's legal system at the time, Peter's reforms were codified and articulated in a series of royal decrees (Russian: указ, ukaz, literally "imposition"), issued chiefly between 1700 and 1721.