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exis [7]
2 years ago
12

Mayan traders transported goods in two ways. One was to carry the goods on their back, and the other was __________.

History
1 answer:
Effectus [21]2 years ago
3 0

Mayan traders were known to transport their goods via b. canoe

For all their advancements, the Maya never came up with the wheel and did not have donkeys and horses to carry goods when they were trading. They therefore had two main ways of transporting goods:

  • goods were carried by people on their backs
  • goods were carried in very large canoes that could take over 15 people sometimes

The Maya who carried goods on their backs were normally enslaved people or people who they paid to carry the goods and so large quantities of goods could not be traded overland effectively.

In conclusion, the Maya used both canoes and people to transport goods.

<em>Find out more at brainly.com/question/2887363.</em>

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It is difficult to begin a chronological index, a matrix – as it were – for a massive event. In fact, Nazi Germany generated several policies of planned mass killing, a practice which culminated in the attempt to completely destroy European Jewry in a planned way, which will be the focal point of this index. The beginning of these mass killing practices has been clearly identified: the first massacres took place in the context of the total ideological war against the USSR. However, the warning signs preceding these practices, without which the latter remain mostly difficult to understand, are still being discussed (Burrin, 1989; Gerlach, 1998; Browning, 1992 and 2003; Brayard, 2004). With a few rare exceptions, the factual information about these phenomena has been well documented and analyzed, which justifies attributing four stars to all of the facts and events detailed below, except when indicated otherwise.

Should one link Hitler directly to Luther, as some U.S. authors did in the 1950s? The approach chosen here will not. The first manifestations of discrimination against Jews began in Germany during the First World War, then were eclipsed on the institutional level during the Weimar Republic; afterward, they grew steadily from 1933 to 1941. However, one cannot trace a direct line from discrimination to persecution and killing.

Thus, we must begin by focusing on Germany, even though murder practices (in the strictest sense) did not take place there at the time, in order to explain a process which blazed across the whole of Europe and led to the participation of a very broad part of European societies, and the killing of over 5 million Jews from all the countries involved (Hilberg, 1961). We shall also present a detailed account of the local implementation procedures of violent impulses, which were sometimes decided locally, but were more frequently inspired by the Berlin-based decision-making centers, through a general matrix, and four geographically-based indexes. Based on the general matrix, which will concentrate on the central (i.e., German) point of view, we shall:

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