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Sidana [21]
2 years ago
9

How did Olympe de Gouges respond to the French Revolution?

History
1 answer:
mojhsa [17]2 years ago
6 0

Answer:

C is the answer ; De Gouges was inspired by the Revolution, but she wanted it tocall for women's rights

Explanation:

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A Chinese supporter of the Boxer Rebellion would most likely agree with<br> which statement?
Elden [556K]

Answer: C. China must violently resist foreign countries efforts to control the country.

Explanation:

The Chinese Boxer Rebellion occurred between the years 1899 and 1901 and was propagated by a secret society known as the Boxers who incited the Chinese peasants to rise up against the perceived exploitation of China by foreign powers such as Britain, France, Germany and other European countries.

They believed that China should resist the foreigners by any means necessary including by violence. They showed this by embarking on a violent campaign during the Rebellion to chase all Foreign powers from China and eventually got the support of the Government.

The Rebellion ended when a Multinational force defeated the rebellion and forced China to make concessions.

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2 years ago
How did the geography of Yorktown cause the British to lose the battle and eventually the war?
Ksenya-84 [330]

Answer: When British General Lord Charles Cornwallis and his army surrendered to General George Washington’s American force and its French allies at the Battle of Yorktown on October 19, 1781, it was more than just military win. The outcome in Yorktown, Virginia marked the conclusion of the last major battle of the American Revolution and the start of a new nation's independence. It also cemented Washington’s reputation as a great leader and eventual election as first president of the United States. In the summer of 1780, 5,500 French troops, with Comte de Rochambeau at the helm, landed in Newport, Rhode Island to aid the Americans. At the time, British forces were fighting on two fronts, with General Henry Clinton occupying New York City, and Cornwallis, who had already captured Charleston and Savannah, South Carolina, heading up operations in the south. With the Continental Army positioned in New York, Washington and Rochambeau teamed to plan a timed attack on Clinton with the arrival of more French forces. When they found the French fleet was instead sailing to the Chesapeake Bay, Washington concocted a new plan. By mid-September 1781, Washington and Rochambeau arrived in Williamsburg, Virginia, 13 miles from the tobacco port of Yorktown, where Cornwallis’s men had built a defense of 10 small forts (a.k.a. redoubts) with artillery batteries and connecting trenches. In response, Cornwallis asked Clinton for aid, and the general promised him a fleet of 5,000 British soldiers would set sail from New York to Yorktown.

With a small force left in New York, about 2,500 Americans and 4,000 French soldiers—facing some 8,000 British troops—began digging their own trenches 800 yards from the Brits and started a nearly week-long artillery assault on the enemy on October 9.

Explanation:

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3 years ago
How did the journey of Marco polo bridge the cultural differences between east and west ?
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Crossing the Silk Road, Marco Polo brought elements of Western culture to the East and Eastern culture back to the West.

Because of his exploration for trade of what is today modern China, Indonesia, Mongolia, Sri Lanka, and India, the east experienced Western culture.

Furthermore, his journeys were documented in the Book of the Marvels of the World which presented to Europeans the Asian cities and countries.

4 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
As the native americans were worked to death and died of disieses what group of people were brought in to replace them as labore
BARSIC [14]

he thoughts and perspectives of indigenous individuals, especially those who lived during the 15th through 19th centuries, have survived in written form less often than is optimal for the historian. Because such documents are extremely rare, those interested in the Native American past also draw information from traditional arts, folk literature, folklore, archaeology, and other sources.

Powhatan village of Secoton

Powhatan village of Secoton

Powhatan village of Secoton, colour engraving by Theodor de Bry, 1590, after a watercolour drawing by John White, c. 1587.

© North Wind Picture Archives

Native American history is made additionally complex by the diverse geographic and cultural backgrounds of the peoples involved. As one would expect, indigenous American farmers living in stratified societies, such as the Natchez, engaged with Europeans differently than did those who relied on hunting and gathering, such as the Apache. Likewise, Spanish conquistadors were engaged in a fundamentally different kind of colonial enterprise than were their counterparts from France or England.

The sections below consider broad trends in Native American history from the late 15th century to the late 20th century. More-recent events are considered in the final part of this article, Developments in the late 20th and early 21st centuries.

North America and Europe circa 1492

The population of Native America

Scholarly estimates of the pre-Columbian population of Northern America have differed by millions of individuals: the lowest credible approximations propose that some 900,000 people lived north of the Rio Grande in 1492, and the highest posit some 18,000,000. In 1910 anthropologist James Mooney undertook the first thorough investigation of the problem. He estimated the precontact population density of each culture area based on historical accounts and carrying capacity, an estimate of the number of people who could be supported by a given form of subsistence. Mooney concluded that approximately 1,115,000 individuals lived in Northern America at the time of Columbian landfall. In 1934 A.L. Kroeber reanalyzed Mooney’s work and estimated 900,000 individuals for the same region and period. In 1966 ethnohistorian Henry Dobyns estimated that there were between 9,800,000 and 12,200,000 people north of the Rio Grande before contact; in 1983 he revised that number upward to 18,000,000 people.

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3 years ago
Which factor made New England poorly suited for growing cotton
BigorU [14]
The climate was very cold up there and the terrain tended to be rocky
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2 years ago
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