Answer:
they were able to use the riffles they were comfortable with.
Explanation:
Answer: Today, it's best known as the Black Death or the bubonic plague. Medieval people called it "the blue sickness," La pest ("the Pestilence"), and "the Great Mortality." The name bubonic comes from the medieval Latin word bubo via Italian bilbo--meaning a pustule, growth, or swelling.
Explanation: Hope this helped :)
At the time of the Transportation Revolution, there were three major vehicles in consideration: automobiles, trains and boats. This caused the construction of roads/highways, railroads, and canals to accommodate all these new vehicles.
were beaten and marched to a POW camp by Japanese soldiers.
The Battle of Bataan, located in the Philippines, ended with US surrender to the Japanese. The march to the POW (prisoner of war) camp is referred to as the Battan Death March.
The Battan Death March was a 65 mile march from one end of the island to the other to reach the POW camp. The Japanese marched groups of soldiers and Filipino people while beating them, starving them, and killing anyone too weak to keep up. The exact number who died on the march is unknown but estimates put it into the thousands. Those that made it to the POW camp continued to experience poor treatment leading to the death of more at the camps.