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Ghella [55]
2 years ago
9

How did mechanization of farm equiment lead to urbanization during the Industrial Revolution

History
1 answer:
RoseWind [281]2 years ago
8 0

It reduced the demand for agricultural laborers, driving many of them to relocate to urban areas in search of employment.

<h3>What do you mean by urbanization?</h3>

Urbanization is the process by which cities develop and a rising proportion of the population moves there to live.

Urbanization has significantly increased as a result of the Industrial Revolution's technical expansion. The greater population density in compact locations allowed the new industries to access a vast pool of laborers, and the larger labor force allowed for ever-increasing specialization.

Urbanization and the rise of industrial economies were largely caused by mechanization.

Learn more about urbanization during the Industrial Revolution:

brainly.com/question/13843643

#SPJ1

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How did geography influence the Ancient Greek civilization?
11Alexandr11 [23.1K]

The geography of the region helped to shape the government and culture of the Ancient Greeks. Geographical formations including mountains, seas, and islands formed natural barriers between the Greek city-states and forced the Greeks to settle along the coast.

4 0
4 years ago
Explain what an anti-Semitic conspiracy theory is, and give one or more examples?​
artcher [175]

Answer:

Anti-Semitic is a person that is hostile against Jewish people, Hitler was a anti-semitic and blamed Jews for what had happened to Germany since the first world war, that is a Anti-Semitic Conspiracy

Explanation:

4 0
3 years ago
The justice of the peace is considered a(n) ____________ under the constitution?
sertanlavr [38]

Answer:

treaty

Explanation:

5 0
4 years ago
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Where were many of the colonial towns located
alekssr [168]
Plymouth colony would be the answer.
8 0
4 years ago
How are the boundaries drawn during the Berlin Conference to blame for the political unrest in modern Africa?
Alik [6]

Answer:

The Berlin Conference can be best understood as the formalisation of the Scramble for Africa. This British coined the term sometime in 1884, and it has since been used to describe the twenty-plus years when the various European powers explored, divided, conquered and began to exploit virtually the entire African continent. European powers were slow to realise the benefits of claiming land in Africa and had mainly kept to coastal colonies. However in 1884–5 the Scramble for Africa had truly began in earnest when thirteen European countries and the United States met in Berlin to agree to the rules dividing Africa. The outcome of the conference was the General Act of the Berlin Conference.

Prior to the conference, European diplomacy treated African indigenous people in the same manner as they treated New World natives, forming trade realtions with tribal chiefs. This can seen in examples such as the Portuguese trading with the Kingdom of the Kongo. With the exception of the trading posts along the coasts, the continent was essentially ignored. This changed as a result of King Leopold of Belgium’s desire for personal glory and riches and by the mid-19th century, Africa was considered ripe for exploration, trade, and settlement. 

In 1876, Belgium’s King Leopold II announced his intent to fund an exploration of the Congo region, and in 1879 Leopold sent Sir Henry Morton Stanley to the area. In the same year, the French began building a railway east from Dakar, hoping to tap potentially huge Sahelian markets. That year France also joined Great Britain in taking financial control of Egypt.

From 1879 to 1885, Stanley went to the Congo as an envoy from Léopold with the secret mission to organise what would become known as the Congo Free State, a mercantile enterprise in the Congo. French intelligence had discovered Leopold’s plans, and France was quick to engage in its own colonial exploration. French naval officer Pierre de Brazza was dispatched to central Africa, traveled into the western Congo basin, and raised the French flag over the newly founded Brazzaville in 1881, in what is currently the Republic of Congo. To add to this, Portugal, had a long history in the are through its trade and treaties with the Kongo Empire in the area through its treaties with the Kongo Empire which in essence became a proxy state of Portugal. It quickly made a treaty with its old ally, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, on 26 February 1884 to block off the Congo Society’s access to the Atlantic.

By the early 1880s European interest in Africa had increased dramatically. Stanley’s charting of the Congo River Basin (1874–77) removed the last bit of terra incognita from European maps of the continent, thereby delineating the rough areas of British, Portuguese, French, and Belgian control. The powers raced to push these rough boundaries to their furthest limits and eliminating any local minor rulers which might prove troublesome to European competitive diplomacy.

France moved to occupy Tunisia, one of the last of the Barbary Pirate states, under the pretext of another Islamic terror and piracy incident. French claims by Pierre de Brazza were quickly solidified with the French taking control of today’s Republic of the Congo in 1881 and also Guinea in 1884. This, in turn, partly convinced Italy to become part of the Triple Alliance, thereby upsetting Germany's Otto van Bismarck’s carefully laid out plans with Italy and forcing Germany to become involved. In 1882, realizing the geopolitical extent of Portuguese control on the coasts, but seeing penetration by France eastward across Central Africa toward Ethiopia, the Nile, and the Suez Canal, Britain saw its vital trade route through Egypt and its Indian Empire threatened.

for more brief explanation please go tohttps://www.sahistory.org.za/article/berlin-conference

4 0
3 years ago
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