Answer:
The Thirty Years' War was primarily fought in Central Europe between 1618 and 1648. Estimates of the total number of military and civilian deaths which resulted range from 4.5 to 8 million, the vast majority from disease or starvation. In some areas of Germany, it has been suggested up to 60% of the population died.[14]
Until 1938, the war was usually presented as a German conflict; this changed when historian CV Wedgwood argued it formed part of a wider, ongoing European struggle, with the Habsburg-Bourbon conflict at its centre.[15] This is now the generally accepted view, with related conflicts such as the 1568–1648 Eighty Years War, the 1635-59 Franco-Spanish War, and the 1629–31 War of the Mantuan Succession.[16]
Explanation:
The correct answer is option A. "determined which jobs workers would hold and where workers would live". When the Bolsheviks took control of the Soviet economy during the Civil War, they adopted War communism. According to historians, Bolsheviks wanted to keep towns (the proletarian power-base) and the Red Army stocked with food and weapons. As a result, Bolsheviks had absolute power of who would acquire a job and where people would live.
<span>The cession of the Philippines involved a payment of $20 million from the United States to Spain. The treaty was signed on December 10, 1898, and ended the Spanish–American War. The Treaty of Paris came into effect on April 11, 1899, when the documents of ratification were exchanged.</span>
To begin, it didn't promote "peace" as much as it promoted a "cold war" which is the whole point of the name, Cold War.
Nuclear Weapons essentially forced the US and the Soviet Union into an uncomfortable draw.
They knew they couldn't fight each other directly so they fought each other in a series of devastating proxy wars around the world.