Answer:
The Russo-Japanese war started in 1904 and ended in 1905. It was fought between Japanese and Russian empires due to the claims over Manchuria and Korea. It fighting was confined in Liadoing peninsula, the sea around Korea and Japan and Southern Manchuria. The fighting started when Japan attacked Russian fleet at Port Arthur without giving any formal declaration. It caused huge casualities on both sides. Japanese urged president Roosevelt to negotiate peace agreements. The representative of both the countries met at Portsmouth, New Hampshire in 1905. Roosevelt wanted to end the war with such terms that both Russia and Japan could play an important role in Northeast China. H<em>e was worried because if Japan managed to drive Russia out entirely then it could harm American Interests in that region.</em>
Answer:
During the period 1870 to 1900, there were many inventions to increase the urban growth. <em>Some of them are an incandescent lamp, tinfoil phonograph, box telephone etc.
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<u>Explanation:
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The incandescent lamp was invented by Edison, <em>An American businessman and inventor Thomas Alva Edison invented incandescent lamp. </em>This invention didn’t depend on firework for lighting this lamp was used more in factories, homes and offices.
This lamp consists filament to which temperature is increased with the help of electric current this helps to produce a lighting effect. The filament is made up of tungsten and protected it from oxidation by covering glass which is filled with inert gas.
The use of images had probably been increasing in the years leading up to the outbreak of iconoclasm.[6]<span> One notable change came in 695, when </span>Justinian II<span> put a full-faced image of Christ on the </span>obverse<span> of his gold coins. The effect on iconoclast opinion is unknown, but the change certainly caused </span>Caliph Abd al-Malik<span> to break permanently with his previous adoption of Byzantine coin types to start a purely Islamic coinage with lettering only.</span>[7]<span> This appears more like two opposed camps asserting their positions (pro and anti images) than one empire seeking to imitate the other. More striking is the fact that Islamic iconoclasm rejected any depictions of living people or animals, not only religious images. By contrast, Byzantine iconomachy concerned itself only with the question of the holy presence (or lack thereof) of images. </span>