Answer:
house slave
coz they worked often cooking cleaning and doing chores bt field slave they used to harvest cotton sugar and which was hard
The triangular trading system was not only used to sell/buy slaves, many countries benefitted from other resources that were scarce in their lands. The thirteen colonies would trade fish, whale oil, lumber, tobacco, rum, iron products, flour and meat products and England and Europe would trade teas, spices, furniture, cloth, tools, iron products, etc. New England specifically would trade with the Caribbean for sugar (or molasses) and New England would distill it into rum. The profits from the sale of the sugar would be shipped to West Africa where the majority of slaves came from, and the slaves were sent to the Caribbean to work on sugar plantations.
Although the male citizen, with his full legal status, right to vote, hold public office, and own property, may well have dominated Greek Society, the social groups which made up the population of a typical Greek city-state or polis were remarkably diverse. Women, children, immigrants (both Greek and foreign), labourers, and slaves all had defined roles, but there was interaction (often illicit) between the classes and there was also some movement between social groups, particularly for second generation offspring and during times of stress such as wars.
In 66 CE a group of rebels unsuccessfully fought against the Romans. The Empire then attacked Jerusalem and killed a portion of the population in response.
"Dear friend,
our land has been invaded and turned into province of Roman Empire. The land has been divided and explored by their rulers. We are subdued and forced to pay exorbitant tributes to the invaders, who do absolutely nothing for our people and families. I contact thee because i wish to reunite the conclaves, unite our people and expel the Romans from our beloved territory"