If I remember correctly I would say D but I could be wrong
I think it’s rapid invasion by air and land .
As a former mission the site had great religious importance in Texas did Jim Bowie have for defending the Alamo.
As a former mission, the site had great religious importance to Texans.
<u>Explanation:</u>
Mission san Antonio de Valero was built by Spanish settlers it housed missionaries and Native American converts. In 1793 the lands of the five missions was divided among the local people. The abandoned chapel of the mission was occupied by several military troops in the later years.
The fort which housed the chapel was called El Alamo. Alamo is an important location in Texas’ war of independence from Mexico. Texas soldiers gained control of Alamo in 1836 and even after the being suggested to abandon the fort due to lack of sufficient troops people like Colonel Jim Bowie decided to defend the fort until last breath because of the religious significance the fort had.
Answer:
<em>Indentured servants in the early 1800s were usually immigrants.</em>
<span>When the Afrikaner-backed National Party Came to power in South Africa in 1948, it implemented its campaign promises in the form of high apartheid. This contrasted with the segregationist policies of the pre-war government. While much of that legislation was designed to restructure the organization of economic opportunity in South Africa, apartheid legislation lacked the trademark of systematic exploitation of native Africans (Butler 19). The English speaking whites who had held power before the war were sidelined as the white constituency was consolidated under the National Party, a Afrikaner dominated political group. This allowed the National Party to enact such legislation as the Population Registration Act, which enforced classification into four racial categories: white, Co loured, Asiatic, or native. The next high apartheid landmark was the Group Areas Act of 1950. This act enforced the separate areas of residence by race across the country. It would be this act that eventually led to Promotion of Bantu Self-Government Act of 1959 that transferred Africans’ political rights to these quasi-states, which allowed the South African government to treat natives as foreigners and allow them no political representation in the South African government.</span><span />