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garik1379 [7]
3 years ago
5

#8 How did landowners benefit from sharecropping?

History
1 answer:
katen-ka-za [31]3 years ago
6 0

Answer:

The answer is A. They did not have to pay their workers.

Explanation:

In the sharecropping system, the main advantage that the land owners had was that they were able to pay their workers by giving them a share of the crop/Harvest and not in cash.

This gave a tremendous advantage for the land owners as they could save money and reinvest in other means (more lands and tangible assets), increasing their wealth significantly and the gap between the rich and poor grew as well.

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List the geographical features that make India so unique. Include plateaus, rivers, mountains, seas, oceans, etc.
KatRina [158]

Answer:

The Indian subcontinent can be divided into four geographical divisions. There are the Northern Plains, the Deccan Plateau, and the Northern Mountains or the Himalayan as regions with dissimilar climatic and physical resources.

India has practically all major physical features of the earth, i.e., mountains, plains, deserts, plateaus and islands. The land of India displays great physical variation. Geologically, the Peninsular Plateau constitutes one of the ancient landmasses on the earth’s surface.

Explanation:

5 0
2 years ago
1. How did the French Revolution lead to division of the German Confederation and the
saw5 [17]

Answer:

Social inequalities between the estates, economic problems, government debt Effects abolishing monarchy, it lead to the Napoleonic era because of the turmoil in France Napoleon was able to rise to power quickly and win many battles for his county. Hope this helps :)

6 0
2 years ago
4. On page 26, the author writes, "So if these teams bring in so much money, why
arlik [135]

Answer:

Rhetorical question

Explanation:

the quote is asking a question to think about rather than to answer, making it a rhetorical question.

Hope this helps!

8 0
3 years ago
Please help. No links. No nonsense.
Ghella [55]

Answer: One major difference is that King's believes that slavery didn't play a role, while Burns' does. A historical event that could support King's is when Congress established the Freedmen's Bureau in 1865. This provided aid to African Americans in their transition from slavery to freedom. A historical event that could support Burns' is Dred Scott v. Sandford. The case in 1857 declared that slaves and blacks descended from slaves and were not American citizens and cannot sue, so this could have led to outrage and war.

3 0
3 years ago
What four things should you look for when analyzing sources in history?
skad [1K]

When you analyze a primary source, you are undertaking the most important job of the historian. There is no better way to understand events in the past than by examining the sources--whether journals, newspaper articles, letters, court case records, novels, artworks, music or autobiographies--that people from that period left behind.

Each historian, including you, will approach a source with a different set of experiences and skills, and will therefore interpret the document differently. Remember that there is no one right interpretation. However, if you do not do a careful and thorough job, you might arrive at a wrong interpretation.

In order to analyze a primary source you need information about two things: the document itself, and the era from which it comes. You can base your information about the time period on the readings you do in class and on lectures. On your own you need to think about the document itself. The following questions may be helpful to you as you begin to analyze the sources:

1. Look at the physical nature of your source. This is particularly important and powerful if you are dealing with an original source (i.e., an actual old letter, rather than a transcribed and published version of the same letter). What can you learn from the form of the source? (Was it written on fancy paper in elegant handwriting, or on scrap-paper, scribbled in pencil?) What does this tell you?

2. Think about the purpose of the source. What was the author's message or argument? What was he/she trying to get across? Is the message explicit, or are there implicit messages as well?

3. How does the author try to get the message across? What methods does he/she use?

4. What do you know about the author? Race, sex, class, occupation, religion, age, region, political beliefs? Does any of this matter? How?

5. Who constituted the intended audience? Was this source meant for one person's eyes, or for the public? How does that affect the source?

6. What can a careful reading of the text (even if it is an object) tell you? How does the language work? What are the important metaphors or symbols? What can the author's choice of words tell you? What about the silences--what does the author choose NOT to talk about?

Now you can evaluate the source as historical evidence.

1. Is it prescriptive--telling you what people thought should happen--or descriptive--telling you what people thought did happen?

2. Does it describe ideology and/or behavior?

3. Does it tell you about the beliefs/actions of the elite, or of "ordinary" people? From whose perspective?

4. What historical questions can you answer using this source? What are the benefits of using this kind of source?

5. What questions can this source NOT help you answer? What are the limitations of this type of source?

6. If we have read other historians' interpretations of this source or sources like this one, how does your analysis fit with theirs? In your opinion, does this source support or challenge their argument?

Remember, you cannot address each and every one of these questions in your presentation or in your paper, and I wouldn't want you to.



hope it helps

7 0
3 years ago
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