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Volgvan
3 years ago
7

HELPPP ITS (5 points )

History
2 answers:
Lena [83]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

answer is c . as charlemagne had nothing to do with these lands

Explanation:

plz mark as brainliest if it helps you

gizmo_the_mogwai [7]3 years ago
4 0
The answer would be D
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Which event seriously hurt jimmy carters presidency?
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The big issue during Carter's presidency was the Iran Hostage Crisis which only ended shortly before Reagan's inauguration.
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3 years ago
Why do you think America wanted to bomb Tokyo, Japan so badly after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor?
motikmotik

Answer:

revenge cause they deserved it plus it would cause the most japanese deaths  considering how big and populated

7 0
3 years ago
Write an essay about the Pearl Harbor.
stepladder [879]

Sunday, December 7, 1941, was supposed to be a day of rest for the military soldiers at Hawaii’s Pearl Harbor naval base on the island of Oahu. But at 7:55 a.m., Japanese fighter planes zoomed in without warning and attacked the United States Pacific fleet, or naval vessels, moored in the harbor. Thousands of lives would be lost that day

It was, as then President Franklin Delano Roosevelt would call it, “a date which will live in infamy.”

 The sudden attack in Hawaii—at the time a territory of the United States, not a state—might have taken many by surprise, but the Japanesehad been planning the operation for months.

Franklin Delano Roosevelt was president of the United States at the time of the attack on Pearl Harbor.
Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto, architect of the attack on Pearl Harbor

Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto, commander in chief of the Japanese naval forces and architect of the Pearl Harbor attack, didn’t want a fight with America. But much of Europe and Asia, including Japan, were involved in World War II at the time. Yamamoto wanted to take over certain countries in southeastern Asia and use their oil to help fuel Japan’s military vehicles and naval fleet.

But because the U.S. base in Hawaii was relatively close to these countries, the Japanese worried that the United States would send soldiers from Pearl Harbor to defend the nations if they were attacked. By destroying the U.S. military presence in the region, the countries Japan wanted to target would be left vulnerable. So Yamamoto decided to move forward with a surprise attack on the U.S. fleet in Hawaii.

So on November 26, 1941, 31 warships carrying fighter planes and bombers slipped from Japan into the North Pacific. They moved silently until they closed in on the Hawaiian Islands. A small Japanese plane made a loop around the target and radioed back: “Pearl Harbor sleeps.”

THE ATTACK

 At dawn on December 7, 350 planes launched in two waves from Japan’s ships. The bombers dropped bombs on American warships below, while the fighter planes targeted the U.S. aircraft on the ground so they couldn’t fight back.

Repair crews went to work on the ships. Except for the U.S.S. Arizona, Utah, and Oklahoma, every damaged ship returned to sea.

 The day after the attack, the United States declared war on Japan, officially entering World War II. In the nearly four years that followed, the U.S. Navy sank all of the Japanese aircraft carriers, battleships, and cruisers that participated in the Pearl Harbor attack.

The United States and its allies—Britain, France, and Russia, among other countries—eventually won the war, defeating Japan and its allies, Germany and Italy.

 

Today visitors can tour the Pearl Harbor National Monument, built on the water above the wreckage of the U.S.S. <span>Arizona, </span>one of the eight battleships attacked and damaged during the fight. From there you can still glimpse at the remains of the sunken ship 40 feet below the water, a memorial to the brave people who fought in this important battle.



7 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Which phrase completes this expert
Ivahew [28]
territorial disputes
8 0
3 years ago
How did farming in the united states change in the late 1800s? please help me
Ira Lisetskai [31]

'The late 1800s were a time of explosive growth for agriculture in the United States. After the end of the Civil War and the passage of the Homestead Act in 1862, which gave free land to any family that would promise to settle on it for at least five years, huge areas of the Midwest and western United States were turned into farms. But even though farming grew tremendously in this period, actual conditions for farmers were tough, often extremely so. The increasing urbanization and industrialization of the country meant that even though more people were entering rural life than ever before, even more were exiting it.

Because of the nature of the land distribution of American farms in the late 1800s, many farming families lived a life of relative isolation. Those who gained land under the Homestead Act, for example, usually received 160 acres to settle, so their closest neighbors were miles away. Social life was often limited to church on Sunday, and even that usually ended early as families had to make the trek back to the farm before evening fell to complete the daily chores. The solitary farm life led to the rise of huge mail order catalog companies, such as Montgomery Ward's and Sears and Roebuck, which offered free rural delivery by the end of the 19th century.

Because the late 1800s were also a time of intense industrialization in the United States, the nature of the farm drastically changed from self-sufficiency to specialization in order to compete in the national market. Small farmers began to specialize in producing a particular commodity and this also meant buying the mechanized equipment that would make them competitive with other producers of the same product. The rate of debt among farmers sky-rocketed during the late 1800s, which coupled with the loss of subsistence farming, meant that many rural people went from working to fill their own larder to working to pay monthly bills.

For many farmers in the late 1800s, debt grew and grew until the farm itself was finally lost. This happened for a number of reasons including a steady drop in prices for agricultural products during this period, which meant that even if farmers managed to become more productive because of their industrial agricultural equipment, the market rate for their products dropped so low that they couldn't recoup their costs. Farmers were also dependent on the large corporations that owned the railroads and grain storage units, which were necessary to store and transport their goods, and these companies often charged high prices because they had no competition. Farmers who lost their farms joined the ranks of recent immigrants who were quickly swelling America's urban areas.

Because conditions for farmers became harsher and harsher in the late 1800s, this period also saw the growth of a rural political movement that attempted to protect farmers. The Grangers were founded in 1867, and tried to build buying and selling cooperatives to counter the corporate middle-men who set prices for the urban markets of the Northeast. In the 1870s and '80s this collectivist movement grew into the National Farmers Alliance. The cooperative businesses set up by the National Farmers Alliance ultimately could not compete with the large corporate entities that controlled most of the transportation and distribution of agricultural products at the time, but by the end of the century the movement morphed into a political party -- the Populist Party -- which elected four state governors and five U.S. senators in the election of 1892."

Hoped I helped!


6 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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