Answer:
What caused the Second Opium War were the harsh treaties imposed after the First Opium War.
Explanation:
The Second Opium War was an armed conflict between Great Britain and France, on the one hand, and the Qing Dynasty of China, on the other.
Both the French agreement known as the Huangpu Treaty and the US pact called the Wangxia Treaty, signed after the First Opium War, contained clauses that allowed the renegotiation of these treaties after twelve years. In an effort to expand its territories in China, the United Kingdom asked the authorities of the Qing dynasty to renegotiate what was agreed in the Treaty of Nanking, in 1842.
The British demands included that they could exercise free trade throughout China, legalize the commercialization of opium, abolish taxes on foreigners for internal transit, suppress piracy, regulate the traffic of coolies (semi-slave workers) and allow the British ambassador to reside in Beijing, among other things. The court of the Qing rejected the demands presented by the United Kingdom, France and the United States.
Because of this, a coalition was formed, with the aim of pressuring the Qing to sign those pacts.
Answer:
#1: illegal bars that operated during the Prohibition
Explanation:
#1 is 100% correct but I'm not too sure about #2:(
Kings and Queens who called upon the Divine Right actually claimed that God himself chose their lineage as the one set to rule and that's why they should rule.
Answer:
Help with manufacturing
Explanation:
During the war people who were home worked infacstuture like factories and railroads to keep supplies coming. Women worked in factories to produce items for the war and people like my great grandfather worked the railroad to make sure items made it to the destations to be shipped to eroupe,africa, and pacific asia.
The answer is the growing political influence of women. The
Eighteenth Amendment was the result of decades of effort by the temperance
movement in the United States and at the time was generally considered a
progressive amendment. There are claims that prohibiting the sale of alcohol
would eliminate poverty and social issues like violence and immoral behaviour. And
also they believe that families would be happier it inspire new forms of sociability
between men and women.