Answer:
Parliament, desiring revenue from its North American colonies, passed the first law specifically aimed at raising colonial money for the Crown. The act increased duties on non-British goods shipped to the colonies.
Answer:
Southwest Asia and East Africa
Explanation:
The Swahili culture is a branch of the Bantu culture, thus it is based on the Bantu culture from the Niger-Congo basins. This culture has started to take up its modern shape from around the ninth century AD, and it has developed around the Great Lakes in Eastern Africa and along the Swahili coast of East Africa. The Swahili culture can be found in what is now considered as Eastern Africa, mainly on the territories of Tanzania, Mozambique, Kenya, and Uganda. This culture though is not strictly based on its ancestral Bantu culture, but it has been heavily influenced by the Southwestern culture, mainly the Arab one. This mixture came to be because of the spread of Islam by the Arabs, and lot of people in this part of Africa accepted it as their religion, so it influenced their culture greatly. The Swahili culture exists in the present, and the tribes that still live in the old fashioned way are big tourist attractions.
Answer:
The assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand was the immediate cause of a war between two great powers—Russia and the Habsburg Austro-Hungarian Empire.
Explanation:
The war was started by the leaders of Germany and Austria-Hungary. Vienna seized the opportunity presented by the assassination of the archduke to attempt to destroy its Balkan rival Serbia
Answer:
Slavery was so profitable, it sprouted more millionaires per capita in the Mississippi River valley than anywhere in the nation. With cash crops of tobacco, cotton and sugar cane, America's southern states became the economic engine of the burgeoning nation.
Answer:
Rwanda.
Explanation:
The Rwandan genocide, or the genocide against the Tutsi, was an intense mass genocide of specific ethnic groups such as Tutsi, Twa, and even Hutu in Rwanda, all of this took place on the 7th of April and the 15th of July 1994 during the Rwandan Civil War.