Ans: Through the 1920s, Britain's economy was already struggling to pay for the effects of World War I. Then, in 1929, the US stock market crashed. ... The value of British exports halved, plunging its industrial areas into poverty: by the end of 1930, unemployment more than doubled to 20 per cent.
Answer:
Cross cultural interactions changed permanently trade and travel patterns as well as having a technology diffusion throughout the world.
Explanation:
Cross cultural interactions among nations resulted in the spreading of technology as a result of new international trade practices and routes. This new way of international interaction facilitated changes with the knowledge and adapting of existing new products and technologies. This resulted in the creation of new products combined to native ones that provided new advantages while trading these new products, new prices and new supply and demand models.
This resulted in new travel routes or the need to visit more often places that could offer raw materials or technologies for the development of the new and recently created and/ or discovered products.
Answer:
A synergy between iron and steel, and railroads and coal developed .
Explanation:
It develop at the beginning of the Second Industrial Revolution. Railroads allowed cheap transportation of materials and products, which in turn led to cheap rails to build more roads. Railroads also benefited from cheap coal for their steam locomotives.
Both the French and the British wanted control of the Ohio River Valley.
Answer:
Alexander created one of the largest empires of the ancient world, stretching from Greece to northwestern India.
Explanation: