<span>- Chinese products (especially silk) were vital to the Afro-Eurasian trade networks
- Chinese technologies (shipbuilding, navigation, gunpowder, printing) spread to other regions of Eurasia
- Buddhism greatly affected China
- China's trade with the rest of the world made it the richest country in the world
-
Most highly commercialized society in the world too, with regions
(especially in the south) producing for the market as opposed to for
local consumption
- China adopted cotton and sugar crops and how to refine them from India</span>
The Turks won a major victory by destroying the Byzantine Empire.
The German economy started to clasp under the heaviness of these outside and inward pressing factors. As the principal reimbursements were made to the Allies in the mid 1920s, the estimation of the German imprint sank radically, and a time of excessive inflation started. In mid 1922, 160 German imprints was identical to one US dollar. By November of 1923, the money would devalue to 4,200,000,000,000 imprints to one US dollar.
Was there a “back door” to World War II, as some revisionist historians have asserted? According to this view, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, inhibited by the American public’s opposition to direct U.S. involvement in the fighting and determined to save Great Britain from a Nazi victory in Europe, manipulated events in the Pacific in order to provoke a Japanese attack on the U.S. naval base at Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, thereby forcing the United States to enter the war on the side of Britain
Answer:
A: in Chinatowns in several cities
Explanation:
For edge