Answer:
Repartimiento system, is the right answer.
Explanation:
A system of forced labor imposed on the natives of Spanish America and the Philippines is known as the Repartimiento system.
In some form, it was just similar to the tribute-labor system of the Inca Empire or the Ancien Régime France.
It was a system in which the local population was required to give their labor for the colonial leaders in mines, workshops or farms without pay for some days in a year.
Answer:
The estates were actually social classes.
Explanation:
Until the Revolution of 1789 France was actually a feudal state. Three estates actually represented three classes that had different political, economical and even cultural influence. Although the third estate was the largest one they practically had no influence in the decision making.
First two nobles - nobles and clergy were the ones who had the main role in the society.
Good question, thanks for improving my knowledge.
Rahil azam,,,,India
Too often medieval authors are cited merely for their negative reaction to the Mongols. Yet both the written sources and evidence from archeology show a picture of some complexity that requires critical analysis. The emphasis here is on archeology, often ignored or slighted by historians of the Mongols, and on evidence from Central Asia and Eastern Europe, primarily as reported in Russian-language scholarship. The impact of the Mongols varied depending on the location and the priorities of the new conquerors.
Answer: One of the ship's passengers was a doctor who saved the lives of many colonists ill with yellow fever.
Explanation:
Samuel Nunis Ribeiro(1668–1744) was a prominent Portuguese physician who had escaped Portugal for London and then moved to Georgia with his family, arriving in the ship William and Sarah, that landed in Savannah on July 11, with other 40 Jewish passengers.
Many colonists were against allowing Jews to settle with them, but James Oglethorpe insisted on welcoming them.
Nunes replaced the recently died doctor and saved many lives from yellow fever.