The Peloponnesian Wars fought between Athens<span> and </span>Sparta<span> and their respective allies came in two stages, the first from c. 460 to 446 BCE and the second and more significant </span>war<span> from 431 to 404 BCE. With battles occurring at home and abroad, the long and complex conflict was damaging to both sides but Sparta, with financial help from </span>Persia<span>, finally won the conflict by destroying the Athenian fleet at Aegospotami in 405 BCE.</span>
<span>I only know that the wealth of the Spanish colonies and the diverse opportunities of the English colonies attracted settlers more easily than did the cold climate of New France</span>
Answer: a Frenchman built the Suez Canal, but it ultimately came under British control.
Explanation:
Due to a friendly relationship developed while he was a French diplomat, Ferdinand de Lesseps received a concession from Sa'id Pasha, the Khedive of Egypt and Sudan, to form a company to build a canal. After the British invasion of 1882, Britain gained control of the canal. Foreign control of the canal subsisted until the President of Egypt, Gamal Abdel Nasser, nationalized it in 1956.
<span>The correct answer should be This act substantially lowered the price of tea sold in the colonies. Sure the act would drop prices, but it would also give Britain the monopoly over the trade so if the colonies wanted to trade with others they wouldn't be able to. Also, all the money would go to Britain so they didn't have much from it.</span>
Ancient Greece was divided into a collection of city-states (or Polis) because the population centers were isolated by the many islands, peninsulas and mountains that Ancient Greece had. Because of its geography, it made more sense for each Poli to have a government on their own.