Answer:
In my opinion, colonization created new countries.
Explanation:
If we consider that the term country is related only to the physical territory, we can say that the creation did not create new countries, as new territories were not created.
However, I believe that the term "country" is related to the territory, culture and customs of a people, that is, it is related to the characteristics that determine that a people belongs to a particular country. In this case, we can say that colonization created new countries, as colonization allowed the mixing of cultures and customs, creating new cultures and new characteristics that intensely changed how Africans live, in addition, the influence of different European countries created many differences between African peoples that were already different from each other. In this case, we can consider that colonization was able to create new countries, new borders and new customs and cultures.
Answer:
With the vast Atlantic ocean separating Britain from the Colonies such that a trip from one side to the other could take between 6 weeks to 2 months, Britain could not impose the control it wanted on the colonies and the colonies could not always rely on the British Government to make decisions for them because responses could take too long to be transmitted as they did not have the modern forms of communication that we do today.
Americans therefore not having the weight of the British Government on them had to come up with a Government that would manage their affairs and respond speedily to their own issues as well. The British for the most part let the colonists do what they wanted so long as they purchased British goods and maintained loyalty to the crown.
I grow corn first get corn then plant corn in ground and then boom corn then I feed corn to rats boom done easy
During WW2, Georgia was among the targets of the German Case Blue (Fall Blau) offensive in 1942, which aimed to seize the oilfields of the Caucasus region, but Axis troops were stopped before reaching Georgian borders. ... After the war, Georgia remained a Soviet republic until the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991.