Construction works.
Women generally were viewed as being "weak" and "elegant" in the history of the US, and were given jobs that were not back-breaking, or were not allowed to obtain jobs, as the US public also believed that only males should provide for the family, while the women were "nurturers" of the next generations.
~
<span><span>Answer: Into many kingdoms.
</span>The Germanic peoples
settled in the zones of the old Roman Empire in the West, being born
kingdoms where the Germans sought to separate like an elite, and
separated of the population; but the Visigoths and Franks,
more peaceful and stable, mingled with the population in religious,
legislative and social aspects, coming to have Latin as the basis of
their new languages. The difference between the Germanic
peoples and the Roman Empire, in terms of their cultures, was very
great, but from this contact, the Germans adopted many Roman customs,
including their ways of organizing themselves politically; along with the old Germanic traditions. This mixture of cultures was the social and cultural basis of medieval Europe, and the basis of modern Western civilization.</span>
In Australia, the most populated region by natives was places like the outback and what is nowadays known as Alice springs. The New Zealand had a more or less equally spread population because of it's much smaller sides, but there was a bias towards the North where there were more people than in the South of the island.
I believe the best answer for this would be D
Explanation: The Mandate of Heaven did not require a ruler to be of noble birth, and had no time limitations. Instead, rulers were expected to be good and just in order to keep the Mandate. The Zhou claimed that their rule was justified by the Mandate of Heaven. In other words, the Zhou believed that the Shang kings had become immoral with their excessive drinking, luxuriant living, and cruelty, and so had lost their mandate.
The correct answer is A) Since so many Jewish people had been murdered in the Holocaust, many international organizations felt that they were not a large enough ethnic group to deserve their own state.
The Holocaust contributed to ongoing Arab-Israeli conflict in "Since so many Jewish people had been murdered in the Holocaust, many international organizations felt that they were not a large enough ethnic group to deserve their own state."
After all the atrocities committed by Adolph Hitler and the Nazi party to all the Jews in Germany and Europe, the international community supported the idea of having a place just for Jews. Britain played a key role and was supported by the United States to get the Jewish people a piece of land in Israel. Of course, this idea did not like the Arab Palestine nations and created many conflicts.