Hi there!
The environment and society help study history in so many ways. If you look deeper you can actually see how the environment affected history. As the environment changes, time advances and sometimes you can link why something’s happened due to environmental changes. An example would be an area off the coast of Spain considered the “Lost City Of Atlantis”. Scientists used their knowledge of how society lived their life back then and linked to how the people may have built their city in the most functional way possible.
Hope this helps !
Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.
So basically there shall be no slavery within the US, and if there is it will be prosecuted.
The early part of the Vedic period, was an age of economic self-sufficiency and consequently there was little scope for an exchange of commodities. All the rural centres were self-supporting. Every house-holder produced the necessaries of life—his farm producing his food-grains and other necessaries, the industry of the women of his household supplied him with his clothing, while the craftsmen attached to the village did the rest. Consequently, there was no inter-dependence between two neighbouring local areas. The surplus product was kept for future consumption. This state of full economic independence did not however last long. Society became complex.
A large section of the community gave up the simple agricultural life; the primitive arts and crafts drew away a large number; owing to these and various other causes, there arose a scope for interchange of commodities between different local areas.
Industries in New England started to develop a lot faster due to the advancements in technology. They started using coal instead of wood, steam engines instead of manual labor, and cotton mills.
They were fighting the north it was the civil war they thought they were <span>retreating</span>