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aev [14]
3 years ago
9

Which feature of japan made it difficult to unify and govern?

History
2 answers:
kolbaska11 [484]3 years ago
6 0

The correct answer is D) consisting of many islands.

<em>The feature of Japan that made it difficult to unify and govern is that Japan has many islands.</em>

The Japanese archipelago consists of many islands, that originally, was a problem to unify Japan in one single and solid nation. It was a difficult territory to establish good communications and exchange or trade of products was not easy as well.

Of all the Japanese territory, only 430 islands are inhabited of the total of 6,852. The main islands are Kyushu, Honshu, Shikoku, and Hokkaido. Japan's capital city, Tokyo, is located in the Honshu island.

trapecia [35]3 years ago
5 0

Japanese are  not very religious, they don't have many immigrants.

'Consisting of many islands' must be the answer because they do communicate some for trade

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The Seven Years War was a multinational conflict, the main belligerents were the British and French Empires. Each looking to expand their territory across numerous continents, both nations suffered mass casualties and racked up copious amounts of debt in order to fund the long and ardous struggle for territorial dominance which led to economic hardship in the US and an acknowledgment of the cultural differences between colonists and Britons. making it one of the key roles that led to the war

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The taxes and duties caused outrage in the colonies and became the main root of spontaneous and violent opposition. Encouraged and rallied by propaganda leaflets and posters, such as those created by Paul Revere, colonists rioted and organised merchant boycotts. Eventually, the colonial response was met with fierce repression

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it was in December 1773 that the most famous and overt display of anger and resistance took place. A group of colonists led by Adams hopped aboard the East India Company trade vessel Dartmouth and poured 342 chests of tea (worth close to $2,000,000 in today’s currency) of British tea into the sea at Boston Harbour. This act – now known as the ‘Boston Tea Party’, remains important in patriotic American folklore.

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Rather than attempting to appease the rebels, the Boston Tea Party was met with the passing of the Intolerable Acts in 1774 by the British Crown. These punitive measures included the forced closure of Boston port and an order of compensation to the East India Company for damaged property. Town meetings were now also banned, and the authority of the royal governor was increased.

The British lost further support and patriots formed the First Continental Congress in the same year, a body where men from all the colonies were formally represented. In Britain, opinion was divided as the Whigs favoured reform while North’s Tories wanted to demonstrate the power of the British Parliament. It would be the Tories who got their way.

In the meantime, the First Continental Congress raised a militia, and in April 1775 the first shots of the war were fired as British troops clashed with militia men at the twin battles of Lexington and Concord. British reinforcements landed in Massachusetts and defeated the rebels at Bunker Hill in June – the first major battle of the American War of Independence.

King George III’s Speech to Parliament (1775)

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