<span>I think A. Do or Die</span>
Answer: Yes
Explanation: Long ago, almost the whole surface of the earth was one giant landmass called Pangea which was surrounded entirely by water. Then, huge things under the surface called plates started to shift and move which made Pangea break up and drift apart very slowly. Now, we have oceans between the pieces of land
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
The story of Aeneas explains the similarities between the Greek and Roman government systems in that both forms of government had styles of government that varied from Empires to aristocracies to participatory governments. For instance, the powerful city-states of Athens and Sparta in Greece to the beginning of Democracy with Solon and Cleisthenes, in Athens. Or the Roman Republic that ended whit the first Roman Emperor and its dominion and expansion.
Aeneas is a story from ancient Greece. Aeneas was the son of Anchises and his mother was Aphrodite, a giddiness. Writer Virgil refers to Aeneas as a Trojan hero in the poem "Aeneid."
In the story of Aeneas, we can learn about the political and social life of ancient Greece and Rome, distinguishing some similarities like the above-mentioned.
<span>The answerd is: South and southeast.
The
Seven Years' War, or the French and Indian War, came to an end with the
signing of the Treaty of Paris in 1763 and the beginning of the era of
British rule in the world. Great Britain managed with this, to gain much of the territory and goods that France had in North America. Even
new maps were signed after the signing of the treaty, because the
borders of North America had changed, in one of the most important
cessions of territory of the American continent. France gives to Great Britain: Canada, Dominica, Grenada, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines; <span>as well as half of the French Louisiana, which comprised the area from the Mississippi River to the Appalachian Mountains.</span></span>
Haiti was a brutal, terrifying place for most slaves.
<span>Slavery was particularly harsh in Haiti, much harsher than in the USA. There were laws which defined what a slave owner could, and couldn't do to their slaves, but these were routinely ignored. </span>
<span>There are at least two documented cases of runaway slaves being captured, tied over a log, a funnel put up their backside, gunpowder poured in and then a fuse lit - all for the benefit of the other slaves - they were killed by being blown apart as a warning to the others. </span>
<span>The work was hard, life expectancy low and wives and children were routinely sold away from their husbands. The French even codified the degrees of "African-ness", down to 1 part per 128, that's someone's great-great-great-great-great-great grand parents, and what jobs and responsibilities they could have. </span>
<span>Then there were the maroons - escaped slaves who lived in the jungles and mountains - they occasionally raided plantations and even the towns, killing whites and taking slaves away with them. The Maroons became like the bogeyman to blacks and whites alike. </span>
<span>Then along comes the French Revolution, with it's promise of "Liberty, Fraternity and Equality", obviously the slaves believed that this meant them as well: it didn't. </span>
<span>The intellectual cause of the Haitian Revolution was the philosophies of the Enlightenment - specifically the same intellectual base as the French Revolution. Basically the cry "libertie egalitie fraternitie" does not qualify which kind of person should be free - so ALL men were considered brothers. This thought pervaded Haitian mulatto and freed slave society, and seemed to offer a genuine equality and freedom for all on the island. </span>
<span>The other intellectual driving force of the revolution is the individual intellect of those leaders who were able to motivate, to organise and to conduct military campaigns with skill and flair - the leaders, Christopher, Brenda and, of course, Toussaint L'Ouverture. </span><span />