A form of collective social behavior that persists over a long period and gradually finds place as a tradition is called a custom. Examples:
Drinking a glass of wine with each meal--French custom (although that might changing due to economic woe and other variables)
Saying a prayer before each meal--Latin American custom (although it's a custom in other places too, and not every Latin American does this)
<span>On July 20, 1636, a trader named John Oldham was attacked on a trading voyage to Block Island. He and several of his crew were killed and his ship was looted by Narragansett-allied Indians who sought to discourage English settlers from trading with Pequot rivals. In the weeks that followed, colonial officials from Massachusetts Bay, Rhode Island, and Connecticut, assumed the Narragansett were likely culprits. Puritan officials became equally suspicious of the Narragansett. The colonial English response to Oldham's death, the last in a series of escalating incidents, has traditionally been viewed as the beginning of the Pequot War. SO in he end It was Oldham's death that caused the Pequot War.</span>
The American Civil War was a civil war fought in the United States from 1861 to 1865, between the North and the South. The Civil War began primarily as a result of the long-standing controversy over the enslavement of black people
Answer:
The Industrial Revolution began in Britain in the late 1700s and had spread to other countries at the time, like America. People like Thomas Newcomen, Richard Arkwright, Samuel Crompton, Edmund Cartwright and James Watt. Invented machines that brought forward the Industrial revolution. Textiles were the leading industry of the Industrial Revolution, and mechanized factories, powered by a central water wheel or steam engine, were the new workplace. The impact of changing the way items were manufactured had a wide reach that affected many industries in the Industrial Revolution, such as textile manufacturing, mining, glass making, and agriculture which had all undergone changes.
Explanation:
A coureur des bois (French pronunciation: [kuʁœʁ de bwa]) or coureur de bois (French pronunciation: [kuʁœʁ də bwa], runner of the woods; plural: coureurs de bois) was an independent entrepreneurial French-Canadian woodsman who traveled in NewFrance<span> and the interior of </span>North America<span>.</span>