The correct answer is true.
It is true that some goods exchanged between Aksum and its trading partners included gold, ivory, cloth, spices, and even slaves.
The kingdom of Assum was located in what today is Ethiopia, Sudan Saudi Arabia, and Yemen, in Northeastern Africa, along the coast of the Red Sea. It started around 400 BCE and reached its best moment under the rule of King Ezana, who expanded Aksum territory, conquering the kingdom of Kush. Under King Ezana, the Aksum Empire became a major trade center in the region where Aksum traded gold, ivory, cloth, spices, and slaves.
Over 30 years, Paul clocked up around 10,000 miles, traveling across the Roman Empire. He preached in some of the empire’s most important cities. Although places like Ephesus, Philippi, Corinth and Athens looked magnificent, they were also home to tens of thousands of poor, desperate people who were the perfect audience for the Christian message of eternal life.
Answer:
False
The African savanna ecosystem is a tropical grassland with warm temperatures year-round and with its highest seasonal rainfall in the summer. The savanna is characterized by grasses and small or dispersed trees that do not form a closed canopy, allowing sunlight to reach the ground. The African savanna contains a diverse community of organisms that interact to form a complex food web.
Answer:
They worked only for a share in the profits to be made by the owner of the lands of the sharecroppers. To be calculated, 'of course', after costs. The owner had no interest at all in showing a good net profit, since that would mean big pay-outs to the sharecroppers. And since he was keeping the books, it was fairly easy for him to calculate (or make reservations for) costs in such a way that the profit - and the pay-out - always was minimal.
Many owners kept their sharecroppers in a state of virtual slavery by putting them in debt to him: through bills run up in the store and saloon owned by the boss, by the rent he charged for their homes and by the money he asked for use of heavy equipment. In a 'bad' year, there simply would be no pay-out and income for the sharecroppers and the unpaid debts would pile up. And even if there finally was a good year, the owner could - and would - offset their pay-out against the money still owed to him.
Hopefully this helps out!
The second continental congress was a convention of delegates in the 13 original colonies. They started meeting in spring of 1775. I hope this helps. :)