In etymology, The modern word Norman simply comes from words meaning 'Northman'
Explanation:
The viking settlers who settled in Northwest France came from the northern lands and were raiding those lands before eventually settling on them.
<u>They were known as Normans in french language which itself derives from Latin Normand, or straight from old Norse.</u>
<u>These similar words have existed for the people and basically mean "North man" or someone who came to their land from the North. </u>
The vikings retained the name to show their cultural heritage and origins.
Cain
Abel, the first murder victim, is sometimes seen as the first Marty, while Cain, the first murderer, is sometimes seen as an ancestor of evil.
The answer is" Assembly lines were highly efficient.....
There was opposition to the Revenue Act of 1763, on a basis that no one in Parliament could have foreseen.
<span>The Revenue Act, which came to be called the Sugar Act, was actually an extension of an act from 1733 called the Molasses Act. The Molasses Act required a tariff on all sugar products that were imported into America from the West Indies. The American colonists, however, had found that it was not difficult to smuggle their sugar items into the colonies and avoid the tariff that was due to the British government. This sort of activity was not allowed to go on in any other part of the British Empire, and Lord Grenville saw no reason why it should be permitted in the colonies and be winked at by England.</span>
When Alexius I Komnenoi implored the pope (Urban II) for help, he meant it to reconquer the lost Byzantine lands (and therefore return in to their de facto ruler, a.k.a., the Byzantines). Urban however, decided to merely use that as a façade in order to then invade the Muslims, and retake the holy land.
He also saw the wanted to unite Christianity as a whole (All the sects at the time, Orthodoxy, Catholicism, Paulicianism, Iconoclasts, etc. into a single conglomerate, fighting a common enemy.)