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Andru [333]
4 years ago
14

DO NOW: The following selections are from the Thoughts of Chairman Mao. For many years, Chinese

History
1 answer:
Natasha2012 [34]4 years ago
5 0

A revolution is not a dinner party, or writing an essay, or painting a picture or doing embroidery it cannot  be so refined, so leisurely and gentle, so.. kind, courteous, restrained, and generous. A revolution is an  insurrection, an act of violence by which one class overthrows another.

Mao Tse Tung was a Chinese statesman, he was born in the city of Hunan in 1893, he was born into a family of rural workers. Where his childhood lived, school education was only considered useful to the extent that it could be applied to tasks such as taking records and others proper to agricultural production. Therefore, Mao Tse Tung abandoned his studies at the age of thirteen to devote himself entirely to work on the family farm.

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What caused protests in South Vietnam during the presidency of Ngo Dinh Diem?Select one of the options below as your answer: A.
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The thing that caused the protests in South Vietnam during the presidency of Ngo Dinh Diem was that Diem began policies that were oppressive to the Buddhists. The correct answer is B.
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Which Muslim ruler ordered the construction of a magnificent mosque in Isanbul and decreed a vast new set of laws for his empire
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Suleyman.

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2) What were the long-term impacts of the Lewis and Clark Expedition?
Amanda [17]

Answer:

It is difficult to overstate the long-term ramifications of the Expedition. The most noticeable immediate effect was the rise in the northern plains fur trade between 1806 & 1812. During that period individuals like Manuel Lisa & John Colter–the latter a member of the Corps of Discovery–established short-lived trade from northern South Dakota to Montana. After the War of 1812, the trade was renewed with the advent of the Mountain Man period (1820- 1845), during which time additional posts were erected in the region. Ft. Union was perhaps the flagship of these interests, particularly for its owners, the American Fur Company of St. Louis.

Artists quickly followed in the wake of the Expedition, with individuals such as Charles St. Memin, Paul Kane, George Catlin, & Karl Bodmer presenting to the world startling images of life on the Northern Plains. These helped to further popularize the west in the popular imagination & would help fuel immigration in the decades to come.

For Native Peoples, the aftermath of the Lewis and Clark was anything but a positive experience. Perhaps the most devastating was the outbreak of smallpox among the Mandan in 1837, an epidemic which all but destroyed the once-powerful group. This catastrophe was a major impetus in further uniting the surviving Mandan & Hidatsa, whom the Arikara joined at Like-A-Fish-Hook village. There the Three Affiliated Tribes engaged in trade, farming, & hunting. Worst of all, during the last quarter of the 19th century, the reservation system was instituted, taking away from the original inhabitants the vast majority of their land. On reservations like Ft. Berthold, residents were forced to convert to Christianity, take up farming in place of hunting, & educate their children in white boarding schools. This terrible pattern was repeated across the trans-Mississippi west and took a devastating toll on all tribes involved.

The military also made its presence known by the mid-to late-19th century, eventually building a series of forts across North Dakota in an effort to protect settlers & railroad workers. Ft. McKeen, Ft. Abraham Lincoln, Ft. Rice, Ft. Yates, Ft. Totten, Ft. Abercrombie, Ft. Buford, Ft. Berthold, & Ft. Pembina were among the most notable of these military posts. Some of these forts were the site of later historic events, such as Chief Joseph & Sitting Bull’s giving up their struggle against white incursion on their lands and forced culture change.

Economic, political, military, & social forces brought to bear as a result of the expedition forever changed the northern plains that the Native Peoples had known, & would also forever change those who came to the prairie.

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