Answer:
<u>King Tut becomes pharaoh.</u>
Explanation:
Tutankhamun was an Egyptian Pharaoh. He ruled most probably from 1334 to 1325 BC during the eighteenth dynasty.
The historical significance of Tutankhamun is reflected in the fact that it began the abandonment of Atonism (introduced by Akhenaton) and the return to the ancient Egyptian religion. As Tutankhamun began his reign in the ninth year of his life, much of the government had a vizier, and his successor Ay.
Today, Tutankhamen is one of the most famous pharaohs, primarily because he is the only Egyptian pharaoh whose tomb was found intact in the 20th century.
Their were major terrorist attacks housing meltdown downturned us stock market
Answer:
The first Battle of the Marne considered so important, because it flourished in driving the Germans back for a distance of 40 to 50 miles and therefore kept the capital city of Paris from capture.
I hope this helps, L.E.
Also it was the first battle of <u>Marne</u> not <u>Mame</u>
I'd say this is Social.
The writer is making a plea to Pathos by giving an emotional and self relative thought to the present thought around the subject during the time.
Can't be political. It's not between elected parties or people of power talking, judging or being elected.
not economic. it's not talking about present state of supplies selling goods trades etc.
Two main reasons: keep the American colonists closer to the coast and therefore easier to control, and to cut down on contact with French and Native American populations on the other side.
Explanation:
1763 saw the end of a worldwide war between France and Great Britain. On the American continent, that war was waged primarily in the mountains between British colonists and the British army on one side, and the French army and colonists, allied with Native American peoples on the other.
After the war concluded, the British crown wanted to prevent the repeat of such an expensive conflict, and decided that the American colonies were growing too quickly. They had stretched well into the interior of the continent and were far away from the centers of British power near the coast. The Proclamation of 1763 attempted to limit that expansion but was immediately unpopular and proved to be nearly impossible to enforce.
It was an early source of dissatisfaction with British rule that would simmer and grow until the outbreak of the Revolution