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Tom [10]
2 years ago
13

When Europeans arrived, many Native Americans:

History
1 answer:
Anna71 [15]2 years ago
8 0

I honestly think it is A:simply attacked them.and learned their languages.That is my answer but I'm not so sure.

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How might the eating habits of cod change
murzikaleks [220]
Cod would to find a new food source which would result them to eat more squid.
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2 years ago
How has globalization<br> changed over time?
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Globalization aims to benefit individual economies around the world by making markets more efficient, increasing competition, limiting military conflicts, and spreading wealth more equally. ...

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2 years ago
6. ARGUMENT You are an officer in the Athenian army. The Persians have just landed at Marathon to invade Greece. Write a letter
Leona [35]

Answer:

On the morning of September 17, 490 bc, some 10,000 Greeks stood assembled on the plain of Marathon, preparing to fight to the last man. Behind them lay everything they held dear: their city, their homes, their families. In front of the outnumbered Greeks stood the assembled forces of the Persian empire, a seemingly invincible army with revenge, pillage and plunder on its mind.

The Athenians’ feelings are best expressed by Aeschylus, who fought in the Persian wars, in his tragic play The Persians: “On, sons of the Hellenes! Fight for the freedom of your country! Fight for the freedom of your children and of your wives, for the gods of your fathers and for the sepulchers of your ancestors! All are now staked upon the strife!”

The two sides faced each another directly, waiting for the fight to start. The Athenians stalled for days, anticipating reinforcements promised by Sparta. But they knew they could not wait for long. The Persians, expecting as easy a victory as they had won against enemies so many times before, were in no hurry.

The Greeks, knowing the time for battle had come, began to move forward. Ostensibly, they advanced with focus and purpose, but beneath this firm veneer, as they looked on a vastly larger enemy — at least twice their number — many must have been fearful of what was to come. The Persian archers sat with their bows drawn, ready to loose a barrage of arrows that would send fear and confusion through the Greek ranks.

“The Athenians advanced at a run towards the enemy, not less than a mile away,” recounted the historian Herodotus. “The Persians, seeing the attack developed at the double, prepared to meet it, thinking it suicidal madness for the Athenians to risk an assault with so small a force — rushing in with no support from either cavalry or archers.”

Had the Persian archers been allowed to loose their bows, the battle might have ended before it had truly begun. Fighting their doubts and fears, the Athenians seized the initiative and rushed the Persians. Confronted by such a bold move and realizing their infantry would be pressed into action sooner than expected must have shaken Persian confidence.

The two Athenian commanders, Callimachus and Miltiades (the latter having fought in the Persian army himself), used their knowledge of Persian battle tactics to turn the tide further in their favor. As the clatter of spears, swords and shields echoed through the valley, the Greeks had ensured that their best hoplites (heavily armed infantry) were on the flanks and that their ranks were thinned in the center. Persian battle doctrine dictated that their best troops, true Persians, fought in the center, while conscripts, pressed into service from tribute states, fought on the flanks. The Persian elite forces surged into the center of the fray, easily gaining the ascendancy. But this time it was a fatal mistake. The Persian conscripts whom the Hellenic hoplites faced on the flanks quickly broke into flight. The Greeks then made another crucial decision: Instead of pursuing their fleeing foes, they turned inward to aid their countrymen fighting in the center of the battle.

Explanation:

''Dear Tom,

I was recently in the Athenian army and, it was shattering for a mind. When the Persian's first got to the shore of Athens to fight, they started attacking us right away. We were defending ourselves so much that, we couldn't attack! We sent somebody to race to Sparta for help but, they came too late. Good thing I survived!"

8 0
2 years ago
Form your counterargument using the framework provided.
Rus_ich [418]

The United States should have declared war because there were many mixed relationships between the US and Mexico. The us wanted Texas to help complete the idea of Manifest Destiny. Mexico was not fit to govern Texas. Reason 1 the US joined the war because the Mexicans provoked the war by killing Americans. A second reason is Mexico wasn't fit for Texas because Mexicans killed Americans on disputed territory. The Americans were made that blood was being shed on American soil.




8 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
How did constantinople respond to numerous invasion attempts before 1453?
Wittaler [7]

Answer

It fought them off but was weakened.

Explanation

In the early 13th century Constantinople was known to be the largest and the wealthiest city in Europe. The invasion of the  Constantinople resulted when  Sultan Meh-med II, ruler of the Ottoman Turks, led the assault. This led to the Turks employ various important tactics in taking over the city. The Constantinople responded to he invasion but they were weakened.They were captured by the Ottoman Empire and ottoman made the ottoman capital.  It was used as the most formal official name in Ottoman Turkish, and remained in use throughout most of the time up to the fall of the Empire in 1923.

3 0
2 years ago
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