<span>According to the Proclamation of 1763 at the end of the French and Indian War, the French gave up the territory of New France east of the Mississippi River over to the British since the war ended in a British victory. This forbade settlement across the Appalachian mountains. </span><span />
Although the tenant/sharecropping system is usually thought of as a development that occurred after the Civil War, this type of farming existed in antebellum Mississippi, especially in the areas of the state with few slaves or plantations, such as northeast Mississippi.
Not all whites who emigrated to even the poorest parts of Mississippi in the years before the Civil War had the funds to purchase a farm. As a result, most of the men who headed these households worked as tenant farmers or sharecroppers. Many rented land from or farmed on shares with family members and typically received favorable arrangements, but some antebellum tenants or sharecroppers had to deal with landlords who were primarily concerned with making profits rather than helping struggling farmers move toward landownership.
Consider the sharecropping arrangement that Richard Bridges of Marshall County worked out with his landlord, T. L. Treadwell, in the 1850s. Treadwell provided Bridges with land, livestock, and tools; the landlord also advanced Bridges some food. Bridges grew corn and cotton, and at the end of the year, he had to give Treadwell one-sixth of the corn he grew and five-sixths of the cotton raised. From his share of the crop, Bridges also had to pay Treadwell for the use of the livestock and tools and for the food advanced. Obviously, Bridges worked the entire year primarily for the food he needed to live. He had no opportunity to make any money from this arrangement and accumulate the capital that would allow him to purchase his own farm.
Americans began to wonder if they could win the war. During the beginning of the war, morale amongst Americans was generally high and accepted a quick victory against the Viet Cong. As time went on however, fighting in the unknown terrain of Vietnam against an enemy who had no true uniform and blended in with the locals made fighting very difficult which prolonged the war. In 1968, the Viet Cong launched a nationwide surprise attack in cities, in the countryside, by splinter groups who all coordinated assaults in South Vietnam known as the Tet Offensive. The attack was a failure for the Viet Cong, but for the Americans to see the size and scope of the surprise attack in areas originally thought to be under US and South Vietnamese control was a psychological blow for the American military. They soon realized that fighting an enemy who they could not identify regardless of the hostile or friendly terrain eventually influenced the Americans decision to pull out of the war in 1973.
First and Last answer because when the Europeans went to Africa they were looking for new resources to improve theres and use those goods within trade to other countries and as a bonus they converted many African tribes to Christianity.
The correct asnwer is B) Julius Caesar naming himself dictator and adopting his great nephew.
In the year 45 BC, Julius Caesar named himself dictator, an exceptional political title of the Ancient Roman Republic that gave complete authority to a political figure during periods of conflict. Julius Caesar was extremely popular in Rome for all his military achievements and campaigns of conquest in Gaul. After that, he adopted his great-nephew Gaius Octavius as his heir.
This political movement marked the end of the Roman Republic and the beginning of the Roman Empire. After Julius Caesar was killed in a conspiracy, his great-nephew succeeded him as the first emperor: Augustus.