Answer:
I belive its C Nabopolassar
Explanation:
hope it helps
Answer:
I believe it was Lord William Bentinck
Answer:
Cormac Ó Gráda 02 September 2019
Of WWII’s warring powers only the Soviet Union suffered mass starvation, but as this column, part of a Vox debate on the economics of WWII, describes, it is a measure of the war’s global reach that 20 to 25 million civilians died of hunger or hunger-related diseases outside Europe. In Britain effective rationing ensured a ‘fair’ distribution of food supplies throughout the war and in Germany the famine conditions experienced in 1918-19 were not replicated, but Japan was facing semi-starvation at war’s end. In Europe, apart from Greece and the Soviet Union, famine mortality was modest, but 3-5% of the populations of faraway Bengal, Henan, and Java perished.
The correct answer is - The Kushnites captured most of Egypt and forced the Egyptians to become slaves.
I think that it's B, because I know in the late 1800s, sanitation in the city was absolutely atrocious, and that many people died from things like rats carrying diseases, or just bad sanitation. I may be wrong, though.