Answer:
B) conversion to Islam
Explanation:
A) Indian Ocean trade
B) conversion to Islam
C) trans-saharan trade
D) conversion to christianity
False
pythagoras actually first launched the idea that the earth was round way before galileo did. Also christopher columbus tried sailing around the earth to find a new way without paying tariffs. this lead to his discovery of the new world long before galileo was born.
hope his helps:)
Correct answer choice is :
<h2>C) South America. </h2><h2 /><h3>Explanation:</h3><h3 />
The Monroe Doctrine declared that European nations should not meddle in countries to the south of the U.S. The Monroe Doctrine, announced in December of 1823, was a prime U.S. foreign policy statement. It was accelerated by several independence changes in South America and the U.S. government's wish to discourage European nations from establishing the Americas and a developing American nationalism.
Answer:
It hurt the confederacy very harshly, by destroying many crop fields, taking control of a vast amount of previously controlled confederate land, and scaring many confederate supporters off.
Explanation:
Sherman led a march of about 60,000 soldiers from Atlanta to Savanna, Georgia.
The intention was mainly to scare any remaining confederate supporters off. Anyone who opposed had their possessions taken and their property burned. They did not destroy whole towns but they destroyed many crop fields, resulting in reduced rations for soldiers and less food for the families at home.
They also ended up capturing Atlanta, which at the time was a main railroad hub in the south, and also home to the ICOTC or the industrial center of the confederacy. It held many supplies for all of the armies in the deep south.
Answer:
The correct answer is A. The Americans' greatest military victory, ironically achieved after the War of 1812 had officially ended, was Andrew Jackson's defeat of a British invasion of New Orleans.
Explanation:
The Battle of New Orleans between the United States and Great Britain, which took place between December 23, 1814 and January 8, 1815, was the greatest battle of the War of 1812.
In late 1814 a British fleet of more than 50 ships sent by General Edward Pakenham, sailed into the Gulf of Mexico and prepared to attack New Orleans. The American general Andrew Jackson, commander of the American army that was in the southwest of the country, had his regiment composed mainly of militiamen and volunteers, with whom he fought against the British who suddenly attacked his position on January 8, 1815. The troops of Jackson effectively entrenched themselves behind the fortifications, while the English hosts were exposed, the fight being brief and ending in a decisive victory for the Americans, thus achieving British withdrawal and the death of General Pakenham.
The battle can be considered extemporaneous since the Treaty of Ghent that ended the war had been signed last December, but the report had been slow to arrive. The victory however raised national morale, improving Jackson's reputation to the level of a hero, which served as a platform for his path to the presidency.