British law made it a punishable crime to possess salt not bought from the English factories.
While the Indians were ruled by the British, they were not allowed to posses salt any other than the one produced and procured by the English. The indians were forbidden by law to not own such or process their own salt. People who did this illegally were caught and beaten down for breaking this law.
Answer:
Explanation:
World War I destroyed kings, kaisers, czars and sultans; ... It is hard to imagine that nearly 300,000 men died or were wounded here ... and the muddy killing ground of Passchendaele, is the largest British Commonwealth cemetery in the world. Nearly 12,000 soldiers are buried here — some 8,400 of them
Answer:
It was destroyed by the Almoravids, who took control in the country for the next ten years.
Explanation:
The sacking of Ghana by Almoravids in something that can be seen even as a holy war led to the decline of its power and its trade links. Although their rule lasted for only a couple of years, they weren't able to recover and to extent their trade once more as they did before this event.