Answer:
The appeal of profits to be earned from the China trade served as the initial impetus to motivate U.S. citizens and officials to enter the Pacific region.
Civilians did things such as mend clothing for soldiers, make ammunition from household silver, and many women followed their husbands to the battlefield where they washed, mended, and cooked for troops. Very few were able to fight in combat, but some women did.
<u>Answer:</u>
<em>Imperial ladies delighted in impact and power, particularly the mother of the lord. A few ladies had monetary freedom, owning and coordinating their own bequests. </em>
<u>Explanation:</u>
Non-regal ladies were distinguished by their activity and occupation rank. Ladies laborers got indistinguishable wages and proportions from men during the Achaemenid Empire.
There were few similarities between the status of women under Islam during the seventh and eighth centuries C.E. <em>And the status of women in a Greek city-state and/or the Achaemenid (Persian) Empire during the fifth an fourth centuries B.C.E.</em>