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qwelly [4]
3 years ago
9

Why did Palestinian militants launch a second intifada?

History
2 answers:
patriot [66]3 years ago
6 0
The answer is D because the Palestinians wanted to be free from israel.
Step2247 [10]3 years ago
6 0

The correct answer to this question is D) The PLO had made too many concessions to Israel.

Palestinian militants launched a second intifada because the PLO had made too many concessions to Israel.  

The Oslo Accords had given Israel many concessions. The Oslo Accords were the agreements reached by Israel’s government and the Palestinian Liberal Organization to establish peace in the region. The first accord was signed in 1993, in Washington D.C. The second accord was signed in Egypt.  

Nevertheless, Palestinian militants launched a second intifada because the PLO had made too many concessions to Israel. The second Intifada began in September 2000, and was a time of violent conflicts between Palestina and Israel, resulting in many people killed by bombs and attacks by air.

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Answer:

D I believe

Explanation:

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3 years ago
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How did Japan change in the second half of the 19th century?
tatuchka [14]

Answer:

The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History

CHRONOLOGY

Search

Japan, 1800–1900 A.D.

Japan, 1800–1900 A.D.

Overview

In the nineteenth century, Japan experiences a dramatic shift from the conservative, isolationist policies of the shōgun-dominated 

Edo period

 to the rapid and widespread drive to modernize and engage with the rest of the world that characterizes the Meiji Restoration. During the first half of the century, decades of fiscal and social disruption caused by the growth of a market economy and a complex monetary system in a country that is still officially based on agriculture, which supports both the farming and privileged but unproductive 

samurai classes

, continues to weaken the country in general and the 

Tokugawa regime

 in particular. Increasingly aggressive intrusions by Western powers not only puts pressure on Japan but convinces its political leaders that the Seclusion Policy has limited the country’s participation in technological advances and worldwide changes and also handicapped the economy by restricting its involvement in global trade. Taking advantage of the disruption caused by these internal and external crises, in 1867 several powerful daimyo (regional warlords) band together and overthrow Shōgun Yoshinobu (1837–1913), forcing him to resign authority. Marching into the imperial capital Kyoto, they “restore” Emperor Mutsuhito (1852–1912) to power and establish the Meiji (“enlightened rule”) Restoration.

In the name of Emperor Meiji, numerous striking and far-reaching social, political, and economic changes are legislated through a series of edicts. Japan also opens its borders, sending several high-ranking expeditions abroad and inviting foreign advisors—including educators, engineers, architects, painters, and scientists—to assist the Japanese in rapidly absorbing modern technology and Western knowledge. Throughout the century, however, the drive to Westernize is paralleled by continued isolationist tendencies and a desire to resist foreign influences. Eventually, as has happened numerous times in the nation’s history, after the Japanese assimilate what has been borrowed, they use these imports to formulate a new but distinctly Japanese modern society.

Citation

RELATED

MAP

Encompasses present-day Japan

PRIMARY CHRONOLOGYJapan, 1800–1900 A.D.

SECONDARY CHRONOLOGY

LISTS OF RULERS

SEE ALSO

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ARTISTS / MAKERS KEYWORDSAbout Rights and Permissions Share

© 2000–2021 The Metropolitan Museum of Art

4 0
3 years ago
(((((Civil Rights Timeline put these in order))))) plzzzzz help
Brilliant_brown [7]

/Answer:

Plessy v Ferguson: 5/18/1896

NAACP founded: 2/12/1909

19th Amendment: 5/21/1919

Brown v Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas: 5/17/1954

Brown v Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas II: 5/3/1955

Montgomery Bus Boycotts: 12/5//1955

Little Rock Nine: 9/4/1957

Greensboro Four: 2/1/1960

Ruby Bridges: 11/14/1960

Freedom Rides: 5/4/1961

Bailey v Patterson: 2/26/1962

"I Have a Dream" Speech & March on Washington: 8/28/1963

Birmingham Church Bombing: 9/15/1963

Civil Rights Act of 1964: 7/2/1964

Malcolm X Assassinated: 2/21/1965

Selma-Montgomery March: 3/7/1965

Voting Rights Act of 1965: 8/6/1965

Watts Riots in L.A.: 8/11/1965

Black Panther Party founded: 10/15/1966

Loving v Virginia: 6/12/1967

Detroit Riot: 7/23/1967

Martin Luther King, Jr. Assassinated: 4/4/1968

Explanation:

3 0
3 years ago
What were the results of the defeat of the spanish armada
grandymaker [24]
The defeat and destruction of the Spanish Armada in 1588 is seen by many as the high point of Elizabeth I's of England's reign. ... As a result of the failed invasion, by Catholic Spain, England became more self-consciously Protestant and Catholicism became increasingly unpopular and was viewed as anti-English.
4 0
3 years ago
Who negotiated the treaty of the sale of Louisiana on behalf of the United States? Question 3 options: A. Merriweather Lewis and
vladimir1956 [14]
D. Robert Livingston and James Monroe. :)
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3 years ago
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