By the time he died 13 years later, Alexander had built an empire that stretched from Greece all the way to India. ... It lasted from the death of Alexander in 323 B.C. until 31 B.C., when Roman troops conquered the last of the territories that the Macedonian king had once ruled.
The correct answer is - the Third Punic War.
The Punic Wars were a series of three wars between the Roman Empire and the Phoenician colony of Carthage. They took place in a span of 82 years, from 264 BC to 146 BC. In the last of the three wars, the Third Punic War, the Romans managed to defeat Carthage and they burned it to the ground, and that marked the end of the Phoenician influence in the Mediterranean region.
The name of the wars, Punic, comes from the Latin Punicus/Poenicus, which actually means Phoenicians, and is referring to the ancestry of the Carthaginians.
Answer:
Karen Armstrong was a nun. She left her convent in the 1960s and maintained distance from the organized religion for thirteen years. Meanwhile, she worked in television and assignments on Jerusalem. She has studied the major religions of the world. Later she started writing books and published many of them. Her latest book is The Case for God. According to her, the divine personality mentioned in the religious scriptures is simply a symbol of greater transcendence which lays beyond it and hence we cannot tie down the god to one single instance of being but God means being itself that is everything around us.
In the Southeast region, Native Americans lived in Wattle and Daub houses. These houses were made by weaving river cane and wood into a frame. The roofs were made of grass and bark. Wattle and Daub houses were permanent structures, perfect for farming people.
Answer:
A. North and South piglet