Between 1750 and 1775, the number of Africans living in slavery in Georgia increased from approximately 500 to 18,000. This drastic increase in Georgia's slave population is a pretty good indicator that the end of the trustee period also marked the end of Georgia's attempts to develop a stable, slave-free economy.
I dint have the options, but scribes were some of the only people who knew how to read and write in ancient times.
Things scribes did: writing letters for fellow villagers who couldn't write, recording the amount of crops harvested, calculating the amount of food needed to feed the workers, keeping accounts and ordering supplies for temples and the army.
Things scribes did not do: Write laws, and compose emails ;)
Yes, the society was divided into four varnas, namely kshatriya, brahman, vaishya and shudra. The kshatriyas were the kings or protectors, brahmans were the priests and sadhus, vaishyas were the traders and shudras were the other people like peasants and cleaners, and were wrongly considered outcastes.
Answer:
Here, Mollel blends elements of the city mouse/country mouse story with the useful lesson that one can't judge by appearances. Kitoto is a mouse on the savannah who needs protection from a dangerous hawk. To find an appropriate protector, he sets out to find the most powerful being in the world.