Comparisons between trade and early forms of expansion during the 13th and 14th centuries of the third-wave era:
By the middle of the 13th century , the chenghis khan controls the asia from the coast of china to black sea. Beginning with the agrarian civilisation, societies started to connect into large network of exchange is called trade. trade was important from the beginning.
As early 2300 BCE , civilisation in Mesopotamia in Egypt and Indus valley were in commercial relationship. Silk road enable small scale exchanges to expand dramatically , when the silk road is first opened , there has been opportunity for trade , the eastern end of silk road has been unsafe because the Chinese inability to control the nomads of mongols.
<u>Comparisons between trade and early forms of expansion during the 13th and 14th centuries of the third-wave era:</u>
By the middle of the 13th century , the chenghis khan controls the asia from the coast of china to black sea. Beginning with the agrarian civilisation, societies started to connect into large network of exchange is called trade. trade was important from the beginning.
As early 2300 BCE , civilisation in Mesopotamia in Egypt and Indus valley were in commercial relationship. Silk road enable small scale exchanges to expand dramatically , when the silk road is first opened , there has been opportunity for trade , the eastern end of silk road has been unsafe because the Chinese inability to control the nomads of mongols.
T<span>o “centralize power” means to concentrate the power in one part of the government. It increases the </span><span>power of an absolute monarch because it takes away the power from the people and the monarch gets all the authority.
Texas is a very large state and may have ruined the balance between slave and free state
Explanation:
Texas would be under the line for slave states and since Texas was a massive state, the north feared that the south would gain an upper hand in the conflict between slave and free state. Eventually Maine was created to fix this.
<span>Thomas Aquinas who attempted to present a rational argument for god's existence two of which being the clockmakers argument and the first causer argument</span>