Answer:
North and South America
Explanation:
There were 2 waves in history of colonialism. The very first wave began in the 15th century. Countries from Europe such as Britain, Spain, France, and Portugal colonized lands throughout North and South America
Carthage was Rome's main rival in the third century BCE. The Carthaginians were able merchants, wealthy, well-connected, knowledgeable, and they had a strong land and sea military. Definitely trouble for Rome, and not that far away.
When Rome defeated Carthage in the Second Punic War, it cleared the way for Rome to dominate the trade of the western Mediterranean. And since the Greek states seemed intent on destroying each other (and Athens itself from within), this really allowed Rome a safe neighborhood in which to become dominant.
Answer:
C.) The Columbian exchange
Explanation:
It is called the Columbian exchange to the process occurred between the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries in which agricultural products and other foods of the New World (the American continent) in the Old World (Europe, Africa and Asia) and vice versa were made known. A broader definition also includes technological advances, demographics and even diseases. The term was coined by the American historian Alfred Crosby in 1972 in his book The Columbian Exchange
Thirteen Colonies” is shorthand for the English-speaking colonies arrayed along the east coast of North America, which rebelled against Britain in 1775-83.