Answer:
Because of the fast pace that people were moving to cities, housing, sewage and social systems, and transportation were unable to keep up.
Explanation: disease were prevalent problems in all urban centers; city planners and inhabitants alike sought new solutions to the problems caused by rapid urban growth. Living conditions for most working-class urban dwellers were atrocious.
Answer:
Saul, David, and Solomon
Explanation:
Saul is the first king of Israel, before him, judges ruled in Israel. Saul descended from the tribe of Benjamin, who by the vision of the prophet Samuel became the first king and united the tribes of Israel to fight the Philistines. After him, Israel was ruled by Saul's son-in-law, King David, who extended the territory of Israel, conquered Jerusalem, with some historians claiming that David had purchased Jerusalem, which became the capital of Israel. David had a great desire to build a temple in Jerusalem, but his son King Solomon succeeded. King Solomon, who was called the wise men, was known for his wisdom and, through his diplomacy, maintained peace with the surrounding countries, thus enabling prosperity, construction, great trade, and thus the unprecedented progress of Israel. He built the famous Solomon's Temple and during his reign Israel did not wage war, an important fact in the consolidation and further development of Israel's golden age.
Nazi leaders used <em>Kristallnacht </em>to their advantage by blaming the Jews for the violence that had occurred, and beginning a campaign of putting Jews into concentration camps.
Context/details:
In November, 1938, there was rampant destruction of Jewish-owned businesses and synagogues and violence against Jewish people. This occurred on the night of November 9 going on into November 10, 1938, and was called "<em>Kristallnacht,</em>" or "The Night of Broken Glass." It was public violence by masses of people, not a specific campaign ordered by the Nazi regime. However, Nazi officials did tell police and firefighters to do nothing -- to let the violence and destruction occur. The next day, Joseph Goebbels, the Nazi minister of propaganda, said that this sort of eruption against the Jews was natural and understandable. He said: "It is an intolerable state of affairs that within our borders and for all these years hundreds of thousands of Jews still control whole streets of shops, populate our recreation spots and, as foreign apartment owners, pocket the money of German tenants, while their racial comrades abroad agitate for war against Germany."
In the days after <em>Kristallnacht, </em>the Nazi government said that the Jewish community itself was responsible for all the damage and destruction, and imposed enormous fines against the Jewish community. They also arrested more than 30,000 Jewish men and sent them to concentration camps which were built to incarcerate Jews and any others that the Nazis perceived to be enemies of the German state.