The answer is C. it allowed people to buy and sell goods in a wider market
This trading<span> competition was </span>linked<span> to </span>their<span> desire to gain political power and ... In the </span>case<span> of </span>Britain,<span>its relationship</span>
Here were many things traded along the Triangular Trade Route. First of all, Europeans gave America things like onions, olives, turnips, coffee beans, peaches, pears, grains (wheat, rice, barley, oats), livestock (cattle, sheep, pigs, horses), and (most importantly) disease<span>. Smallpox, measles, and other such sicknesses affected native Americans more because they were not immune to them like the Europeans were. In return for these things, colonies in the Americas gave Europeans pumpkins, turkeys, pheasants, potatoes, tomatoes, corn, vanilla, cacao, beans, pineapples, tobacco, and (most importantly) </span>sugar<span> and </span>spices<span>. Remember that before this, Europeans were eating plain bread (maybe the rich got a bit of butter) and barley or oatmeal with nothing on it. When they got sugar and spices, they went crazy for it. Europeans also gave textiles and wool to Africa in return for slaves that would be shipped to their colonies in the Americas</span>
German leaders want following things during the reformation:
to collect their own taxes
to increase the pope's power
to collect their own taxes
to enforce the laws of the Roman Catholic Church
to collect taxes for the pope
It was the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria-Hungary