I believe the correct answer would be: C. Colonial Expansion
Answer:
c) It caused a decrease in the output of the cash crops in the New World.
Explanation:
The slave trade brought a increase in the output of cash crops in the New World, hence why they were called cash crops. Larger amounts of people in the workforce who require only food, shelter, and clothes on their back, without pay, is cheaper then hiring white workers in the area. This allowed for bare minimum payment to the slaves with large cash deposits entering in. With the end of the slave trade after the American Civil War, the cash-crops had already found other methods to be planted and harvested. These include, but is not limited too, new plowing methods, the cotton gin, etc. The removal of the slave trade made a dent in the pockets individually based on the amount of resources sunk into them, but did not affect in the way that the South believed it will.
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Answer:
Ok so the answer is 5, 2 and 3.
Explanation:
The explorers did not find a waterway from Central America to the Pacific. But they did sponsor Columbus, who "discovered" the brand new settlement of Hispaniola. Through quickly conquering territory along the Americas, Spain also became the first to locate those rivers.
John Locke was an English philosopher from the time of the Enlightenment and as such advocated that according to natural law, all people have the same rights, unlike the Church's teaching that all people under God's law are subordinated to a single absolute or dogma
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Hope that this is correct.
Philip II of Macedon was a Macedonian king (359-336), who started the conquest of Greece (347 BC) financed by the gold mines of the Pangeu region, which with the final submission (356 BC) transformed Macedonia into the greatest power in the ancient Greece and laid the foundations for the Hellenic expansion, carried out by his son Alexander III, Alexander the Great. Son of Amintas III, as a child he witnessed the disintegration of the Macedonian kingdom, while his older brothers Alexander II and Perdicas III struggled against the insubordination of the local aristocracy, the attack of Thebes and the invasion of the Illyrians. He succeeded Perdicas III on the Macedonian throne (359 BC) and, after reestablishing and even expanding the country's borders, consolidated them by establishing colonies and seized the mining region of Pangeu, where he obtained the gold necessary to mint his own currency, Filippia.
Alexander the Great, king of Macedonia, son of Emperor Fellipe II of Macedonia and Olympia, princess of Epirus, was born between 20 and 30 July, 356 BC, in the region of Pella in Babylon.
Alexander, conqueror of the Persian Empire, was one of the most important soldiers in the ancient world.
In his childhood he was tutored by Aristotle, who taught him rhetoric and literature, and stimulated his interest in science, medicine and philosophy.
In the summer of 336 BC, his father, Philip II, was assassinated and Alexander ascended the throne of Macedonia, beginning the trajectory of one of the greatest conquerors in history.