India and Britain have a long and complicated history, starting in the 1600's.
By the late 1770's, the East India Company was starting to slowing gain political and territorial power for over 100 years. By the late 1800's, parliament places India under the direct control of Britain.
In 1869, the Suez Canal was opened. This made British goods and textiles easy to ship to India. British textiles were cheaper and made faster (machine-made) than India's own handmade textiles. This caused India's textile industry to collapse.
India was not happy under British rule. By the 1920's Mahatma Gandhi started campaigning for "noncooperation" and encourages people to avoid anything British. In the 1930's, he lead the Salt March, in an attempt to end Britain's monopoly on the salt market.
By 1947, India won its independence from Britain. The Muslim League wanted their own state. Britain divided India into two separate states: Muslim Pakistan and Hindu India.
Britain then left and withdrew from South Asia.
Answer: D. Its location in regard to the Asian and Pacific tectonic plates causes it to be. A. was fundamentally changed by the introduction of rice cultivation about 400.
Answer:
Explanation:
James Long (February 9, 1793 – April 8, 1822) was an American filibuster who led an unsuccessful expedition to seize control of Spanish Texas between 1819 and 1821.
Answer:
The development of the Railroad.
Explanation:
The things you describe can all be given thanks to the development and creation of complex railroad systems that dominated what was modern transportation from the mid-1800's through early-1900's.
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The correct answer is letter B
The Ethiopian revolution had important consequences for the International System, including being one of the factors that caused the intensification of tensions that led to the end of detente originated the second cold war. The study of this revolution also demystifies the country as a poor and subservient Third World country and puts it as an autonomous actor (as far as possible) and diplomatically relevant beyond of the African continent.