it depends on the severity, but ill focus on a 5.0 earthquake on the richer side. there is a little bit of damage to buildings and roads along with miner casualties. there are approximately 500 of these earthquakes each year.
When investing you have the chance of losing any money you've made from the investment as well as the original amount you put down. When saving you are simply putting aside money and beginning to pile it up as you continue to save it.
In my view, only the black plague and class inequality.
<u>The Black Death was a disease of the rat flea that spread and devastated Europe in the fourteenth century, but reached England again in the second outbreak in the sixteenth century.
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The world wars happened in the twentieth century, so they are not an answer.
Unemployment and lack of manpower are the opposite of each other, but none have actually reached England. First, because the population of that time was basically rural and lived subsistence. The event of the Industrial Revolution caused a great demand by manpower, that was satisfied by the peasant class, that migrated to the city.
<u>However, class inequality has always been present. This comes from the age of feudalism, but it grew especially during the Industrial Revolution, which produced a capitalist bourgeoisie and a mass that worked in factories for low wages and abusive hours.</u>
Yu has patrolled The street around the villages, with historical wooden houses. For many years the hours with his gong to tell or remind the villagers when there were theifs of a fire