Answer:
emigration or increase in death rate
Explanation:
emigration is leaving ones place of living, which would explain why the population is going down, and an increased death rate means more individuals are dying than the birth rate can keep up with, so the population would be going down as well. so, the answer is number one.
This depends on your definition of "friendly". Although there was plenty of animosity in the years after the war, Americans and British maintained a fairly cordial relationship because it was in the best interest of both countries to trade with one another. However tensions over land disputes and the British taking American sailors eventually led to the War of 1812.
Answer:
The correct sentence is C. " Mass immigration into the United States began in the 1830s, when many Irish, Germans, and Scandinavians arrived. "
Explanation:
Sentence "A" incorrectly implies that the arrival ofIrish, German, and Scandinavian immigrants is merely an example andnot the main cause of the mass immigration of the 1830s;
sentence "B"
incorrectly implies that the arrival of Irish, German, and Scandinavianimmigrants was somehow contrary to the beginning of mass immigrationin the 1830s.
If your choices are the same as I've seen elsewhere with this question (brainly.com/question/12289199#readmore), this was the <u>not true</u> item:
- It was the hottest city in the rapidly growing Christian region.
Additional details about the establishment of Constantinople:
Constantine built his new capital city to resemble "Old Rome." Constantine made his own capital city in monumental fashion, but wanted to give it also the prestige and aura of the Roman Empire. The building of Constantinople took several years, and Constantine modeled it after Rome, with government buildings designed in Roman style.
The existing city of Byzantium was the place Constantine built up and renamed after himself as Constantinople. (That's why the Eastern Roman Empire often is referred to as the Byzantine Empire.)
Today, Istanbul is the name of the city that was once Byzantium and then Constantinople.