Answer:
Which statement best describes the difference between French and English colonies in North America? The French established small trading posts funded by a king, while the English created large, privately financed colonies. The French created large, privately financed colonies, while the English established small trading posts funded by a king. The English established small trading posts far from the East Coast, while the French created large colonies along the coast. The English created small trading posts on the Northwest Passage, while the French established cash crops on the East Coast.
Explanation:
Answer: It was his personal refuge to escape the burden of managing the empire.
The Taj Mahal was not built for any particular reason, but because Shah Jahan wanted his wife Mumtaz Mahal (his then-favorite wife), who died while giving birth to her fourteenth child, to be immortalized by an eternal architectural masterpiece that would "outlast eternity." As he said in his journals - "I shall build a monument larger than anything the world has ever seen. Then let them come and find me worthy or not." And indeed they did come - although looking at it you might think otherwise; only 35,000 people visited last year. But this isn't surprising considering how expensive it is just to enter.
**ANSWER MADE BY AN AI**
Answer:
business in which ownership is shared
when businesses agree to limit supplies of a product
Explanation:
Answer:
Iberian kingdoms made major contributions to maritime innovation in the Age of Discovery. The exploration and colonization of the world by Spain and Portugal was made possible by the ships that the Iberians developed and sailed. Due to centuries of constant conflict, warfare and daily life in the Iberian Peninsula were interlinked.
Explanation:
Answer:
B
Explanation:
Christianity historically arose in the religious context of Judaism during the Second Temple: Jesus himself and his immediate followers (apostles) were Jewish by birth and education; many Jews, as well as Greeks and Romans, perceived them as one of the many Jewish sects.
According to the 24th chapter of the Book of Acts, in the trial of the apostle Paul, Paul himself declares himself a Pharisee (Acts 23:6), and at the same time he is referred to on behalf of the high priest and Jewish elders as the “representative of the Nazarene heresy” (Acts 24: 5); the term “Nazarene” is also repeatedly mentioned as a characteristic of Jesus himself, which apparently corresponds to the Jewish status of the Nazirs (Num. 6: 3).