Answer:
The Crusades in the Holy Land introduced Europeans to Eastern goods.
Explanation:
Medieval merchants reopened and expanded contact with other parts of the world. In this way, they continued what European Crusaders had begun. Merchants and explorers traveled farther in the Late Middle Ages. This brought them back into contact with the people of Africa and Asia. Trade expanded, and they brought back goods and ideas from these lands. Some cities and communities formed groups for mutual defense of their trade and markets. These changes set the stage for the Age of Exploration that would soon follow.
Archduke Franz Ferdinand of the Austria- Hungary empire was shot down, along with his wife by an assassins bullet when he was in Bosnia visiting Sarajevo.
One of the clearest policy manifestations of the "kill the Indian, save the man" concept in western expansion would be those of the boarding school era. These policies removed Native American children from their homes and sent them to far-off boarding schools in an effort to replace (and remove) Native languages, customs, and culture from an entire generation. White policymakers waged a cultural genocide on the generation in an effort to replace their Native traditions with English, Christianity, and other white, Euroamerican values. The earliest boarding schools were actually created by William Pratt, the military official who first coined the "kill the Indian, save the man" motto.
Its where the river Hindus think of as sacred
I believe D is the correct answer. If Japan (or any country) were to be hit with the largest natural disaster in recent history, it would most likely sway people away from migrating into the country.