A cylinder seal is a small, round cylinder invented around 3500 BCE in the Near East. It was particularly important in southern Mesopotamia. Cylinder seals were usually engraved with written characters or figures, and were used for administrative purposes.
There were two ways in which the Mesopotamians used cylinder seals:
- Most Mesopotamian sylinder seals formed an image through the use of depressions in the cylinder surface. This type of seal is linked to the development of clay tablets, and produces an effect similar to that of sunken reliefs in Ancient Egypt.
- The second was as for the seal to print images using raised areas on the cylinder. These were often used to print images on cloth and other two-dimensional surfaces.
Explanation:
We supposed to right it out or an a,b,c,d question
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Answer:
It gave Connecticut more representatives in the House of Representatives after the Revolution.
I think B preventing nuclear war
Answer: The Incan emperors forced the conquered people to speak Quechua, which is the Incan lanquage.
Explanation: The Inca empire was the largest empire in pre-Columbian America and their civilization arose from the Peruvian highlands sometime in the early 13th century. They were conquerors who employed different methods to unify their empire.
In addition to forcing them to use the Inca language, rebellions were avoided by transporting conquered peoples to different parts of the empire thereby averting would-be rebellions.
They had an advanced system of roads that held and linked the empire together, with some of their roads, walls and irrigation systems still in use till date. These were mostly done using mit'a which was the system of conscripting labor from villages.