Between October 1428 and May 1429, during the Hundred Years' War (1337-1453), the city of Orleans, France, was besieged by English forces. On May 8, 1429, Joan of Arc (1412-31), a teenage French peasant, successfully led a French force to break the siege.
Answer:
1. Great Britain incurs a huge war debt from the French and Indian War.
The British had to fight in Europe and the Americas during the time of the French and Indian war and this was costly to them such that a huge debt was incurred.
2. Stamp Act imposed the first direct tax on the colonists.
To make back some cash they started taxing the colonists more such as with the stamp act.
3. Colonial resentment increases
The Colonists began to feel resentment because they felt they were being unfairly taxed yet they were not making much.
4. Repeal of Stamp Act
As a result of actions by the Colonists, the Stamp Act was repealed without ever actually collecting taxes.
5. British revenue increases
British revenue eventually increased as the British restricted the Colonists to trading only with the British.
6. Colonists refused to buy British goods.
Eventually the Colonists refused to buy British goods as a protest against the trade restrictions placed on them.
7. Boston Tea Party
The Colonist boarded a ship and burnt an entire shipment of tea sent b the British in defiance of an Act that they viewed as unjust.
8. Coercive Acts/ Intolerable Acts
In response, the British passed the Intolerable Acts to try to bring the Colonists back under the firm control of the British.
An Electoral Reform. <span>However, many other reforms can seemingly be achieved without a constitutional amendment. These include various forms of public financing of political campaigns, disclosure requirements and </span>instant-runoff voting<span>.</span>
During the Civil War, the South’s use of enslaved labor gave it a way to keep plantations running (Option "C" is the correct one).
Enslaved African Americans, who lived in the South of the US, responded to the American Civil War (1861–1865) in a variety of ways. Some slaves assisted the Confederate war effort, while others were forced to support the Confederacy by working on farms or plantations, in factories and households. There were many slaves who could escape and earn their freedom. Those slaves who remained on their plantations and farms worked as agricultural laborers while their production helped feed both civilians and soldiers. However, much of the wartime agricultural work in the South was carried out by female slaves, since males slaves were hired for the Confederacy's military and industrial works.