According to a different source, the movement that the question refers to is Black Lives Matter.
Black Lives Matter is a movement that originated in the African-American community, and which campaigns against violence towards black people, particularly from the state and in the criminal justice system.
This movement is similar to PanAfricanism in that both of them have a focus on race. Moreover, both of these movements see a connection between all people of color, and share a desire to bring them together. However, PanAfricanism does not oppose or criticize the government of any one state. Moreover, it addresses Black people everywhere (with emphasis in Africa), not just those in the United States.
Black consciousness, on the other hand, is similar to Black Lives Matter in that both movements were grassroots movements, and they both addressed the subject of police brutality and institutional racism. However, Black Consciousness focused on the South African apartheid, while Black Lives Matter focuses on the United States.
Answer: They wanted to use their land for tobacco plantations.
The Natchez are a Native American people from the Lower Mississippi Valley. They spoke a language with no known close relatives, and are noted for being the only Mississippian culture with complex chiefdoms that survived into the colonization period. The Natchez were defeated by French forces around 1730. Today, most descendants of the Natchez live in Oklahoma and South Carolina.
Initially, contact between the Natchez and the Europeans was peaceful. French colonists intermarried with the Native Americans and the French were granted some lands to cultivate. French colonists imported African slaves and cultivated tobacco plants. During the 1710s and 1720s, however, several conflicts arose. These culminated in the French commander Sieur de Chepart's order to vacate the village in order to use the land for a tobacco plantation. This initiated the Natchez Revolt.
As far as I know, it was the Chinese - there is evidence they had movable printing press as early as in 12th century.
In Europe the movable print was devised by Johannes Gutenberg in Germany, Mainz.
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Answer:
The Battle of Shiloh
Explanation:
not 100% sure but on April 6, Confederate forces attacked Union forces under General Ulysses S. Grant at Shiloh, Tennessee. By the end of the day, the federal troops were almost defeated. Yet, during the night, reinforcements arrived, and by the next morning the Union commanded the field.