Answer:
Southern Europe was the closest set of people near them
Explanation:
At some point in the history of Europe, particularly around 711 AD, the Arab Muslims from the region of the Mediterranean or Iberian peninsula raided and amassed their first strong foothold in continental Europe, particularly in modern-day Spain and Portugal.
One of the main reason this was made possible was that the Muslims raid towns in southern Europe because Southern Europe was the closest set of people near them
Answer:
B) Quakers were assigned to encroach upon Native American tribes in their negotiations
Explanation:
sorry if its wrong
Here were many things traded along the Triangular Trade Route. First of all, Europeans gave America things like onions, olives, turnips, coffee beans, peaches, pears, grains (wheat, rice, barley, oats), livestock (cattle, sheep, pigs, horses), and (most importantly) disease<span>. Smallpox, measles, and other such sicknesses affected native Americans more because they were not immune to them like the Europeans were. In return for these things, colonies in the Americas gave Europeans pumpkins, turkeys, pheasants, potatoes, tomatoes, corn, vanilla, cacao, beans, pineapples, tobacco, and (most importantly) </span>sugar<span> and </span>spices<span>. Remember that before this, Europeans were eating plain bread (maybe the rich got a bit of butter) and barley or oatmeal with nothing on it. When they got sugar and spices, they went crazy for it. Europeans also gave textiles and wool to Africa in return for slaves that would be shipped to their colonies in the Americas</span>
<span> to release men for combat.</span>
Answer:
Zebulon pike
Explanation:
Zebulon Montgomery Pike was an American brigadier general and explorer for whom Pikes Peak in Colorado was named.
Zebulon Montgomery Pike (January 5, 1779 - April 27, 1813) was an American explorer and military officer (he served in the War of 1812).
Pike tried to find the source of the Mississippi River and also explored the Rocky Mountains and southwestern North America. Pike's Peak in Colorado is named for him.
Considering his heroic actions in the War of 1812, Zebulon Pike was remembered as a military hero. And in the 1850s settlers and prospectors in Colorado began calling the mountain he encountered Pike's Peak, a name which stuck.