In late March 1857 a sepoy named Mangal Pandey attacked British officers at the military garrison in Barrackpore. He was arrested and then executed by the British in early April. Later in April sepoy troopers at Meerut refused the Enfield cartridges, and, as punishment, they were given long prison terms, fettered, and put in jail. This punishment incensed their comrades, who rose on May 10, shot their British officers, and marched to Delhi, where there were no European troops. There the local sepoy garrison joined the Meerut men, and by nightfall the aged pensionary Mughal emperor Bahādur Shah II had been nominally restored to power by a tumultuous soldiery. The seizure of Delhi provided a focus and set the pattern for the whole mutiny, which then spread throughout northern India. With the exception of the Mughal emperor and his sons and Nana Sahib, the adopted son of the deposed Maratha peshwa, none of the important Indian princes joined the mutineers.
The Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty signed by the United States, the Soviet Union, and Great Britain in 1963 stopped the testing of nuclear weapons in all <span>locations except "on land", since it was mainly to prevent this testing from taking place in space or the atmosphere. </span>
When items are scarce the supply goes down and the and the demand remains so the producers make more money
Answer: The correct answer is: to strongly encourage American Indians to become farmers
Explanation: The Dawes Act was approved in 1887, by means of which it was tried to foment the progress of the native agriculturists. It was intended to take Native Americans out of poverty and stimulate their assimilation into mainstream American society.