<span>"Guilds were established to protect the craftsmen."
This is true.</span>
<span>"Voyageur", the French word for traveler, refers to the contracted employees who worked as canoe paddlers, bundle carriers, and general laborers for fur trading firms from the 1690s until the 1850s. This is why voyageurs were also known as "engagés", a loose French expression translated as "employees". The voyageurs, who were under the direction of a clerk (commis), were distinguished from "freemen", in other words, people who trapped and traded furs on their own account without being bound by a contract. Though it is true that the majority of voyageurs were French-Canadian, there were those who were English, German, and Iroquois</span>
Restricted the rights of African Americans..<span />
The immediate causes of the Hundred Years War were the dissatisfaction of Edward III of England with the nonfulfillment by Philip VI of France of his pledges to restore a part of Guienne taken by Charles IV; the English attempts to control Flanders, an important market for English wool and a source of cloth; and ...
Hundred Years War: Causes | Infoplease
hoover
Glass-Steagall Act of 1932
Federal Home Loan Bank Act
Hawley-Smoot Tariff
The Stinson Doctrine
Federal Farm Board
not hoover
Fair Labour Standards Act
Federal Emergency Relief Act
Civilian Conservation Crops
Agricultural Adjustment Administration