Answer:
Después de la muerte de Sauvolle en 1701, Bienville ascendió al cargo de gobernador del nuevo territorio para el primero de sus cuatro gobiernos. Por 1701, sólo 180 personas permanecieron en la colonia; el resto había muerto a causa de la desnutrición y las enfermedades. Bienville fue gobernador por un total de 30 años.
Explanation:
Entre las recomendaciones de su hermano, Bienville trasladó la mayoría de los colonos a un nuevo asentamiento en lo que hoy es Alabama en el lado oeste del río Mobile, llamado Fort Louis de la Mobile (o "Mobille"). También estableció un puerto de aguas profundas cerca de Dauphin Island para la colonia, como la bahía de Mobile y el río Mobile eran demasiado poco profundos para buques de navegación marítima. La población de la colonia fluctuó en los próximos años. En 1704, en parte, debido al miedo a que la confraternización de los soldados franceses con mujeres nativas puedan conducir a un conflicto, Bienville hizo arreglos para la importación de veinticuatro mujeres jóvenes francesas. Por tradición las jóvenes fueron seleccionados de conventos, aunque la mayoría eran probablemente de familias pobres, y viajaron al Nuevo Mundo con sus posesiones en pequeños troncos conocidos como casetes, por lo que son conocidos en las historias locales como Las chicas casquette en la tradición temprana y por la traducción en inglés de las niñas ataúd en la tradición posterior.
Answer:
The good answer is: It supported the establishment of a Jewish homeland in Palestine.
Explanation:
On November 2, 1917, still during the First World War, the British government made a public statement called the Balfour Declaration, in which it supported the establishment of a Jewish national home in Palestine that was by then an Ottoman territory. The declaration brought legitimacy and drew international attention to the Zionist movement.
Answer:
Where was Josephs home town?
Nazareth
Explanation:
The forces that drove the revolution of the 1700s, 1800s, and early 1900s were <u>control, money, political reform, social reform, economic reform, coal, inventors and entrepreneurs, and textile machines. </u>
Enlightenment ideas about government provided a philosophical basis for the revolutions of the late 1700s and early 1800s.
They replaced them with more democratic forms of government. They also triggered a series of nationalist uprisings that let to the formation of new nation-states.
Answer:
Question 1: Actually, he did not. If he did export and spread the ideals of the Revolution, why did he appoint his brothers and other people to high points in government? Apart from that, they held the position of kings and monarchs which is opposite to the ideals of the Revolution. It should be that the people have the right to decide for themselves but they didn’t. Instead, they lived in fear and rebelled against him.
Question 2: Both revolutions started rather moderately, with people demanding more representation in government. Neither gained the full support of everyone in the respective nations either, as evidenced by Loyalists in the US and counterrevolutions in areas like the Vendee in France. In France, the revolution became more radical and ideological, taking Enlightenment ideals and rationalism to the extreme. The revolution in France also led to the dictatorship of Napoleon and the restoration is Bourbon monarchs, so ultimately a return to the status quo, while the American Revolution was successful in gaining American independence. Furthermore, the French Revolution was fought in France while the American Revolution was fought in the colonies of England and never sought to completely depose George III, just remove his control of the colonies.