We were in black were in slavery and we had to work for the whites
The correct answer is - C. Songhai.
The Songhai Empire was one of the largest empires that the African continent witnessed on its soil. The empire stretched from the Atlantic coast, where Senegal and Gambia are now, occupying the northern portion of Western Africa, and large portion of the western Sahel, having the Niger River running in the middle of the empire.
The people living in this empire were Muslims, and they had accepted it before the empire was formed through earlier contacts with Muslims. As the empire grew stronger and larger, it incorporated lot of people that were not Muslims in it. The Songhai used their power and managed to convert most of the people on their territory to the Islam, thus spreading out the religion and strengthening it in the region.
William Penn, son of Admiral Sir William Penn, founded the Province of Pennsylvania. He joined the Friends of Society or Quakers when he was 22 years old. The Quakers were strongly persecuted at the time so William Penn decided to travel to the New World. King Charles II of England owed the late Admiral Sir William Penn a large amount of money so as payment, William Penn asked for a tract of land in America. He was granted a large area west and south of New Jersey which he called Sylvania. King Charles II changed it to Pennsylvania in honor of the late Admiral Penn.
i would think it would be for spiritual energy
Answer:
The Mexican War of Independence
Explanation:
As described, the initial phase of the Mexican War of Independence began with the Dolores Uprising, that would evolve to a full-scale rebellion that reached the outskirts of Mexico City but was defeated in the Battle of Calderon Bridge. After the fall of Father Miguel Hidalgo, the struggle was continued by Father Jose María Morelos, that would summon a Congress in Chilpancingo that declared independence, but the movement was crushed when Morelos was captured and executed. Independence would finally be achieved when Agustin de Iturbide, a member of the creole elite of Mexico City and an officer of the colonial army, negotiated the Three Guarantees Treaty (or Iguala Accord) with Vicente Guerrero, and was then proclaimed Emperor of Mexico.