Answer:
Portuguese explorers began voyages south along the Atlantic coast of Africa. First the Portuguese established trading posts along the coast of West Africa, but gradually moved further south along the coast. This was the beginning of the African slave trade. The Europeans is different from the Arabs, they did not conduct raids themselves, but bought slaves from Arab slave brokers and African chiefs. Europeans built trading post and forts all along the coast of West Africa. The slaves were transported across the Atlantic Ocean primarily to Brazil, the West Indies and the English colonies in North America. As the demand for slaves expanded, whole areas of Africa were depopulated. The European African slave trade began during the mercantalist era. It continued well into the industrial era. In fact because African slaves played a major role in the industrial revolution in Europe.
Explanation:
Answer:
people's right
Explanation:
ugvbhi have to put an explanation he he he I hope you get it right
Answer:
Face to face communication?
thats what i think it might be
hope this helps :)
Explanation:
Answer:
Both Greek and roman residents practiced polytheist religion. The Greeks focused on life on earth and believed man would be judged on earth and his deeds both good and bad would follow him into afterlife while the Romans believed that one's actions if proper and many would make one god in heaven.
Explanation:
There you go.
At the beginning of the 19th century, the treatment of the mentally ill was a distorted reinterpretation of Pinel's moral treatment and used physical and hygienic measures such as: showers, cold baths, whips, rotating machines and bleeds. The cure desired by Pinel was not achieved and these institutions gradually became places of deposit and exclusion, which was considered as a moral disease started to also have an organic conception according to the thought of several Pinel disciples, the treatment techniques used by those who defended organicist theories were the same as those employed by the followers of moral treatment, all with physiological explanations and justifications for their use since then prevail over organicist theories of mental illness resulting from the experimental discoveries of neurophysiology and pathological anatomy.