Answer:
What accounted for the shift was the same thing that accounted for the shift in other parts of the world: the development of agriculture.
Explanation:
When a society develops agriculture, it shifts from being nomadic to being sedentary. This is because of two main, intertwined reasons:
The first is that growing crops is a burdensome activity that demands a lot of time, and care: ploughing the land, planting the seeds, tending the crops, caring for them, and picking them in time of harvest. This makes growing crops clash with a nomadic lifestyle.
The second reason is that agriculture is a more efficient way to produce food than hunting or gathering. Agriculture does produce a steady supply of food when the crops do not fail, while gathering and hunting hardly produces what is necessary for survival. This is an incentive for early societies to develop agriculture.
The correct answer is B) by establishing overseas colonies.
European nations competed for power in the years before World War I by establishing overseas colonies.
Between 1881 and 1914, European powers competed for each other to establish more colonies in Africa and other parts of the world. In the case of the African continent, the dispute was so high that the term of "Scramble for Africa" was coined. European countries such as Great Britain, France, and Portugal occupied, colonize or split the African territories to get more power and dominion.
World War 1 started in August 1914.
There is a claim by some Liberals that the ACA Law does not go far enough in securing the Americans, and reducing health care costs. The law, they say, has brought a lot of good things, but if we take into account the fact that 5300 members of Congress have registered 3300 lobbyists for health care, and more spent on preparing the law itself, than for some campaigns for presidential elections. Therefore, not a small part of this law appears to have been written by foreign private insurance industry or pharmaceutical industry.
For example, many health insurers, patients were bankrupt due to the high cost of health care, under the auspices of the ACA.
Answer:
Many reasons
Explanation:
Jewish People were targeted and hated long before Hitler was even born. Antisemitism was nothing new when he showed up and began his political campaign. Churches (specifically Christian churches) portrayed Jews as unwilling to accept word of God, as agents of the devil, and as murderers of Jesus. Jewish people were accused of murdering children for religious rituals, causing plague, and conspiring to dominate the world. Obviously, none of this is true but back then, especially before media was prominent, people listened to politicians and the church.
In the 19th century, Jewish people were classed as a race and even now that ancient hate caused by lies remained. It was believed that even if a Jewish person was converted to Christianity, they still were evil as they had "Jew Blood"
Wounded German pride was to thank for Hitler's quick following. Germany's loss was pitted on German Jews, despite being a small population of the country, Hitler claiming that Jewish people had stabbed them in the back. This, obviously, was not true but it got the ball rolling. Mass debt and poverty had the country on its knees after the war. People were suffering and needed someone to look up to... Hitler was that someone, providing a new hope for German people. He brought back their pride and strengthened the country once more. People trusted him and Jewish people suffered as a result.
Historians are unable to pinpoint his antisemitism to one specific event. It is actually unknown specifically why he had such a grudge against Jewish people.
Answer:
Option: A period of scientific achievement and artistic triumph where people believed that all problems and mysteries could be solved by the application of Reason.
Explanation:
Enlightenment was an intellectual movement that controlled the ideas in Europe during the 18th century. Thinkers began an intellectual journey indicating the reason, skepticism, individualism, and science. Enlightenment science greatly valued experimentation and rational thought with reasons and scientific experiments. Some of the famous scientific persons were Copernicus, Kepler, and Newton.