First option: Raw materials were first sold to Africa from Europe, then, in the middle passage, slaves were traded to the Americas, and then finally manufactured goods were then shipped back to England. <span>The Trans-Atlantic trade system </span>was also called as the Triangular Trade as it connected three continents; so the complete circuit lasted 18 months in total, in order to carry the largest number of slaves. The slave trade lasted approximately four centuries, and was the largest deportation of people in history and according to many historians a worldwide catastrophe, at once a violent form of globalization.
<span>As more people move out of poverty and into the middle class, there is more discretionary income, which can be spent on entertainment. Mass entertainment is formed in response to the demands of the middle class, and then provides new industries which then create more jobs, moving more people into the middle class, to create more discretionary income. It's a nice circle</span>
Answer:
Instead of demoralizing Americans, it gave Americans a cause to rally behind in defeating the British once again
Explanation:
Contributing factors towards the start of the Industrial Revolution in Great Britain were cheap energy, foreign competition and Great Britain had a small population. Industrialisation as opposed to agriculture as the main economy meant that machines were used to manufacture the items that were formerly made by hand. This meant that more items could be manufactured in the same time as when they were manufactured by hand. Small farmers could no longer keep up with the pace of the industrialisation of the economy so they moved into the towns to work in the factory. This allowed Great Britain to generate a greater gross domestic product as more work was completed by one person in less time. Energy was very cheap during the time of the Industrial Revolution so the cost of running the machinery was not high. Ships from the East eg. China and India brought in the same goods that were handmade in the UK and they were cheaper than the handmade goods. This forced the local manufacturers out of business