Answer:I think Cleopatra was in love with a Greek man (Greeks and Egyptians were enemies) But when the other Greeks found out, they killed him, and in sorrow, she kiIIed herself via snake poison, and then the Greek leader kiIIed Cleopatra's son and made Egypt part of Greece (or something like that.) Egypt is part of Africa now though, so I don't know how that happened, but whatever.
Explanation: Anyway, it's pretty tragic, partly because before her death she lost the love of her life and when she died she had to come to terms with leaving her kingdom to be conquered by the Greeks, and leaving her son behind.
I just looked it up, and I guess her choice was to either "Fall under Octavian's' domination" or kiII herself. So before her death she was pretty much backed into a corner. She probably felt that death was her only escape, and I guess it was, but she could've <em><u>tried</u></em> to escape to protect her son at least, I don't know, maybe she did.
ANYWAY, I digress.
So, this isn't really describing her tragedy, but I hope you can take away from it and describe her tragedy in your own words. Have a great day!!
Let me know if this helps at all, okie? :)
Answer:
The correct answer is B.
Explanation:
Bay of Pigs disaster took place in 1961, when the CIA planned and sponsored an invasion of Cuba, after the great power that Fidel Castro had showed and his support of communism. The US underestimated the Cuban forces and the US troops were sent to a terrible defeat with a high number of casualities.
The unsucessful invasion was embarrasing for the Kennedy administration, but he had no regrets to assume the whole political responsibility for everything that happened in Cuba. US people liked his honesty and his population grew even further.
Pls give brainliest! im 2 more brainliests away from getting virtuoso!
Answer: It's the Chagos islands. It's between Madagascar, Sir Lanka, and Indonesia.
Explanation:
In political science, a "nation" refers to a group of people who feel bound into a single body by shared culture, values, folkways, religion and/or language. A "state" just refers to a patch of land with a sovereign government. States often coincide with nations (and are called "nation-states," but not always.