Answer:
Economic, demographic, and technological changes likewise inspired and shaped antebellum reform. Although America remained predominately a rural and small-town nation into the twentieth century, its cities were growing after 1820.
Explanation:
The question is asking to state or describe how both groups used land, and how their ways of life conflicted, and base on my research, I think the best way to explain it is that they have conflict on their interest of the resources found on each land of the Great Plains. I hope this would help
Mansa Musa was king of the Kingdom of Mali from 1312 to 1337. He annexed the important cities of Timbuktu and Gao to his kingdom. He also built many mosques around Mali and made Islam a state religion.
It is alleged that during his reign, the Kingdom of Mali held more than half of the world’s gold and Musa was fabulously rich. In a European map from 1375, Mali is symbolized by a king holding a scepter in one hand and a large piece of gold in the other. The information about him comes from Arab chroniclers who described Mansa Musa as the strongest, richest, most feared, and capable of doing good to his loved ones among all West African leaders.
He expanded the empire and introduced a common legislative and trade system and is considered one of Africa's greatest statesmen and even the richest of all time.
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Answer:
Bartolome de las Casas witnessed the brutal treatment that the spanish conquistadors gave to the Native Americans who lived in Hispaniola and Cuba.
They natives were killed frequently in conflicts, became enslaved, and many died while enduring forced labor.
This horrified de las Casas, because he believed that the natives were equally rational and humane as the Spaniards. The only thing that made them different was that the Natives were not christians.
Bartolome de las Casas argued for the end of the enslavement of native americans, and he succeeded, in a way, because slavery was replaced with a system known as "Encomienda". Under the Encomienda, natives are christianized, are not formally slaves, but more like serfs. This system was more or less a reenactment of medieval feudalism, but in the Spanish Americas.
Bartome de las Casas did not recommend Encomienda either, his views were probably misinterpreted.
I think the answer would be Functional