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MariettaO [177]
3 years ago
12

2) Give a quick biography on the origins and life of Alexander of Macedonia (356-

History
1 answer:
Alex17521 [72]3 years ago
8 0

Answer:

Alexander The Great is probably the greatest general of his time, who managed to spread his country and establish cultural connections with practically whole known world at the time. Although a general and a ruler, he was also someone who believed that the world could be united not through the means of war, but through cultural unification.

Explanation:

Alexander was the son of Macedonian ruler Philip II, who wanted to conquer but also unite the world. During that period he managed to defeat Persian Empire, which at the time seemed as an impossible task. He conquered lands from Egypt to India. During his period, a specific culture, known as Hellenism developed. Still, when he died most of his heritage was destroyed by his successors.

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Answer:

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Explanation:

symbolic presence in international legal accounts of the 19th century, but for historians of the era its importance has often been doubted. This article seeks to re-interpret the place of the Berlin General Act in late 19th-century history, suggesting that the divergence of views has arisen largely as a consequence of an inattentiveness to the place of systemic logics in legal regimes of this kind.

Issue Section:

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INTRODUCTION

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If for lawyers and historians the facts of the Conference are taken as a common starting point, this has not prevented widely divergent interpretations of its significance from emerging. On one side, one may find an array of international lawyers, from John Westlake 6 in the 19th century to Tony Anghie 7 in the 21 st century, affirming the importance of the Conference and its General Act for having created a legal and political framework for the subsequent partition of Africa. 8 For Anghie, Berlin ‘transformed Africa into a conceptual terra nullius ’, silencing native resistance through the subordination of their claims to sovereignty, and providing, in the process, an effective ideology of colonial rule. It was a conference, he argues, ‘which determined in important ways the future of the continent and which continues to have a profound influence on the politics of contemporary Africa’. 9

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However, it benefited Georgia by granting the state a very significant amount of land. For instance, it gave it all the lands between the rivers Altamaha and St. Marys, therefore extending its southern border. In addition, two of the four new colonies that were created after the Proclamation (East and West Florida) were located south of Georgia. Between those two Floridas and Georgia there was a very large area of undesignated land, which soon afterwards was also granted to Georgia.

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Answer:

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Explanation:

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