The early mapmakers really had it very hard to create a proper map, as they didn't had any of the modern technology that nowadays we do. They had to rely on their orientation in the space, be able to properly adjust the distances, using only their eyes and brains. Also, they were putting into the maps areas that were told and described by them by people that were there, but they personally haven't even seen the place. The knowledge they had about the size of the world was very limited, as they were not really able to travel that much during their lifetime.
Their interpretation is usually relatively good and relatively accurate considering the circumstances. Of course there were some misjudged distances and proportions, but not by far. Since they only new so much of the world, they usually were making the map, thus the size of the world, from the eastern most location they new, to the westernmost location they new, either putting straight lines like that is the end of the world, or putting waters to mark the same.
<span>- Produced agriculture where no one had thought possible.
- Played roles as traders and bandits on long distance trade routes.
- Played roles in the the collapses of the 2nd wave civilizations and their rebuilds.
- Supported Buddhism in China
- Nomadic Bedouin Arabs aided in expansion of Islam.
- Turks carried Islam to new lands.
- Mongols made largest empire of the time. - Facilitated closer connections across Eurasia.
- Increased the rate of technology & crop exchange, mixing of peoples, spread of epidemic disease.
- Mongol tolerance of other religions facilitated spread of religion.</span>
Your answers A, B and D.
He rises in the French army after the beginning of the Revolution,
He helps put down a royalist uprising in Paris.
He takes command of a new French army in Italy.
He was forced to live on the island of Elba.
Answer: The us Sell and Lend supplies to Great Britain.
Explanation:
Between 1880 and 1900, cities in the United States grew at a dramatic rate. Owing most of their population growth to the expansion of industry, U.S. cities grew by about 15 million people in the two decades before 1900. Many of those who helped account for the population growth of cities were immigrants arriving from around the world. A steady stream of people from rural America also migrated to the cities during this period. Between 1880 and 1890, almost 40 percent of the townships in the United States lost population because of migration.