Survivors who moved from camps close to front were sent to Bergen Belsen, Buchenwald, Mauthausen, Terezin (The Residents Traditional) and Ravens Bruckner, or one of their many sub-camps. The resulting overcrowding in these camps hastened the spread of disease and caused many more deaths.
In every camp, Allied soldiers encountered appalling scenes. Bergen Belsen was liberated by British forces on the 15 April 1945. It become exceptionally overcrowded after the arrival of survivors of the death marches. Thousands of unburied bodies lay strewn around the camp, while the barracks some 60,000 starving and mortally ill people werè packed togethér without food or water. The mortality rate amongst those suffering from typhus over 60 ℅.
The first iñtake of the food proved fatal for many prisoners, too weak from starvatioñ to dîgest it. For survivors of Nazi camps, the road to recovery would be long and painful.
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I'm pretty sure the answer is Shay's Rebellion. Good luck! <span />
Bread lines were common during the Great Depression when the government at that time failed to properly tackle the problem of unemployment because of their commitment to balanced budgets, regardless of whether they operated in a free trade or protectionist context. Bread lines resolve the problem by offering free meals to the hungry.
Impact : The Haitian Revolution had many international repercussions. It ended Napoleon's attempts to create a French empire in the Western Hemisphere and arguably caused France to decide to sell its North American holdings to the United States (the Louisiana Purchase)—thus enabling the expansion of slavery into that territory.
The social instability of Saint Domingue was the leading factor in the Haitian revolution, as it caused political unrest within the colony. ... In political terms, the French Revolution aided in giving rights to slaves, and therefore causing anger and hatred between these different social classes.
Affect later revolutions : The Haitian Revolution had many international repercussions. It ended Napoleon's attempts to create a French empire in the Western Hemisphere and arguably caused France to decide to sell its North American holdings to the United States (the Louisiana Purchase)—thus enabling the expansion of slavery into that territory.