Louis lassen took the hamburger to the USA
These innovations impacted American civilian life greatly. They increased the quality of life and availability of information to the public. They also created skeptical views on health and how technology could both negatively and positively affect it.
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
"He who will not be a hammer must be an anvil. An anvil we are today and that anvil will be beaten until out of the anvil we fashion once more a hammer, a German sword!"
The meaning of the excerpt is the following.
Bernhard Von Bülow (1849-1929) was the one who said that quote. He expressed that idea as the Foreign Minister of Germany. What he tried to say was that Germany was ready to strike against those enemies and was also ready to counter-attack any aggression from their enemies. Either way, Germany had the resources to be successful in any situation.
The above-mentioned quote was part of his famous speech "Hammer and the Evil," delivered on December 11, 1899.
The Gilded Age displayed considerable amounts of foul play ineconomic exploitation, political corruption, and unethical business practices. Many people who saw the unlawful ways of the rich and powerful took action to better the American society. Many reformers of the Gilded age were successful in bringing the change they desired; the reforms are still in effect to this day in our country, working to protect American citizens from unfair business practices that concentrated economic power, subjected workers to horrific labor <span>conditions, and outcasted the mentally ill. That probably doesn´t answer your question at all, but I tried.</span>
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Unfortunately, you did not attach the chart. Without the chart, we do not know what are its contents.
However, trying to help you we can comment on the following.
The generalization about the Roman Empire that can be made based on the information is the following: "Rome traded only within the Empire."
This is correct because the information of the chart includes different regions of the empire such as Egypt, Greece, Britain, and Carthage.
Among the most important goods traded in Rome throughout the empire were linen, tin, marble, oil, and other raw materials and natural resources.
The Roman Empire was so vast that it could trade only within its dominions and made great profits. That is the reason why the Roman Empire built good roads to connect many regions within the empire.