major events of the early years of the civil war from 1861-1863:
The Civil War began. The South had advantages as they were better prepared, had better war plans and generals. North was not well prepared and did not have good generals to command their soldiers.
Major events of the middle years of the civil war from 1863-1865:
As the war dragged on, the advantages of the North from having more factories and better economy showed their effects to the various battles. Key victories for the North at Gettysburg, Forts Henry and Donelson .
Major events of the ending years of the civil war after 1865:
After Gettysburg and Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation, the South recognized it was losing the war. Cities of Petersberg and Richmond were taken by the North. The South retreated further and further. Even after Lincoln was killed in an assassination in 1865, the South had lost and surrendered.
The answers are B.The modern-day nation of Mongolia is landlocked.
C.Mongolia--the homeland of the Mongols--is located in central Asia. A is wrong because the Gobi desert is to the south of mongolia. <span /><span>
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Definitely: social organization of clans and tribes and moved around a lot. Might be livestock was only surplus if you mean that livestock was kept from season to season.
Oil played a big part in the military and simply economic plans of each country. Japan entered through that specifically but also Japan for some time felt as though they were treated as a “little country” they wanted to be a world power so the best way to get to that is a booming economy and bolstered military. At that time the U.S. supplied Japan with a majority of it’s fuel. As did the U.S. to Germany but when the U.S. entered the war it was very much a moral cause but at the same time it was over resources. Germany, Japan, and the U.S. shortly before the war had a time of great economic gains.
The colonists' reaction to the Boston Tea Party was anything but celebratory. ... In April 1774, Parliament passed a set of laws called the Coercive Acts aimed at punishing Boston. The Port Act closed Boston Harbor until further notice, throwing the entire economy of New England into a tailspin.