Well, there were two important turning points of the war.
The first one is the Battle of Gettysburg. Basically, Robert E. Lee and the Confederate Army marched into Pennsylvania to capture a town in order to cut off Washington D.C from the rest of the Union, which could force a decisive surrender of the Union. However, Union forces met with Confederate forces, resulting in a bloody battle that ended with the most notable conflict of the battle of General Pickett's Charge, which was the final conflict that resulted in the defeat of the Confederates. This was decisive because General Lee did not attempt to strategically end the war after this battle. Which further meant that Lee would have to fight an already pro longed war when the South did not have the resources or the industrial capacity or the able bodied men to serve as soldiers as the North did.
The second turning point I would say would be the appointment of General Ulysses S. Grant of the Union forces by Lincoln, due to that he was a brilliant general and already known war hero, and for the fact that of his only acceptance of enemy surrender conditions as "unconditional", hence his nickname "Unconditional Surrender Grant".
Answer:
While Mesopotamia's soil was fertile, the region's semiarid climate didn't have much rainfall, with less than ten inches annually. This initially made farming difficult. Two major rivers in the region - The Tigris and Euphrates - provided a source of water that enabled wide-scale farming.
Explanation:
Geography Mesopotamian's changed their environment to improve life, rivers support agriculture? Semiarid climate - hot summers, less than 10 inches of annual rainfall. Crops grew in this dry region because of rivers, fertile soil - many farming villages across southern Mesopotamia by 4000 B.C.
Answer:
Life work on the manor is described below in detail.
Explanation:
The people existing on the manor were from all “levels” of Feudalism: Laborers, Gentlemen, Nobles, and Lords. There were regularly generous territories around the Manor utilized for cattle, hunting, and crops. The only people permitted to hunt in the manors covers were nobles. The feudal aristocrat of the manor made revenue by accumulating taxes and charges from the workers on his feudal property.