Hi there!
The answer to your question is FALSE. At the Battle of the Alamo, the American's lost.
Could you please Brainliest me?
The Mesopotamia were polytheistic when it happened to faith, they believe in various demons and who they pray to be depended on their requirement.
Example used in the text: Marduk primitive male inventor and Adad, the river spirit. The spirits described physical results.
For example: if a person owes wealth and Adad has overwhelmed the man's jurisdiction, the man will not return any tax or pay any attention in that year.
The Townshend Acts were repealed by Britain's Parliament by the efforts of Prime Minister Frederick North, with the exception of the increased duties on imported tea. The American colonists, in turn, stopped their embargo on British imports.
Answer:
A. domestic sphere.
Explanation:
As an educator, C. Beecher went further than most contemporary schools for women which taught mainly fine arts and languages, teaching a variety of subjects. She was a pioneer of girls´physical education as a way to improve women´s health. Contrary to many pro-suffrage activists, she didn´t support femal suffrage. Her opinion was that home and school had such a relevant social impact that women should limit their lives to those areas only.
The correct answer is: Familiarity with and disdain for the Northern industrial workplace.
In the 1860s<em> </em><em>the Southern states based their economy on agriculture,</em> their crops required lots of manpower so they relied on slavery to work on their harvest. <em>The Northern states were beginning to base their economy on manufacture and factories </em>and they relied mainly on immigrants to work on factories, and were in favor of the abolition of slavery.
So when Abraham Lincoln won the elections in 1860, the Southern states felt the government was in hands of the Northern states and that it no longer watched over the Southern interests, <em>they saw with disdain the Northern activity and that became a reason for the Southern secession from the Union.</em>