1answer.
Ask question
Login Signup
Ask question
All categories
  • English
  • Mathematics
  • Social Studies
  • Business
  • History
  • Health
  • Geography
  • Biology
  • Physics
  • Chemistry
  • Computers and Technology
  • Arts
  • World Languages
  • Spanish
  • French
  • German
  • Advanced Placement (AP)
  • SAT
  • Medicine
  • Law
  • Engineering
Masteriza [31]
2 years ago
15

The woman known as the godmother of thanksgiving also wrote which nursery rhyme? humpty dumpty

English
1 answer:
valkas [14]2 years ago
7 0

Answer:

mary had a little lamb

Explanation:

You might be interested in
Jewelry class , can someone help me this please .
Kipish [7]

<u>To make a ring from scratch, you join shaped wire material into a loop using soldering. Then, you round out the loop to a perfect ring shape that is ready to wear. You will need to know a number of techniques to measure, cut, prepare, solder and form your metal material to become a ring.</u>

5 0
2 years ago
Apprenticeships can be found by contacting a?
Basile [38]
You can search online you can approach companies in person
6 0
3 years ago
Present perfect tense of TAKE<br> he my pen
mafiozo [28]

Answer:

He has taken my pen

Is the answer

4 0
3 years ago
Which of the following is an example of a theme? A. It is better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all. B. Two
olga2289 [7]
A theme is what the author wants you to get from the story only one does this, which is A
5 0
3 years ago
What do the slave traders do with the slave that jumps overboard? in Olaudah Equiano ​
Setler79 [48]

Answer:

   

Explanation:    

"I believe there are few events in my life that have not happened to many," wrote Equiano in his Autobiography. The "many" he refers to are the Africans taken as free people and then forced into slavery in South America, the Caribbean and North America.  

Along the west coast of Africa, from the Cameroons in the south to Senegal in the north, Europeans built some sixty forts that served as trading posts. European sailors seeking riches brought rum, cloth, guns, and other goods to these posts and traded them for human beings. This human cargo was transported across the Atlantic Ocean and sold to New World slave owners, who bought slaves to work their crops.

European traders such as Nicolas Owen waited at these forts for slaves; African traders transported slaves from the interior of Africa. Equiano and others found themselves sold and traded more than once, often in slave markets. African merchants, the poor, royalty -- anyone -- could be abducted in the raids and wars that were undertaken by Africans to secure slaves that they could trade. The slave trade devastated African life. Culture and traditions were torn asunder, as families, especially young men, were abducted. Guns were introduced and slave raids and even wars increased.  

• The Slave Trade (Biard)

• The Slave Trade (Morland)

• Nicolas Owen

• Slaves Offered in the Market

• Slave Caravans on the Road

Slave caravans  

After kidnapping potential slaves, merchants forced them to walk in slave caravans to the European coastal forts, sometimes as far as 1,000 miles. Shackled and underfed, only half the people survived these death marches. Those too sick or weary to keep up were often killed or left to die. Those who reached the coastal forts were put into underground dungeons where they would stay -- sometimes for as long as a year -- until they were boarded on ships.

Just as horrifying as these death marches was the Middle Passage, as it was called -- the transport of slaves across the Atlantic. On the first leg of their trip, slave traders delivered goods from European ports to West African ones. On the "middle" leg, ship captains such as John Newton (who later became a foe of slavery), loaded their then-empty holds with slaves and transported them to the Americas and the Caribbean. A typical Atlantic crossing took 60-90 days but some lasted up to four months Upon arrival, captains sold the slaves and purchased raw materials to be brought back to Europe on the last leg of the trip. Roughly 54,000 voyages were made by Europeans to buy and sell slaves.

Slaves packed like cargo between decks often had to lie in each other's feces, urine, and blood.

Africans were often treated like cattle during the crossing. On the slave ships, people were stuffed between decks in spaces too low for standing. The heat was often unbearable, and the air nearly unbreathable. Women were often used sexually. Men were often chained in pairs, shackled wrist to wrist or ankle to ankle. People were crowded together, usually forced to lie on their backs with their heads between the legs of others. This meant they often had to lie in each other's feces, urine, and, in the case of dysentery, even blood. In such cramped quarters, diseases such as smallpox and yellow fever spread like wildfire. The diseased were sometimes thrown overboard to prevent wholesale epidemics. Because a small crew had to control so many, cruel measures such as iron muzzles and whippings were used to control slaves.  

slave ship

Over the centuries, between one and two million persons died in the crossing. This meant that the living were often chained to the dead until ship surgeons such as Alexander Falconbridge had the corpses thrown overboard.  

• Interior of a Slave Ship

• Insurrection on Board a Slave Ship

• Slave with Iron Muzzle

• Living Africans Thrown Overboard

• Alexander Falconbridge's account of the slave trade  

While ships were still close to shore, insurrections of desperate slaves sometimes broke out. Many went mad in these barbaric conditions; others chose to jump to their watery deaths rather than endure. Equiano wrote of his passage: "Often did I think many of the inhabitants of the deep much happier than myself."

Next: The Growth of Slavery in North America

Part 1 Narrative:

• Introduction

• Map: The British Colonies

• Europeans Come to Western Africa

• New World Exploration and English Ambition

• From Indentured Servitude to Racial Slavery

• The African Slave Trade and the Middle Passage

• The Growth of Slavery in North America

Part 1: Narrative | Resource Bank Contents | Teacher's Guide

Africans in America: Home | Resource Bank Index | Search | Shop

I am sorry if this doesn't help and sorry if I got it wrong! Hope this helps. ^^  

8 0
3 years ago
Other questions:
  • How are the writers' views different in these excerpts?
    15·1 answer
  • Look at this map from When Birds Get Flu and Cows Go Mad! by John DiConsiglio. HIV AROUND THE WORLD (2006) North America: 1.4 mi
    9·2 answers
  • Which of these ideas is the main plot point around which the story of Twelfth Night revolves?
    15·2 answers
  • The note at the beginning of Passage B says that many of the details reported in the Colorado Springs Gazette were later shown t
    13·1 answer
  • What are 3 suggestions for making publications more diverse?
    15·1 answer
  • The girl hoped_________by the board of directors for what she has achieved.
    10·2 answers
  • What does eventual mean? Can someone help me pleaze
    12·2 answers
  • A characteristic, which can be physical (hair color, height) or behavioral (nice, lazy)
    13·1 answer
  • WHAT ARE THE DIFERENCES BETWEEN THE MOVIE AND THE NOVEL OF TOM SAWYER​
    5·1 answer
  • Help me, pleasee hurry
    15·1 answer
Add answer
Login
Not registered? Fast signup
Signup
Login Signup
Ask question!