Answer:
Might be battle of Belleau Wood
Explanation:
would need more info
SUGAR:
<span> "Sugar cane had long been an important crop planted by the Hawaiians of old. Its sweet and nourishing sap was a favorite of chiefs and commoners alike. Industrial production of sugar began at Koloa plantation on Kaua‘i in 1840. It soon became clear that it required a lot of manpower, and manpower was in short supply. Where it is estimated that in the days of Captain Cook the population stood at 300,000, in the middle of the nineteenth century about one fourth of that number of Hawaiians were left. </span>
<span> Native Hawaiians, who had been accustomed to working only for their chiefs and only on a temporary basis as a "labor tax" or </span>‘Auhau Hana<span>, naturally had difficulty in adjusting to the back-breaking work of clearing the land, digging irrigation ditches, planting, fertilizing, weeding, and harvesting the cane, for an alien planter and on a daily ten to twelve hour shift. A song of the day captures the feelings of these first Hawaiian laborers."
</span>https://www.hawaii.edu/uhwo/clear/home/HawaiiLaborHistory.html
<span>(C) is the most correct answer. The Stamp Act was one of the first times that colonial women were moved to take action. The Act, which placed a duty on all mailed material, was seen as an imposition of the monarchy's powers upon the new colonies and was also considered and overreach due to the lack of permission given from the colonies.</span>
Nationao guard troops killed several students
<span>In analyzing the actions of Emperor Leo III, it is clear that his motivations towards implementing an iconoclast ideology and belief system in society was in order to better help the population understand the importance of the human, and that not everything relies solely on religion.</span>