Answer:
The Etruscans built the first roadbed of the Sacred Way through Rome (the most important street in the city). It was under them that Rome came to have temples and markets and other things characteristic of a real city.
Answer:
c I think.. it's the only one that makes sense
Mexican-American farmworker, labor leader and civil rights activist César Chávez brought about better conditions for agricultural workers. Born on his family’s farm near Yuma, Arizona, Chávez witnessed the harsh conditions farm laborers endured. Routinely exploited by their employers, they were often unpaid, living in shacks in exchange for their labor, with no medical or other basic facilities. Without a united voice, they had no means to improve their position. Chávez changed that when he dedicated his life to winning recognition for the rights of agricultural workers, inspiring and organizing them into the National Farm Workers Association, which later became the United Farm Workers. Through marches, strikes and boycotts, Chávez forced employers to pay adequate wages and provide other benefits and was responsible for legislation enacting the first Bill of Rights for agricultural workers. For his commitment to social justice and his lifelong dedication to bettering the lives of others, Chávez was posthumously recognized with the highest civilian honor, the Presidential Medal of fdom.
The lack of Peace agreements definitely contributed as did the conflicts between tribes, I am not even sure what is meant by the first choice, there was no African nationalism at the time so I eliminate it as the choice also. That leaves C. It makes no sense that traders would use guns as methods of trade. The tribes at the time didn't have guns, slave traders would not want them to be able to kill rather than capture so the only ones who has guns were the traders and they wouldn't have given them up because it gave them the up because it gave them the upper hand over the natives they were trading with.
Hope this helped :)
Answer:
1521
Explanation:
On April 27, 1521, Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan was killed by a poison arrow during a skirmish on the island of Mactan in what is now the Philippines. Magellan and his crew were assisting a local king they had allied with when they landed on the island of Cebu weeks earlier.