It increased the amount of war and infighting in west Africa and depleted African resources.
Three famous daimyo spearheaded the unification in the late sixteenth century. And then, after the great Battle of Sekigahara in 1600, one man took control of all Japan. He was Tokugawa Ieyasu, who became shogun in 1603. ... Both sides of the Tokugawa years were crucial to the later making of modern Japan.
Answer:
Sharecropping offered formerly enslaved people an equal opportunity to participate in the Southern economy . Sharecropping gave white landowners the upper hand and economic dominance in Southern society .
Explanation: